List of University of Michigan business alumni
- The parent article is at List of University of Michigan alumni
Academic unit key | ||
---|---|---|
Symbol | Academic unit | |
ARCH | Taubman College | |
BUS | Ross School of Business | |
COE | College of Engineering | |
DENT | School of Dentistry | |
GFSPP | Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy | |
HHRS | Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies | |
LAW | Law School | |
LSA | College of LS&A | |
MED | Medical School | |
SMTD | School of Music, Theatre and Dance | |
PHARM | School of Pharmacy | |
SED | School of Education | |
SNRE | School of Natural Resources | |
SOAD | The Stamps School of Art & Design | |
SOI | School of Information | |
SON | School of Nursing | |
SOK | School of Kinesiology | |
SOSW | School of Social Work | |
SPH | School of Public Health | 1941 |
MDNG | Matriculated, did not graduate |
This is a list of business alumni from the University of Michigan.
Advertising and marketing
- Leo Burnett (BA 1914), journalism, advertising pioneer; founded the Leo Burnett Company in 1935 with $50,000 of borrowed money
- Patrick LaForge, President and CEO of the Edmonton Oilers
Billionaires
- J. Robert Beyster (COE: BSE, MS, Ph.D.), chairman, president, and CEO of Science Applications International Corporation
- Kenneth B. Dart (COE: 1976), businessman and Caymanian billionaire
- William Davidson (BUS: BBA 1947), finance and entertainment; founder of the William Davidson Institute at the Ross School of Business; his son Ethan, a Michigan graduate, inherits control of his foundation
- Bharat Desai (BUS: MBA 1981), co-founder, president, and CEO of Syntel; Indian billionaire
- Stanley Druckenmiller (MDNG: Ph.D., Econometrics), formerly worked with George Soros; co-founded Duquesne Capital
- Henry Engelhardt (B.A.), founder and Chief Executive of Admiral Group, a British motor insurance company; English billionaire
- Brad Keywell (BUS: BBA 1991; LAW: JD 1993), co-founder and principal of Groupon
- Bobby Kotick (born 1963) is an American businessman who currently serves as president and CEO of Activision Blizzard, a member of the S&P 500.
- Eric Paul Lefkofsky (J.D. 1993), serial entrepreneur; angel investor in Groupon; on Forbes' 2011 list of billionaires
- Doug Meijer (BS), net worth of $4.2 billion; son of Frederik G. H. Meijer
- Hank Meijer (BA Literature 1973), net worth of $4.2 billion; oldest son of Frederik G. H. Meijer
- Tom S. Monaghan (MDNG), founder and former owner of Domino's Pizza
- Charlie Munger (MDNG), Vice Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway; donated in excess of $25 million for library and Lawyers Club renovations and $110 million for graduate housing and graduate fellowships
- Larry Page (COE: BSE 1995), co-founder of Google
- Jorge M. Perez (B.A., M.U.P 1976), real estate developer
- Stephen M. Ross (BUS: BBA 1962), real estate developer; donated $100 million to the Ross School of Business, named in his honor in 2004 and in 2013 $200 million, split evenly between the Ross School of Business and Athletics Department, making him the largest donor in Michigan's history.
- Dr. Homer Stryker (MED: M.D. 1925; D. 1980), founder of medical device company Stryker Corporation
- A. Alfred Taubman (MDNG: HLLD 1948), founder of the Taubman Company; his cumulative lifetime donations total roughly $141 million, making him the second largest donor in Michigan's history
- Preston Robert (Bob) Tisch (A.B. 1948), chairman of the Loews Corporation; United States Postmaster General (1986–88); former owner of 50% of the New York Giants; his wife, Joan Tisch (UM graduate, AB 1948) has replaced him on the Forbes 400 list
- Bruce Wasserstein (AB), mergers and acquisitions specialist
- Sam Wyly (BUS: MBA 1957), serial entrepreneur; owner of the Bonanza Restaurants chain
- Samuel Zell (LAW: AB 1963, JD 1966), real estate developer; founder of Equity Office Properties (EOP); former chairman of the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts
- Niklas Zennström (MDNG), sold his share of internet telephony company Skype to eBay
Entrepreneurs
- Dave Barger, President and Chief Operating Officer of JetBlue; CEO as of 2007
- Steve Blank (MDNG), serial entrepreneur, founder and/or part of eight Silicon Valley startups
- Henry W. Bloch (BS 1944), co-founder and former president of H&R Block Inc.
