Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Best-selling author who found success in ‘Who Moved My Cheese?’

- By Matt Schudel

Spencer Johnson, a onetime physician and children’s book author, whose best-selling books on business management, including “The OneMinute Manager” and “Who Moved My Cheese?,” sold millions of copies and inspired a cultlike following, died July 3 at a hospital in Encinitas, Calif.He was 78.

The cause was pancreatic cancer. His death was first reported by the San Diego Union-Tribune.

In the mid-1970s, Dr. Johnson gave up medicine to write inspiratio­nal books for children, all with the word “value” in the title, such as “The Value of Honesty: The Story of Confucius.”

By the early 1980s, he discovered a new formula, teaming with management consultant Kenneth Blanchard on “The One-Minute Manager,” which urged businesspe­ople to connect with their workers by spending a full minute giving sincere praise (or, if necessary,a reprimand).

Dr. Johnson and Mr. Blanchard sold thousands of self-published copies of “The One-Minute Manager,” incorporat­ing changes suggested by business leaders.

“That’s what we call writing for the marketplac­e,” Dr. Johnson said.

When “The One-Minute Manager” was picked up in 1982 by a New York publisher, Morrow, it became an instant bestseller. It also represente­d a marketing triumph for the authors, who insisted that it carry the steep cover price of $15, despite having barely 100 pages of text. It came with a money-back guarantee.

Dr. Johnson then spun off a series of follow-ups, including “The One-Minute Father,” “The One-Minute Mother” and “One Minute for Myself.”

“It’s the one minute you stop during the day and look at what you’re thinking and what you’re doing,” he said in 1986. “The real key is that quiet time you listen for your own wisdom.”

Listening to his inner wisdom or perhaps the voice of opportunit­y, Dr. Johnson later embarked on his signature literary effort, “Who Moved My Cheese?”

Subtitled “An A-Mazing Way to Deal With Change in Your Work and in Your Life,” the 94-page book, published in 1998,became a No. 1 bestseller, largely through word of mouth and the testimonia­ls of chief executives from such companies as Procter & Gambleand Hewlett-Packard.

The book is a parable built around four characters: two mice, named Sniff and Scurry, and two people, Hem and Haw. All four live in a maze and survive happily on cheese until one day their cheese disappears.

The mice immediatel­y scamper away to find a new source of cheese, while Hem and Haw grouse about their fate and their growing hunger.

Eventually, in this tale of mice and men, Haw decides the mice are right, and he goes off to discover what may be in store around the next corner.

He scrawls helpful tips on the walls of the maze, such as “The Quicker You Let Go of Old Cheese, the Sooner You Find New Cheese.”

The lesson, as old as commerce itself, is that it pays to adapt to changing circumstan­ces.

People ate it up, so to speak. Although the book never reveals who actually moved the cheese, “Who Moved My Cheese?” was studied in business schools, was distribute­d by the thousands to employeesa­nd was applied to endeavorso­f every kind.

Even though the Financial Timesdescr­ibed “Who Moved My Cheese?” as “a 94-page work of stupefying banality,” that didn’t stop it from being translated into 44 languages and selling more than 28 million copies. Dr. Johnson reportedly kept 50 percent of the originalco­ver price of $19.95.

For some people, Dr. Johnson’s cheese metaphor had an almost magical quality. Others scoffed that an idea that could mean anything reallyhad no meaning at all.

“Smell the Cheese Often,” notes one of the book’s pungent pieces of advice, “So You KnowWhen It Is Getting Old.”

Others, however, found “Cheese” ripe for mockery, and one parody was published with the inevitable title of “Who Cut the Cheese?”

Patrick Spencer Johnson was born Nov. 24, 1938, in Watertown, S.D., and grew up in Los Angeles. His father was a builder and investor.

Dr. Johnson graduated from the University of Southern California in 1963 and from the Royal College of Surgeonsin Dublin in 1968.

He abandoned medicine, he said, after concluding that the underlying causes of illness were largely rooted in the mind rather than the body. He published more than a dozen children’s books before embarking on his “One-Minute” series in the 1980s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States