The View | DJ like Goldman’s next CEO, paint like Churchill, golf like a deal-maker – a good leader has hobbies
Stephen Vines says David Solomon’s unusual pastime shows how having a life away from work need not be a detriment to success, whereas Elon Musk’s thoughtless comments in the aftermath of the Thai soccer team’s rescue show that a narrow focus on work can be bad for business
Yet Solomon is also regarded as being full on when it comes to the banking business, so has clearly found a way of having a varied life away from his desk.
Is this a good thing? Are corporate leaders, or any other kind of leaders, likely to do their jobs better if they have other lives, lives that are very different from their day jobs?
Clearly Goldman’s board must have thought that Solomon’s range of interests were no bar to his selection as chief executive. But in the intense world of finance, it is not uncommon to come across senior managers who boast about how long they stay in the office and proclaim their ability to stay focused on the job to the exclusion of all else.