Up Close and All In
Life Lessons from a Wall Street Warrior
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- € 16,99
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From John Mack, former CEO of Morgan Stanley, an intimate personal memoir and riveting business story, recounting how he helped grow the company from 300 to 50,000 employees over four decades, transformed a notoriously competitive culture into a successful and collaborative one, and lead the company through the 2008 financial crisis.
During his thirty-four-year tenure at Morgan Stanley, John Mack’s goal was to build the strongest and most productive team on Wall Street. His ability to motivate his employees to do their best work, especially in times of crisis, was fostered by his willingness to slash through bureaucracy and stand up to powerful interests. A forceful personality, one journalist said Mack was “described as ‘charismatic’ so regularly that it could be part of his name.”
In Up Close and All In, Mack traces his personal journey from a one-stoplight North Carolina mill town to a fortieth-floor corner office on Wall Street—and shares the life lessons he learned along the way. He developed a titanium-strength stomach for risk, stress, and competition while landing accounts early in his career, as investment banks fought like wolfpacks to take advantage of new deregulation, fielding business raids, booms, and busts. As he rose through the ranks, he never forgot where he came from, relying on his instincts, doing what was right, and listening to his people on the front lines. This culture of trust and collaboration helped Morgan Stanley anticipate future trends before other firms, adapt quickly, and achieve record profits.
This gripping memoir includes both humbling lows—like when Mack made the difficult decision to leave Morgan Stanley in 2001—and exhilarating highs—such as when he made an eleventh-hour agreement with the Japanese bank Mitsubishi to save the company during the 2008 financial crisis, having refused to give in when top regulators pressured him to sell the firm for $2 per share.
With humor and honesty, Mack shares advice on both business and life: how to create a culture of team players, how to keep perspective during crises, how to make difficult decisions when all eyes are on you, and more. From a singular man who’s as unafraid to cry publicly as he is to anger some of the most powerful people in the world, this is an indispensable guide to living and leading well.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Former Morgan Stanley CEO Mack offers an spirited account of his legendary career in this brash memoir. Born in 1944, Mack grew up in a North Carolina mill town with his Lebanese Catholic parents, whose traditions formed his "core identity." After his father died while Mack was in college, he took a job at a local securities firm, and by 1968 landed on Wall Street at the Smith Barney training program making $60 a week. The early years of his finance career were thrilling if not "glamorous," and Mack describes himself as not a part of the counterculture, though sympathetic to the time's feminist and racial justice movements. He's frank about professional mistakes he's made—like a money-losing computation error after a drunken business lunch—and equally forthright about triumphs, such as a $10.2 billion merger of Morgan Stanley and Dean Witter, Discover & Co, a "jaw-dropper of a deal" that "instantly catapulted us to the top of the financial stratosphere." Now facing down Alzheimer's, Mack reflects on his career with no regrets: "I have fucking killed it," he writes. "I knocked the cover off the ball in the financial world. I ran a great company." Readers won't be able to help cheering him on.