Editor’s Note: Here’s a piece we originally ran over on Substack.
Rewatching Global Financial Crisis Movies, and Replaying the Global Financial Crisis in Your Head
I am blessed to work with, and know, a pretty age-diverse crowd.
Which means a couple things: (1) I need to watch my “Cultural Literacy References” (e.g., talking about how great The Dennis Miller Show was, then punctuating an obscure witticism with “Cha-cha” may not be as over-the-target a zinger as I hoped); and (2) some “Historical References” might be lost completely.
Which brings us to the Global Financial Crisis.
If you missed it, you might have been too young, or it was something that wasn’t as relatively big in your world as it was in the epicenter of global finance.
The unofficial trilogy of the GFC is, in chronological order:
- The Big Short, which begins in 2005 and is based on a true story and derived from Michael Lewis’s book of the same name;
- Margin Call, which is set during the early part of the GFC (2007-2008) and, while fictitious, really wasn’t too far from the truth; it all takes place in around a 24-hour period;
- Too Big To Fail, which wraps everything up nicely and shows the beginning of the unraveling of companies like Lehman Brothers and AIG; it’s based on Andrew Ross Sorkin’s book of the same name (and the book’s title comes from the decision-making process that leads to that binary question that kinda keeps us all from another Depression: Is this particular bank “Too Big To Fail?”).
The Big Short has arguably one central character — Michael Burry, the guy who made the huge bet starting it all — and Too Big To Fail has several; I’ll argue that Margin Call has one central character: John Tuld, played by Jeremy Irons.
Watch This Scene
Even if you’ve seen the movie, I’ll suggest that, before proceeding, you watch (or rewatch; or, if you’re me, rewatch it for the 100th time) the scene here: the “Senior Partners Emergency Meeting.”
Own The Room Like John Tuld
While the scene marks a turning point in the movie, I’d hazard a guess that a good chunk of people had this scene — which is up there with Ned Beatty’s in Network and Alec Baldwin’s in Glengarry Glen Ross; links to both are below — serve as their introduction to the film. (Thanks, YouTube algorithm!) This is fine, because it also serves as the film’s introduction to Tuld.
This is a character that, until this point, we had not seen nor heard from.
But this is a character that would show us in just ten minutes not only who was in charge, but how to run a meeting. Here’s his playbook.
1. Don’t Call A Meeting Just Because
Sure, we get it, meetings are important. Regular team meetings, 1-on-1s, quarterly all-hands: these are part of corporate life. But Mr. Tuld is judicious with his time and is calling this meeting — At what appears to be 3:45 a.m.! With a dozen people! All wearing suits! — because he absolutely has to.
The meeting marks a decision point for the firm, and there is a necessity to it. He’s not meeting just to meet.
2. Every Meeting Should Have Either An Agenda…Or A Point
This meeting didn’t have a stated agenda, but, as we learn at the end, the meeting had a definite point: save the firm.
You could argue that the guy in charge can call a meeting whenever he (or she) wants to and gather everyone at 3:45 in the morning and he could do so without an agenda or a point. It’s a flimsy argument, though, as the person in charge cannot ascend to a position of importance if they call one agenda-free, point-free, 3:45 a.m. meeting. There will not be a second one of those meetings.
Tuld sets the agenda at the outset: this meeting is vital, he wans to get to the bottom of what’s in the report, and he wants to hear from the people who know how the firm got to this point.
If you’re asking whether this meeting could have been an email — which is a GREAT question to ask of any meeting — this meeting COULD NOT HAVE BEEN AN EMAIL.
3. He Involves the Subject Matter Experts…
Tuld relaxes the group at the outset (see above); a likely deliberate mistake to both get everyone thinking (a) did he just say that? and (b) okay, if he can make a mistake like that, maybe there’s less pressure on me.
Since the team is now relaxed — as relaxed as one can be at this hour in what they have to know is the highest-stakes meeting they’ve ever been in — Tuld wants to hear from the expert: Peter Sullivan, played by Zachary Quinto.
