- GSB Priorities
- Ways to Give
- The GSB's Vital Role
- Campaign Leadership
- Campaign News
- Events
- Campaign FAQs
- Highlights in Giving
- Contact Us
Related Sites
The GSB and The Stanford Challenge:
Delivering on Our Vision
As I approach my last spring quarter as dean, I reflect back on the transformations
underway at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and owe a debt of gratitude
to you, our many steadfast alumni and friends who have made these dramatic
changes possible. Since the launch of The Stanford Challenge, we have embarked on
implementing a vision for the school that will have significant impact on generations of
future students, faculty, and alumni. In turn, their collective impact will multiply—surely
in ways that I could not have imagined when I first came to the GSB as a student, nor even
when I first started as dean in the midst of the technology bubble.
Given my 10 years in this role, I am all the more convinced
that our mission has never been more important or relevant to
modern society. Most people around the world either work in or
have their lives impacted by managed organizations. Yet, there
remains a critical shortage of managerial leadership. As a school,
we have never taken for granted our leadership in management
education, but rather have embraced the opportunity to
constantly innovate. In fact, we have taken our unique strengths
to heart and directed them in new ways to bring our mission
to life.
For all the progress that we are making, you also have heard by
now of the tough choices and economic realities that the school
has addressed in the current financial climate. I assure you that
as careful stewards of your support, we are making decisions to
ensure the long-term success of the GSB. We are on a trajectory
to continue to do great things. But we still have much to
accomplish toward fully realizing the potential of the redesigned
curriculum, strengthening collaborations throughout Stanford,
and building the Knight Management Center as our new home.
I am grateful that despite these challenging times, you continue
to give back with your time, expertise, and financial commitment
toward our shared vision. Annual and reunion giving is critical to
the school’s operating revenues. With only half the cost of a GSB
education covered by tuition, your support allows us to maintain
a financial model that gives us the agility that few of our peer
institutions are able to emulate. And through your investments
in increased faculty support, the school is at the forefront of
creating ideas that advance our understanding of management
and the complexity of the challenges we face as a society. The
creation of new professorships and endowed faculty awards are
essential to recruit, retain, and develop the next generation of
faculty leaders.
Combined with your support of curricular innovations and
student financial aid, we are preparing our students with both
the skills and the self-knowledge to lead change for the better
throughout their careers. And without so many of you stepping
forward, we could not have begun construction last fall on the
Knight Management Center—necessitated by our ambitious
plans to forge new ways of teaching and learning, faculty
collaborations, and interaction with the broader community.
The progress of the campaign to date speaks volumes about
our collective belief in the ideas we generate and the education
we provide at the GSB. As volunteer leaders and investors, you
also serve as catalysts for our enhanced role within Stanford
University. I am privileged to have served the school and
Stanford as dean, and thank you for the generosity you
continue to demonstrate toward the school’s priorities.
-Robert L. Joss
Philip H. Knight Professor and Dean
Sloan '66, MBA '67, PhD '70

