Our Story
In May 2006, more than 100 leading Drucker-like thinkers and practitioners gathered
in Claremont, Calif., to help answer one question: What is Peter Drucker’s
legacy? Attendees included Jim Collins, management expert and best-selling author
of Good to Great and Built to Last; Paul H. O’Neill, former
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury and former chairman of Alcoa; A.G. Lafley, chairman
and CEO of Procter & Gamble; Nobuhiro Iijima, CEO of the multi-billion dollar
Yamazaki Baking Co.; and Masatoshi Ito, the founder and honorary chairman of the
Ito-Yokado Group, Asia’s largest retail chain.
This distinguished group’s answer to the question was that Drucker’s
legacy is much more than the man or his writing. Drucker’s legacy, they said,
is a collection of ideas and ideals desperately needed by future generations of
leaders responsible for the companies and communities in which we work and live.
In response, the Board of Advisors of the Peter F. Drucker Archives (founded in
1999) and Claremont Graduate University took a crucial step in 2006: They decided
the best way to keep Drucker’s legacy alive was not simply to look backward
(through old manuscripts and other documents) but to look forward (by building on
Drucker’s wisdom and applying it to important contemporary issues).
Their mandate, in other words, was to transform the archival repository into a think
tank and an action tank whose purpose is to better society by stimulating effective management and responsible leadership.
Out of the Drucker Archives thus grew the Drucker Institute. We are a campus-wide
resource of Claremont Graduate University that is closely aligned with the Peter
F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management, where Peter Drucker
taught for 35 years.