- Louis Borders (BA 1969) co-founded Borders with brother Tom (MA 1966)
- Edward Conard (BSE 1978) founding partner at Bain Capital
- Donald N. Frey (BS MTL 1947, MSE 1949, PhD 1951, D. Eng. hon. 1967), chairman and CEO of Bell & Howell for 17 years; received the National Medal of Technology in 1990
- Jacques Habra
- James John (J.J.) Hagerman (1857, industrialist who owned mines, railroads and corporate farms in the American West in the late 19th century and early 20th century; one of the most influential men in territorial New Mexico
- Gerrard Wendell "(G.W.)" Haworth (COE: MA), founding chairman of Haworth, Inc., a manufacturer of office environments that grew from a garage-shop venture in 1948 to a $1.4 billion global corporation
- Andrew Heiberger, founder, owner, and CEO of Buttonwood Development and Town Residential
- Denise Illitch (BA 1977), president of privately held Ilitch Holdings, which manages the Detroit Tigers, Detroit Red Wings, Little Caesars, Fox Theatre, and other Detroit-area businesses; owner and publisher of Ambassador Magazine; owner of Denise Ilitch Designs; of counsel at the law firm Clark Hill
- Elle Kaplan (BA), founder and CEO of LexION Capital Management
- Gregg Kaplan (AB), president and chief operating officer of change-sorting company Coinstar, which now owns Redbox
- Tom Kemp, co-founder of Centrify
- Brad Keywell (BUS: BBA 1991; LAW: JD 1993), serial entrepreneur
- John Koza (MA Mathematics 1966; BA 1964, MS 1966, Ph. D 1972 Computer Science), venture capitalist; consulting professor in the department of electrical engineering at Stanford University; co-founder of Scientific Games Corporation, where he co-invented the scratch-off instant lottery ticket
- Mark Pieloch, pet pharmaceuticals
- Bhargav Sri Prakash (COE: MEng in Automotive Engineering, 2000), serial entrepreneur, hedge fund manager
- Benjamin D. Pritchard (LAW: JD), American Civil War general who captured Jefferson Davis; State Treasurer of Michigan (1880-1884); organizer and first president (1870–1905) of the First National Bank of Allegan; founded the First State Bank, which was the first bank in the county to be designated as a state depository, the first savings bank, and the first bank to install safety deposit boxes
- Andrew Stenzler (A.B.), co-chairman and CEO of Xando Cosí Inc.
- Charles Rudolph Walgreen, Jr. (PHC 1928, HMS 1951, HLHD 1992), son of the founder of Walgreens drugstores; took over the company presidency in 1939 at age 33; steered the company through World War II and the post-war boom; in 2005, in acknowledgment of his $10 million donation, the university named its new facility the Charles R. Walgreen Jr. Drama Center
Hospitality and travel industries
- Ralph Bahna (BA 1964), CEO of Cunard Line (1980–1989); Chairman of Priceline.com (2004–2013); founder of Club Quarters[1]
Industrials
- Robert Beverley Evans, automobile industry executive, founder of Evans Industries; chairman of American Motors Corporation
- Edgar N. Gott, co-founder and first president of The Boeing Company; executive at Consolidated Aircraft
- Mark N. Greene (MA, Ph.D in economics), CEO and member of the board of FICO (Fair Isaac Corporation) since 2007
- James P. Hoffa (LAW: LLB 1966), attorney; son of Jimmy Hoffa; president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters since 1999
- C. Robert Kidder (COE: BS IE 1967), CEO of Borden Chemical 1995-2002; Principal, Stonehenge Partners, Inc., since 2004; appointed chairman of the restructured Chrysler Group LLC in 2009; former lead director of Morgan Stanley; ran 3Stone Advisors, a Columbus, Ohio, investment firm focusing on clean-technology start-ups
- Temel Kotil (COE: MA 1986, MA 1987, PH.D. 1991), CEO of Turkish Airlines
- Jerry W. Levin (B.S.E), businessman
- Timothy M. Manganello (BSME 1972, MSME 1975), CEO of BorgWarner; member of the Board of BorgWarner (2002-, as Chairman, 2003-)
- William J. Olcott, president of the Oliver Iron Mining Company 1909-1928; president of the Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway 1901-1909
- Thomas F. Olin (BA Economics 1952), chairman and co-CEO of Archway Cookies; worked in clandestine service for the CIA
- Mervin Pregulman, played for the Wolverines (1941–43) and in the NFL with the Green Bay Packers (1946), Detroit Lions (1947–48), and New York Bulldogs (1949); went on to a successful business career as president and CEO of Siskin Steel & Supply Co. in Chattanooga, Tennessee
- Frederic L. Smith (1890); co-founder of the Olds Motor Works in 1899; co-founder of General Motors Corporation in 1908
- Louis Carlyle Walker (BA 1896), industrialist, philanthropist, political figure; co-founded the Shaw-Walker Company in 1899 and became sole owner in 1902; important figure in history of Muskegon, Michigan[2] benefactor and namesake of the L. C. Walker Arena
- Thomas J. Wilson (BS 1970), Chairman and CEO of Allstate Insurance, Incorporated
Internet, software, and hardware
- Jim Buckmaster, CEO of Craigslist
- Dick Costolo (BA), former CEO of Twitter
- Dean Drako (COE), serial entrepreneur; has started more than five companies; founder, president and CEO of Barracuda Networks
- Patrick Gross (COE: MSE 1966), co-founder and executive committee chairman (emeritus) of American Management Systems, Inc., a $3.1 billion, 25,000 employee technology consulting firm; presiding/lead director of Capital One Financial Corporation, and Computer Network Technology Corporation
- David Kalt (BA 1989); co-founder of OptionsXpress, sold to Charles Schwab in 2011 for more than $1 billion
- Kevin O'Connor (COE: BSE EE 1983), co-founder and CEO of DoubleClick Inc.
