Conducted Fall 2008 Q: What keeps you up at night?
A: The neighbor’s dog.
Q: What’s the last book you read?
A: The Great Upheaval: America and the Birth of the Modern World, 1788-1800 by Jay Winik.
Q: Who is your personal hero (and why)?
A: My father. He has always been caring, upbeat, supportive, hard-working, and perseverant.
Q: First job?
A: My first earnings were related to watching some of the neighbors’ children. Later, I worked at an art-house movie theater in the summer.
Q: Best business decision?
A: The personnel decisions I’ve made in developing teams.
Q: What advice would you give to yourself 10 years ago?
A: Be the best “you” you can be.
Q: The one thing you learned in business school that you’ll never forget?
A: Moving a team forward requires an array of skills.
Q: What is the most important room in your home?
A: The kitchen, where we gather as a family.
Q: Favorite comfort food?
A: Low-fat ice cream.
Q: If you had a theme song, what would it be?
A: “Three Little Birds” by Bob Marley. I love the chorus: “Don’t worry about a thing ’cause every little thing’s gonna be alright.”
Q: Favorite line from a movie or television show?
A: “Anyone can take a reservation. I can take a reservation. That’s no big deal. It’s holding the reservation that makes the difference!” --- Seinfeld
Q: What’s the most thrilling/adventurous thing you’ve ever done?
A: Having six hours to move all patients in the UCLA Medical Center into our new, I.M. Pei-designed facility.
Q: Three people, living or dead, you’d have over to dinner?
A: My grandparents and Abraham Lincoln. But I’d have Abe over on a separate night or else he wouldn’t be able to get in a word.
Q: Best trophy/award you ever won?
A: An award from the physicians, nurses, staff, and management of my prior health system for making significant impacts to improve the organization.
Q: If you could read anyone’s mind, whose would it be?
A: Is this a trick question? My wife’s!
Q: Pet peeve?
A: Receiving an email that just precedes a long trail of previously forwarded emails, instead of summarizing the situation.
Q: Unfulfilled wish?
A: To cover the uninsured and better align incentives in the U.S. healthcare system.
Q: Favorite sport to watch?
A: For portfolio optimization, I root for blue and maize/gold teams: Michigan (football) and UCLA (basketball).
Q: What did you want to be when you were a kid?
A: I wanted to be involved in managing large organizations. Before that, I imagine it was something to do with ice cream.
Q: Why do you feel it’s important to give to the Ross School?
A: Ross is developing leaders who are changing the world by driving positive changes in organizations and society.
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