SMG Receives $10 Million Gift
Allen and Kelli Questrom Foundation endows two professorships
Allen Questrom (SMG’64), retired chief executive officer of several of the nation’s largest department and specialty stores, and his wife, Kelli, have made a second major gift to Boston University, giving $10 million from the Allen & Kelli Questrom Foundation to the School of Management, which Allen Questrom credits with launching his 39-year career as a leader in retail management.
The $10 million gift will endow two professorships and kick-start plans for a new School of Management executive education center, according to Kenneth Freeman, the Allen Questrom Professor and Dean of SMG. “This represents one of the most significant gifts in the history of the School of Management, as we approach our 100th anniversary in 2013,” says Freeman, who describes Questrom as “an icon of corporate America.” While details of the endowed chairs are being worked out, he says, the professorships will have many indirect impacts as the faculty increases its emphasis on ethics in business. “That’s the beauty of the Questrom name, which is synonymous with business success, business results, and the highest integrity,” Freeman says.
“We are grateful that Allen and Kelli Questrom share with us a vision for the future of the School of Management, and that they are willing to so generously help make our aspirations a reality,” says BU President Robert A. Brown. “Their gift will help to attract and support distinguished faculty members and seed the fundraising for a new extension to the school’s facilities. Together these initiatives will further strengthen the quality of the education available to our students, and help place the School of Management in the forefront of business schools worldwide.”
This is the Questroms’ second major gift to SMG. In 2007, the Allen & Kelli Questrom Foundation gave $4 million for the endowed deanship and professorship. Former SMG Dean Louis Lataif (SMG’61, Hon.’90) was the first Allen Questrom Professor and Dean, the chair now held by Freeman. The chair is the only endowed deanship at BU. Questrom, a member of the BU Board of Trustees, is a former chairman of the board and chief executive officer of the JCPenney Company, Neiman Marcus, Barneys New York, and Federated Department Stores, Inc., which today is known as Macy’s.
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Endowing the two professorships “is very important,” says Freeman, “as we up the ante on our research capability and credibility” at the national and international levels. “What we aspire to do is become one of the world’s elite business schools.” Endowment of faculty chairs will help fuel that rise, Freeman says, “because a large part of what is used to evaluate business programs is faculty capability in terms of research output.” SMG now has 11 endowed professorships, and the dean hopes to double that number.
Questrom spent most of his career in retailing with Federated Department Stores, Inc., rising from management trainee in 1964 to the corporation’s youngest chairman and chief executive officer in 1990. He brought the company out of bankruptcy in 1993, and in 1995 engineered the acquisition of rivals Broadway Department Stores and the R. H. Macy Company, Inc. He retired in 1997, and returned to retailing a year later as chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Barneys New York, Inc., bringing the fashion emporium out of bankruptcy in 1999, and creating a new division of Barneys, the Coop Stores. From September 2000 through 2004, he served as chairman and chief executive officer of the JCPenney Company, leading a successful turnaround of the corporation’s department store, catalog, and internet businesses.
Questrom has served since 2006 as a senior advisor of Lee Equity Partners, LLC. He is a member of the board of directors of Sotheby’s Holdings, Inc., Foot Locker, Inc., and the Glazer Family of Companies, and is on the board of advisors of The Robin Report, which provides insight into consumer product industries. Questrom is a member of the Board of Trustees of Boston University as well as the board of trustees of the Aspen Music Festival and School.
Kelli Questrom is a trustee of both the Dallas Museum of Art and the Aspen Art Museum, where she and her husband are major donors, through the Allen & Kelli Questrom Foundation, to the museums’ education departments. They are also members of the Aspen Museum’s National Council, as well as the National Committee of the Whitney Museum of American Art, where the foundation has endowed the docented tours for students program. Kelli Questrom is also a member of the board of trustees of the Aspen Santa Fe Ballet. As proponents of the principles of liberty, increasing individual opportunity, and free enterprise, the Questroms are members of the National Council of the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, one of the nation’s oldest and most respected think tanks.
Allen Questrom says he’s “totally amazed” at how much BU has evolved and improved since his days as a student here. He lauds the achievements of Brown, saying, “I believe Dr. Brown is going to make sure that we have a continuation of our advancing standards at Boston University.”
“It’s a remarkable gift,” says Freeman, “and a remarkable commitment to our faculty.”
Additional videography by Phil Zekos, Mark Helton, Chris Palmer, and Nancy Marrs.
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