Mergers, acquisitions, and turn-arounds
- David A. Brandon (AB 1974), Chairman and CEO of Domino's Pizza
- Gerald MacDonald (AB 1960), CEO of Manufacturers National Bank
- Ronald L. Olson (JD: Law 1966), name partner at Munger Tolles & Olson; RAND Corporation Chairman, Board of Trustees (former); member of the board of Munger, Tolles & Olson Chairman; member of the board of Berkshire Hathaway (1997-); Council on Foreign Relations board of directors
- Bruce Wasserstein (AB 1967), CEO of Lazard Freres, founder of Wasserstein Perella & Co.
Finance
- Jason DeYonker, founder and Managing Partner of Forté Capital Advisors, a private equity firm; board member of Academi, formerly known as Blackwater
- David S. Evans (BGS) - Chairman and Chief Investment Office of Glencoe Capital[3][4]
- Paul Kangas, figure on Nightly Business Report on PBS (1979–2009; anchor 1990-2009)[5]
- Charles Edward Merrill (attended Law School from 1906-07 but did not graduate), co-founder of Merrill Lynch
- Scott Seligman, real estate developer, the founder of the Sterling Bank and Trust, and minority owner of the San Francisco Giants major league baseball team
- Boaz Weinstein (BA 1995), derivatives trader and hedge fund manager; formed Saba Capital Management
Not-for-profit
- Jo Ivey Boufford (AB; MED: MD with distinction), Foreign Secretary for the Institute of Medicine; U.S. representative on the Executive Board of the World Health Organization during the Clinton administration; director of the King's Fund College (1991–93); president of the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation (1985–89) during the Ed Koch mayoralty; Principal Deputy and Acting Assistant Secretary for Health in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration; elected in 2006 as president of the New York Academy of Medicine
- Dale Carlson (SPH: MA), first chief communications officer for the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
- Simeon Djankov (PhD), Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Bulgaria
- Steven K. Hamp (MMP), President of The Henry Ford, 1996–2005; member of the Board of McKinley Corporation (2007-); member of the board of Visteon (2001–05 and 2008-)
- Raynard S. Kington (B.S.; SOM: M.D.), President of Grinnell College; former Principal Deputy Director of the National Institutes of Health (2003–10), briefly served as acting director of NIH (2008–09); elected to the Institute of Medicine in 2006
- William Andrew Paton, first editor of The Accounting Review
- Teresa "Teri" Takai (BA, MA), current Assistant Secretary of Defense for Networks and Information Integration and CIO after being appointed by President Obama; former chief information officer of the State of California;[6] former CIO and then director of the Michigan Department of Information Technology (MDIT); worked for 30 years at Ford Motor Company
References
- ↑ Arnold, Laurence (2014-02-28). "Ralph Bahna, Innovator Who Led Cunard, Priceline, Dies at 71". Bloomberg News. Retrieved 2014-03-22.
- ↑ http://www.mlive.com/news/muskegon/index.ssf/2010/10/looking_back_death_takes_louis.html
- ↑ http://www.glencap.com/team.asp
- ↑ http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=86801&privcapId=44434384&previousCapId=24468795&previousTitle=Stockwell%20Capital%20LLC
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/07/business/media/07pbs.html
- ↑ "Gov. Schwarzenegger Appoints California's First State CIO; AeA Celebrates Involvement..." Reuters Dec 6, 2007, Accessed Dec 6, 2007.
External links
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