"Studzinski, 69, held senior roles at Morgan Stanley, HSBC, and Blackstone over five decades and is now Pimco's vice chair. He started giving at age six when he volunteered in a soup kitchen, ran a health hotline as a teenager, worked with Mother Teresa in New York during the AIDS crisis, and set up the Genesis Foundation in 2001 to nurture young artists, and the Arise Foundation in 2015 to combat modern slavery and human trafficking."
"Giving helps you connect with others Studzinski told Business Insider that giving has "enhanced" his career by helping him connect with people and expanding his professional network. Engaging with a broader range of people means "people will be more engaged with you," and inclined to trust you, work with you, and share their contacts with you, Studzinski said. He said he found, from his early years at Morgan Stanley, that clients and colleagues were more interested in him"
John Studzinski is Pimco's vice chair with senior roles at Morgan Stanley, HSBC, and Blackstone across five decades. He began volunteering at age six, later running a health hotline, working with Mother Teresa during the AIDS crisis, founding the Genesis Foundation in 2001 for young artists, and launching the Arise Foundation in 2015 to fight modern slavery and trafficking. Giving is presented as a lifelong habit that enhances career development by expanding networks, earning trust, and creating perspective. Modest donations or volunteering can deliver outsized, multiplying impacts and strengthen personal and professional relationships.
Read at Business Insider
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]