But, before Sullivan speaks, Tuld delivers another self-effacing line; this one is meant to get Sullivan as comfortable as possible:
Sullivan starts explaining the situation and Tuld — having already disarmed everyone TWICE — invites Sullivan to “just relax, stand up, tell us in a clear voice: what is the nature of the problem.”
Tuld has now given the limelight to a junior-level researcher, and he is keenly interested in what Sullivan has to say. Tuld is the one running the meeting, and Tuld does not have all the answers. Sullivan’s report — which was finished just hours earlier, and portends of some really REALLY bad things happening to the firm — has caught his attention.
This is the sign of a leader who, in this case, has incomplete information and is looking to confirm that things are as bad as they are. He knows that Sullivan is the person who can put it in perspective. Or:
Tuld walked in thinking the firm was 90% screwed. He needed Sullivan to confirm the other 10%.
So, he’s not afraid of sharing the spotlight. However, we used an ellipsis for number 3 above because…
4. …Not Everyone Is Included in the Discussion
You’ll notice that there are more than a dozen people in the room. You’ll also notice that nobody speaks unless called on. And you’ll notice half the people in the room DO NOT SPEAK AT ALL.
Sam Rogers, Kevin Spacey’s character, only speaks when he’s asked how they’d implement the plan; his back-and-forth with Tuld underscores their work history together, and he appears to be the only one who can challenge Tuld.
Other than that, Jared Cohen (played by Simon Baker) weighs in a little (more on that below) and Ramesh Shah (Aasif Mandvi) is very brief when suggesting the legalities of what they’re about to do.
But, in the days of “everyone has a voice!” and “we’re an inclusive culture!” it’s notable that most successful organizations aren’t running democracies: in this meeting, crisp is the way to go. We don’t need to hear from Steve in Accounting, and we don’t need a bunch of corporate-speak. We’re not running this up the flagpole; the flagpole is in the room.
5. Enjoy the Silence
One of the best parts of this scene starts at the 4:57 mark, when Tuld asks Sullivan “Do you care to know why I’m in this chair with you all, I mean why I earn the big bucks?” (Sullivan, of course, says yes.) We’ve queued it up below; watch the next minute.
Tuld explains that he’s in that role “to predict what the music might do a week, a month, a year from now. That’s it. Nothing more.” Then…
The word “silence” is punctuated by 15 full seconds of…silence. No one fills the silence until John Tuld fills the silence.
6. Have A Decision Filter…AND USE IT
I mentioned above that Tuld had about a 90 percent inkling that things were wrong — that the music was slowing — and Sullivan’s report got him that last 10 percent — the music had stopped — and now we’re at the decision point. Tuld asks Jared what to do next, Jared pauses, and we get the line from the movie poster:
- Be First
- Be Smarter
- Or Cheat.
Not just a clever marketing gimmick for the movie, this is the decision filter that Tuld had planned on using all along.
If you’re calling a meeting that has a decision to be made, you need to have a decision filter in mind. You need to know going in if there are plans of action that you can reasonably take.
(Funny enough, they do often come in threes like that; the old mantra from my startup days about whether or not to enter a new market often came down to choosing from one of these three:
- Build (e.g., use your resources to create the solution yourselves)
- Buy (find someone doing it and pay for their solution)
- Or Partner (find someone doing it and join forces with them).)
Anyway, Tuld made his choice: Be First. They would get out of the MBS world, effectively killing the market in the process, and face the consequences.
What Can You Learn From All This?
Well, for starters, don’t call a 3:45 a.m. meeting unless you absolutely have to.
But, and again we know meetings are necessary, if you call the meeting, you’re best to begin at the finish line:
- When this meeting is done, what will I have learned?
- What decisions will my team need to make?
- Who is responsible for the final decision?
Also, if the meeting could have been an email, by all means make it an email!
BTW…
Here, as promised, the Ned Beatty scene from Network:
And here’s Alec Baldwin’s speech in Glengarry Glen Ross:
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