Purdue Honors Former Indiana Governor By Naming Its B-School After Him
Purdue University Unveils New B-School Name, Searches For New Dean
Purdue University Unveils New B-School Name, Searches For New Dean

Purdue University’s reimagined business school will be named the Mitchell E. Daniels Jr. School of Business, after the 12th university president, who stepped down in December. Courtesy photo

In September, Purdue University announced that it was “reimagining its current School of Management into a new School of Business,” in what it dubbed the last big initiative to be unveiled during university President Mitch Daniels’ decade-long tenure.

Much has changed since: In November, B-school Dean David Hummels, who has led the school since 2014, announced that he would step down in July. The next month, Daniels retired as university president; Mung Chiang, dean of engineering and executive vice president of strategic initiatives, took over effective January 1.

Purdue announced the latest news in a busy winter last week, unveiling the official name of a business school with big plans for the future: The Mitchell E. Daniels Jr. School of Business.

WHAT’S IN A NAME

The reimagined Daniels School – the leadership of which has stated their aspiration to make a top-10 business school – honors the legacy of Purdue’s 12th president, who previously served as Indiana’s 49th governor. It is the last big strategic initiative in the university’s Purdue Moves plan under Daniels’ watch.

“To be associated with any aspect of Purdue’s academic enterprise is an inestimable honor, but this one in particular touches me deeply,” Daniels says in a school release. “Practiced with integrity, business careers are the noblest of life choices; they create new jobs and wealth for others and bring into being the resources which the public and nonprofit sectors take to pursue their goals. This modernized School of Business will send out its graduates armed with a sense of mission and the tools to fulfill that mission in the most complex of enterprises.”

The Daniels School will retain the Krannert name for its graduate programs which has carried the moniker since 1962 when Herman and Ellnora Krannert gifted a $2.7 million endowment to the university. It was previously named the Krannert Graduate School of Industrial Administration, but dropped “industrial administration” in the 1970s. The Krannert name became a catchall for Purdue business programming in the 1980s, though its undergraduates students were never technically Krannert Management grads.

Daniel served in top executive posts in an 11-year career at Eli Lilly and Company, including president of Eli Lilly’s North American pharmaceutical operations and senior vice president for corporate strategy and policy. He also has served as CEO of the Hudson Institute, a major contract research organization, and on the boards of a number of public and private companies, including Penske Entertainment, Norfolk Southern Corp. and Interactive Intelligence.