Robert Pozen
Robert Charles Pozen known as "Bob" is an American financial executive with a strong interest in public policy. Pozen currently teaches executives about how to be more productive and serves as an executive coach and mentor, www.bobpozen.com . He is the former chairman of MFS Investment Management, the oldest mutual fund company in the United States. Previously, Pozen was the President of Fidelity Investments. As of 2020 he is a senior lecturer at MIT Sloan School of Management, and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Education and family
Pozen grew up in Bridgeport, Connecticut, where he attended public high school and won a scholarship to attend Harvard College. In 1968, he graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard, which awarded him a Knox Traveling Fellowship.In 1972, Pozen received a law degree from Yale Law School, where he served on the editorial board of the Yale Law Journal. He received a JSD from Yale in 1973 for his doctoral thesis on state enterprises in Africa. He is a member of the Massachusetts, New York and Washington, D.C. bars.
He has been married for more than 40 years to Elizabeth Kelner Pozen, a psychotherapist and figurative painter. They live in Boston, Massachusetts, and have two adult children.
Investment industry career
Pozen was an executive at Fidelity Investments from 1987 to 2001, eventually rising to vice chairman of the company and president of FMR Co., the investment adviser to Fidelity’s mutual funds. In the latter role, he had oversight of Fidelity’s global portfolio management and research teams; during his tenure as president, Fidelity’s assets under management increased from $500 billion to $900 billion. He also was a director of Fidelity’s insurance company and credit card bank.Pozen became chairman of MFS Investment Management in February 2004. In that position, he advised the firm on strategic initiatives and long-term planning. Speaking on corporate governance, he has been credited with enhancing the organization’s legal, audit, and risk functions. He retired as Chairman in July 2010 and was Chairman Emeritus through 2011. In 2011, he was recognized for his work in the mutual fund industry with the Fund Action Lifetime Achievement Award.
Productivity and Executive Coaching Work
Pozen currently teaches courses on "Maximzing your Productivity" for corporations around the globe as well as for the MIT Executive Education program. Pozen's website can be found at www.bobpozen.com. Pozen is also an executive coach, a role he started actively playing in 2019. His teachings are based on his 2019 research published by MIT News, "How does your productivity stack up? Survey results and research by MIT Sloan’s Bob Pozen reveal common habits and skills among highly productive managers". In 2012, Pozen published his book "Extreme Productivity: Boost Your Results, Reduce Your Hours" which set the foundation for his coursework. In 2018, Pozen's work on Productivity at MIT was one of the top rated stories of the year.Teaching positions
- 1973-74: Visiting professor, Georgetown University Law Center
- 1974-76: Associate professor, New York University Law School
- 2002-03: John Olin Visiting Professor, Harvard Law School
- 2006-07: Senior lecturer, MIT Sloan School of Management
- 2007–2013: Senior lecturer, Harvard Business School
- 2013–present: MIT Sloan School of Management
Public service
In addition to his private sector and teaching posts, Pozen has dedicated time during his career to public service. He was Associate General Counsel for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission from 1977 to 1980.In 2001 and 2002, he served as a member of President George W. Bush's Commission to Strengthen Social Security. His proposal for utilizing a "progressive indexing" methodology to address Social Security’s long-term solvency issue received national attention, including a mention during President Bush's 2006 State of the Union address.
At the state level, Pozen served as Secretary of Economic Affairs in 2003 under then-Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney during a time of economic uncertainty after the 2001 US recession. Pozen was responsible for all economic-related areas, including banking, technology, consumer affairs, insurance, and labor.
In 2007, Pozen served as chairman of the SEC's Committee to Improve Financial Reporting. Working with both private and public sector experts, the committee made several actionable recommendations to improve the U.S. financial reporting system, many of which have been implemented.
Boards/memberships
- Former board member, Medtronic, Inc. 2006-2018
- Board member, The Nielsen Company
- Former board member, Bell Canada Enterprises
- Former Trustee, Commonwealth Fund
- Former board member, Harvard NeuroDiscovery Center
- Former board member, National Basketball Hall of Fame
- Former vice chairman, Boston Public Library Foundation
- Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Senior Non-resident Fellow, Brookings Institution
- Member, Council on Foreign Relations
- Member, Committee on Capital Markets Regulation
Key publications
Selected books
- Extreme Productivity: Boost Your Results, Reduce Your Hours
- The Fund Industry: How Your Money is Managed
- Too Big to Save? How to Fix the U.S. Financial System
- Financial Institutions: Investment Management
Selected productivity articles and videos by Pozen and about Pozen's work
- MIT News, "How does your productivity stack up?" Survey results and research by MIT Sloan’s Bob Pozen reveal common habits and skills among highly productive managers.
