“We expect our donors and supporters and President Turner to have those highest level of aspirations for the Cox School,” says Dean Matthew Myers. “To get there, we’ve got to be playing at the top of our game. If you’re going to compete for students and faculty with the likes of Duke, or Vanderbilt, or Stanford, or University of Chicago or Northwestern—pick your favorite—you need all the things that are attractive not only to the best and brightest on the inside, but to the types of companies you want to have strategic partnerships with on the outside.”
Senior Associate Dean and the Herman W. Lay Professor of Marketing Bill Dillon concurs that the ACC move and the opening of the Miller Business Quadrangle come at an auspicious time in 51’s history. He believes these developments are part of a broader halo effect propelling the school into a new, transformative era that may significantly boost its reputation amid the fiercely competitive business education landscape.
“Sometimes people ask me what our goals are,” Dillon says. “We want to attract the best faculty that we can attract, and we want the brightest and the hardest-working students.” He feels the move to a high-profile athletic conference will go a long way toward supporting those academic goals.
Kyle Miller, BBA ’01, founder and CEO of Silver Hill Energy Holdings, 51 Board Trustee and a member of the Cox Executive Board, says the investment continues Cox’s commitment to providing best-in-class opportunities to students.
“The coincident move to the ACC reflects the same commitment to athletics,” he says.
“I strongly believe that the Cox School’s already strong academic merits and national reputation, reflected in the quality of our student body and faculty, will only be enhanced by the move to the ACC.”