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Announcing the Boston University Questrom School of Business

Record gift renames SMG Questrom School of Business

BOSTON UNIVERSITY TRUSTEE ALLEN QUESTROM (BSBA’64, Hon.’15), retired chief executive officer of several of the nation’s largest department and specialty stores, and his wife, Kelli (Hon.’15), have given Boston University $50 million, the largest gift in University history, through The Allen & Kelli Questrom Foundation. The gift, which includes $10 million given in 2012, renames the School of Management the Questrom School of Business. It will be used to endow 10 faculty chairs and enable planning to establish a new graduate program facility.

“We are enormously grateful for this magnificent gift,” says Kenneth W. Freeman, the School’s Allen Questrom Professor and Dean. “Allen Questrom is a retailing industry icon, having restored to profitability many companies during his turnaround career, while demonstrating the highest integrity, exceptional leadership, and tireless service in support of others.” The endowed deanship and professorship were given by the Questroms in 2006.

“The gift is transformational, enabling us to attract outstanding faculty widely recognized for excellence in research and teaching who will contribute meaningfully to our mission of educating ethical, innovative business leaders,” Freeman adds. “With the Questroms’ generous support, we will be able to accelerate our transformation and better prepare the next generation of bold leaders.”

“This is a singular moment in the history of the School and the University,” says President Robert A. Brown. “The gift will both propel the School on the path of increased impact and quality and will forever associate it with the name of one of the most distinguished businessmen in America and one of Boston University’s most distinguished graduates.”

Brown says the 10 new professors will enhance the research and teaching of the Questrom School of Business, “while shifting a portion of the cost of the salaries and benefits of these distinguished faculty members from tuition to the endowment.”

The Questroms’ donation also provides seed funding for the School to plan the addition of a new 60,000-square-foot classroom space that will connect to its existing building. Since moving into its current home in 1996, the School has expanded significantly. The building was originally designed to accommodate 1,700 students, but now welcomes 3,500 undergraduate and graduate students.

The gift comes two and a half years after BU announced its first-ever comprehensive fundraising campaign, with a target of $1 billion. BU is the first university to set a $1 billion goal for a first campaign. The $50 million pledge brings the campaign total to $835 million, and the University is on track to meet its overall goal well before the scheduled completion date of 2017.

Questrom says he and Kelli take great pride and pleasure in being able to pay forward the blessings of a combination of good luck and hard work that have enriched their lives, beginning with Allen Questrom’s education at Boston University. “When one looks at where investment can do the most good,” he says, “you have to think of innovation in our schools, because second only to the positive influence of family values, the route to earned success is to be well educated.

“I would hope that students, as they go through school and into a career, will periodically reflect on their life, to pay mental homage to the people who helped them along the way,” Questrom says, “and to recognize that as they ‘make good,’ they have a responsibility to ‘do good,’ to pay it forward by helping the next generation. And I believe that our colleges and universities are a real pivotal point on each generation: how well we educate our students determines how well each generation will deal with the issues of its time.”

Swapping “management” for “business” in the School’s new name, the dean says, reflects the latter word’s greater scope, “representing the vast and vibrant range of industries, encompassing everything from for-profit to nonprofit enterprises around the world, for which we aim to prepare our students.”

Read more about the Questroms.