Cornell University The Johnson School at Cornell University

2005 Headlines

Johnson School Alumni give $1.5 Million to Annual Fund in '04-'05

Gifts Up 15 Percent As Participation Rate Tops 26 Percent

September 12, 2005, Ithaca, New York The Johnson School at Cornell University is pleased to announce that alumni giving to the school's Annual Fund topped $1.5 million. These gifts are an essential foundation for sustaining a premier management education program.

"We are very pleased with the annual fund results, especially the donor participation rate of twenty-six percent. This is essential to the success of the School in attracting corporate donations as well as bringing us in line with our peer schools," said Marybeth Tarzian, the director of the Johnson School Annual Fund. "We could not have achieved our goals without the tireless efforts of our volunteers and I thank everyone who contributed time, effort and personal resources. It was a great team effort that created a lot of momentum that will continue as we move forward."

The Annual Fund helps to underwrite more than 10% of the Johnson School's annual budget. Annual Fund contributions support the core operations of the Johnson School--teaching, research, technology, student services and the tools the Johnson School provides to the business leaders of the future. In the extremely competitive arena of top-tier business schools, the Annual Fund enables the Johnson School to create new ideas and new curricula.

Gifts to the Annual Fund increased by 15 percent over last year's giving as participation rate grew from 24 percent to 26 percent. According to Director Tarzian, donations increased because of a more consistent model of peer-to-peer solicitation program which includes identifying, recruiting, and training a group of highly valued alumni volunteers for the Dean's Leadership Committee and for reunion.

The Johnson School at Cornell University, founded in 1946, is Cornell's graduate school of management. The Johnson School combines leading edge intellectual capital with "real time, real world" business practice and is among the top business schools in the world. Opportunities for experiential learning, such as immersion programs and student-run venture capital and mutual funds, distinguish the Johnson School's curricula. Programs include MBA and doctoral degrees, a twelve-month MBA option for students with advanced degrees in science or engineering and an executive MBA. The Johnson School is located at the center of Cornell University-the largest of the Ivy League schools and one of the world's top research institutions. For more about the Johnson School please visit: www.johnson.cornell.edu.

For More Information
Randall Sawyer
Public Relations Officer
607 255-8006
rs348@cornell.edu