- Harvard Business Review, "What Makes Some People More Productive Than Others"
- Harvard Business Review, "Assessment: How Productive Are You?"
- MIT Sloan Executive Education innovation@work Blog, "Supercharge your productivity: 3 big ideas from Bob Pozen"
- MIT Sloan Executive Education, Video, "Maximizing Your Personal Productivity"
- MIT Sloan Executive Education, "Five tips for improving every-day productivity"
- Harvard Business Review, "The Delicate Art of Giving Feedback"
- Fast Company, "Bob Pozen, Master Of Extreme Productivity, Shares His 3 Most Effective Career Tips" by Drake Baer
- Harvard Business Review, "Managing Yourself: Extreme Productivity" May 2011
Selected financial articles
- MarketWatch, "Opinion: 7 states where Obamacare is cheaper and works better"
- MarketWatch, "Opinion: This is the tax break America’s 1% will cling to — even after death"
- Harvard Business Review, "What Machine Learning Will Mean for Asset Managers"
- Financial Times, "Will bots replace humans in active equity investment?"
- MarketWatch, "Opinion: Tie CEO pay to increases in stakeholder and shareholder value"
- CFO, "What Canada Teaches Us About Internal Controls"
- Pensions&Investments, "Commentary: Board composition drives performance in public plans"
- MarketWatch, "Opinion: 401 retirees won’t buy annuities unless they are better designed"
- Wall Street Journal, Opinion, "Executive Pay Needs a Transparent Scorecard"
- Financial Times, "EU’s attempt to tackle ‘ratings shopping’ is falling short"
- Financial Times, "Spotify’s direct listing is a template for unicorns riding high"
- Financial Times, "Trump tax bills push US jobs and factories abroad"
- Financial Times, "In defence of quarterly reports"
- Wall Street Journal, "Opinion: Keeping Corporate Managements Honest"
- Financial Times, "Short-selling bans are a mistake"
- Science Translational Medicine, "Defining Success for Translational Research Organizations"
- Huffington Post, "Social Security Reform Is the Key to the Debt Ceiling Debate"
- Washington Post, "A debt plan Republicans can support"
- Washington Post, "Wading into money-market funds?"
- Financial Times, "Don't hobble money market funds"
- Harvard Business Review, "Managing Yourself: Extreme Productivity"
- Financial Times, "European funds are outgunning US rivals"
- Washington Post, "A bond backfire after racing to buy long-term Treasuries and sell tax-exempt funds"
- Morningstar Advisor, "The Global Fund-Leadership Playoffs: Europe vs. the U.S."
- Forbes, "Heretic Reality: Mortgage Interest Deduction Needs To Be Slashed"
- Washington Post, "Why Liberals Should Back Social Security Reform"
- Financial Times, "Japan can rebuild on new economic foundations"
- Wall Street Journal, "A New Model for Corporate Boards"
- Harvard Business Review, "The Case for Professional Boards"
- New York Times, "For Social Security, A Birthday Makeover"
- Wall Street Journal, "Bashing Beijing Will Not Help Our Trade Deficit"
- Wall Street Journal, "$100,000 is Plenty for Deposit Insurance"
- Financial Times, "Chatter About a New Global Currency is Overblown,"
- Forbes, "Stop Pining for Glass-Steagall,"
- Wall Street Journal, "Systemic Risk and the Fed,"
- Wall Street Journal, "How to Value Toxic Bank Assets,"
- Financial Times, "Foundations to be Laid Before Bridging Gap,"
- New York Times, "Think First, Bail Out Later,"
- New York Times, "Reporting for Duty,"
- Harvard Business Review, "If Private Equity Sized Up Your Business,"
- Fortune, "China Goes from Red to Gray,"
- Harvard Business Review, "Before You Split that CEO Chair,"
- Pensions & Investments, "Overstating Performance,"
- USA Today, "Why My Plan to Fix Social Security Will Work,"
- Foreign Affairs, "Mind the Gap," Vol. 84, No. 2, 8-12
- The Economist, "The Route to Real Pension Reform," 69
- Harvard Business Review, "Arm Yourself for the Coming Battle Over Social Security," Vol. 80 at 52
- Harvard Business Review, "Institutional Investors: The Reluctant Activists," Vol. 72 of 140