SLM May/June 2023

Page 30

THE HIVE

HIGH PROFILE

Lessons Learned University of Utah’s president reflects on his first turbulent year BY HE ATHER HAYES

EAT, SLEEP, LEARN UofU’s Lassonde Entrepreneur Institute opened its doors in 2016. One of the first buildings of its kind, it offers students a combined residential and learning space complete with studios where they can not only eat, sleep and socialize but also build prototypes and launch companies. Randall plans to model the success of the Lassonde with the Impact and Prosperity Center which will contain two research centers: the Sorenson Impact Center and the Center for Business, Health and Prosperity, in addition to housing nearly 800 students.

Randall, University of Utah’s then-dean of the David Eccles School of Business, stood before a tough crowd. There were no hardball questions about research funding, campus safety, equity or graduation rates. Rather, Randall encouraged his daughter’s classmates to find their passion at Clayton Middle School Career Day. “I remember that speech,” says Randall, whose appointment in 2021 as president of the University of Utah has thrust him into the limelight. “It’s true,” he says of a story he shared with the kids, “I did want to be a pro basketball player when I was their age. I lived and breathed basketball, but unfortunately I stopped growing at 5-foot, 9-inches…and I couldn’t jump. It was very clear to me early on that I was in deep trouble.” While Randall may not be living out his NBA fantasies, he says he is living the dream with a career in education.

PURSUING PASSION The first Utes alum in 50 years to lead his alma mater, the accounting major enrolled at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, where he spent eight years earning an MBA and Ph.D. in operations and information management. “I knew I needed to earn a living, but I wanted something with intrinsic value,” he says. “While at Wharton, I really began to admire my professors. They could work on projects they were passionate about and remain intellectually curious, and they could instill confidence in

28 SALTLAKEMAGAZINE.COM | M AY/JUNE 2 0 2 3

their students. I loved the idea that, like them, I could build organizations and also build people.” After nearly accepting a teaching position with the University of Chicago, Randall felt a tug toward the Wasatch mountain range. “The job market in Utah academics is thin, so I felt lucky to get a job as a professor of accounting at the UofU in the late ’90s.” Several teaching awards and a decade later, his 2009 appointment to dean of the business school likely came as no surprise to those within the department. In the succeeding decade, under his watch, it grew five-fold and its entrepreneurial program ranked 5th in the country. Now leading the charge for the entire University since August 2021, Randall is brimming with plans for the school that “give everyone else FOMO,” but he rejects being credited as the one with all the great ideas. “I wouldn’t describe myself as an ‘ideas guy,’ but I think I am someone who recognizes great ideas and gives them a chance,” he says. “That’s the fun part of my job: meeting people who have energy and passion around their great idea—and then clearing the path for it. I hope at the end of the day, that is what I’m known for.”

‘COMMUTER CAMPUS’ NO MORE As Randall works to add “5,000 beds in five years” to accommodate the University’s growth and change its long-standing reputation as a “commuter school” (citing data that shows on-campus students do better than their off-campus

counterparts), he says he envisions variations of the Lassonde Institute popping up all over campus, like the Impact and Prosperity Center that broke ground last September (see sidebar). “I think we’re in a moment where universities have to completely redefine the relationship they have with students and their community,” says Randall. “A student today isn’t like a student 20 or 30 years ago. A teacher’s job is no longer to disseminate information, but to teach students how to use the information at their fingertips.”

‘WHO WE INCLUDE’ Randall is taking seriously the concern among some that an internal hire—particularly a hometown white man—is perpetuating what some see as the “establishment” rather than a pivot. How to be more inclusive of a changing student body demographic and addressing campus safety top his priority list. In March, the U held its first-ever campus safety conference with Jill McCluskey as the opening speaker. Her daughter Lauren was killed on the U’s campus in 2018. McCluskey acknowledged the safety improvements made at the U since but emphasized the improvements still needed, especially concerning crosscampus communication. When it comes to inclusiveness, Randall recognized his limitations upon taking office and created a transition team to improve outcomes. Composed of a broad cross-section of the university from students to hospital staff to depart-

PHOTOS: (LEFT) LASSONDE ENTREPRENEUR INSTITUTE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH; (RIGHT) ADAM FINKLE

S

I X Y E A R S A G O , Taylor


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

What’s Next for Junior’s Tavern?

7min
pages 116-117

Bar Fly ACME BAR IS AN ESCAPIST’S PARADISE

11min
pages 113-116

ON THE TABLE

5min
pages 110-113

ON THE TABLE

18min
pages 104-109

ON THE TABLE

6min
pages 102-103

Moon Bakery

8min
pages 98-101

Move Over, Corn Dogs

14min
pages 92-97

WHERE TO EAT

3min
pages 90-91

Indulge Korean Cuisine Cravings To-Go

1min
pages 87-89

WHAT ABOUT THOSE BYOB RULES?

0
pages 85-86

PARK CITY SONGS OF SUMMER

1min
pages 84-85

FROM THE TOP DOWN

2min
pages 82-83

WHO’S FUNDING THESE CHANGES?

0
page 82

Top of the Stack

1min
pages 80-81

Park City NOT JUST A SANDWICH

0
pages 79-80

RUSTIC INN AT JACKSON HOLE

1min
pages 77-78

GROUP BUNGALOWS KEY LARGO

2min
pages 75-76

RIVER RETREAT LODGE

5min
pages 72-75

SO, YOU WANT TO PLAY DUNGEONS & DRAGONS

1min
page 67

SIDON

0
pages 65-66

TAVERN…’

2min
page 64

ERIEVE

3min
pages 62-63

EVERYONE IS PLAYING DUNGEONS & DRAGONS

2min
pages 60-61

SANDWICHES OF DISTINCTION

20min
pages 50-59

THE ‘OLD’ FRIENDS LUNCH

0
page 49

The Weekend Lunch

0
page 49

The Buffet Lunch

0
page 48

THE FOOD HALL LUNCH

1min
pages 47-48

The Power Lunch

2min
pages 46-47

LET ’ S TA K E L U N C H BACK! LUNCH LO V E YOUR LEARN TO

0
page 45

‘Oh, the Places You’ll Go!’

2min
pages 38-45

JOURNEY WONDERFUL ON AN AWARD-WINNING EUROPEAN VACATION

0
pages 36-37

LEAVING SO SOON?

1min
pages 35-36

Adventures Top of Your National Park Bucket List

2min
pages 33-34

Lessons Learned

4min
pages 30-32

HOLES IN THE WALL

1min
pages 28-30

How Do You Climb Kilimanjaro?

3min
pages 24-25

HOW TO HIKE WITH YOUR DOG!

1min
page 22

THE HIVE FESTIVALS

1min
pages 20-21

The Hive

0
page 19

WHAT’S NEXT AT YOUR NEW MORE ADDITIONS ARRIVING 2023-2024

0
page 17

‘I’ve Been Everywhere’

1min
pages 16-17

WHAT MAKES A ROLEX A ROLEX?

2min
pages 5-8, 10-12
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.