Think Like an Owner artwork

A.J. Wasserstein - Living a Happier Life - Ep.226 [Replay]

Think Like an Owner

English - June 11, 2024 10:00 - 1 hour - ★★★★★ - 98 ratings
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Ep.226: Alex (@aebridgeman) is joined by A.J. Wasserstein.
My guest on this episode is A.J. Wasserstein. Early in his career, A.J. founded Archives One, a physical records management business he operated as CEO for 17 years before selling to Iron Mountain. He then acquired One Source Water, which was eventually sold to Water Logic in 2016. He then began teaching at Yale School of Management where he has written ad nauseam about nearly every topic within growing and running small companies and search funds. His writings are my go-to resource for many questions and business concepts I want to learn more about, and I'm quick to recommend them to others.
A.J. and I talk about being a professor and how to get involved if you’d like to teach, why students do not pursue entrepreneurship through acquisition and work-life integration as CEO, a topic A.J. has written and thought very deeply about, among other topics. Please enjoy this fantastic conversation with AJ Wasserstein.

Links:
More on A.J. Wasserstein
The Judd Lorson story by A.J. Wasserstein
Why MBA Students Do Not Pursue Entrepreneurship through Acquisition by A.J. Wasserstein
How CEOs actually spend their time? by A.J. Wasserstein

Topics:
(3:14) - What made you excited to publish a paper covering an unsuccessful search?
(4:26) - Is it a conscious part of your process to present both sides of an issue in your writing?
(5:45) - What was your experience like going from a CEO to academia?
(8:39) - What were some challenges you faced as a CEO?
(13:49) - In your experience, did you find your workload felt reduced as you grew different departments?
(15:20) - Is work-life integration as a CEO possible?
(18:03) - Are there any CEOs you know who have achieved this balance?
(19:39) - What do you think about the ROI of your time spent as an investor, professor, and content creator via research papers?
(25:52) - You said it takes 5 years to be a successful CEO, would you say it takes the same amount of time as a professor?
(27:04) - What are some best practices for being an effective professor?
(30:20) - What moments as a professor bring you the most joy?
(32:02) - How do you help students think by asking them questions?
(34:25) - For someone selling their business, how would you recommend testing out the waters of academia?
(37:59) - What were some interesting observations you saw in students after they went through the Search Fund curriculum? 
(43:20) - For students wanting to pursue Search, what roles were most effective in helping them feel ready
(48:41) - Do you want to turn your papers into a book one day?
(49:55) - Do you find any consistent themes in your writing?
(52:15) - Do you get the sense more folks are thinking about work-life integration than ever before?
(55:18) - What strongly held belief have you changed your mind on?
(57:42) - What’s the best business you’ve ever seen?

Ep.226: Alex (@aebridgeman) is joined by A.J. Wasserstein.

My guest on this episode is A.J. Wasserstein. Early in his career, A.J. founded Archives One, a physical records management business he operated as CEO for 17 years before selling to Iron Mountain. He then acquired One Source Water, which was eventually sold to Water Logic in 2016. He then began teaching at Yale School of Management where he has written ad nauseam about nearly every topic within growing and running small companies and search funds. His writings are my go-to resource for many questions and business concepts I want to learn more about, and I'm quick to recommend them to others.

A.J. and I talk about being a professor and how to get involved if you’d like to teach, why students do not pursue entrepreneurship through acquisition and work-life integration as CEO, a topic A.J. has written and thought very deeply about, among other topics. Please enjoy this fantastic conversation with AJ Wasserstein.


Links:

More on A.J. Wasserstein

The Judd Lorson story by A.J. Wasserstein

Why MBA Students Do Not Pursue Entrepreneurship through Acquisition by A.J. Wasserstein

How CEOs actually spend their time? by A.J. Wasserstein


Topics:

(3:14) - What made you excited to publish a paper covering an unsuccessful search?

(4:26) - Is it a conscious part of your process to present both sides of an issue in your writing?

(5:45) - What was your experience like going from a CEO to academia?

(8:39) - What were some challenges you faced as a CEO?

(13:49) - In your experience, did you find your workload felt reduced as you grew different departments?

(15:20) - Is work-life integration as a CEO possible?

(18:03) - Are there any CEOs you know who have achieved this balance?

(19:39) - What do you think about the ROI of your time spent as an investor, professor, and content creator via research papers?

(25:52) - You said it takes 5 years to be a successful CEO, would you say it takes the same amount of time as a professor?

(27:04) - What are some best practices for being an effective professor?

(30:20) - What moments as a professor bring you the most joy?

(32:02) - How do you help students think by asking them questions?

(34:25) - For someone selling their business, how would you recommend testing out the waters of academia?

(37:59) - What were some interesting observations you saw in students after they went through the Search Fund curriculum? 

(43:20) - For students wanting to pursue Search, what roles were most effective in helping them feel ready

(48:41) - Do you want to turn your papers into a book one day?

(49:55) - Do you find any consistent themes in your writing?

(52:15) - Do you get the sense more folks are thinking about work-life integration than ever before?

(55:18) - What strongly held belief have you changed your mind on?

(57:42) - What’s the best business you’ve ever seen?