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Raymond J. Harbert College of Business

Coordinates: 32°36′12″N 85°29′10″W / 32.603374°N 85.486078°W / 32.603374; -85.486078
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond J. Harbert College of Business at Auburn University
MottoInspiring business
TypePublic business school
Established1967; 57 years ago (1967)
Parent institution
Auburn University
DeanJennifer Mueller-Phillips
Undergraduates6,180
Postgraduates977
Location, ,
United States
CampusSmall City
Alumni55,000
Websiteharbert.auburn.edu

The Raymond J. Harbert College of Business, commonly shortened to Harbert College is the business school of Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama. Founded in 1967, it grants both undergraduate and graduate degrees, and is one of the university's 12 constituent schools. Since 2013,[1] the college has been named in honor of Auburn alumnus Raymond J. Harbert, who with his wife Kathryn, gave the college a $40 million gift. Harbert College has over 7,000 students, 136 full-time faculty, 50 part-time instructors, and 98 full-time staff. It is one of the largest business schools in the Southeastern United States.

History

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Leadership and Milestones

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  • In 1967, O.D. “Jack” Turner[2] was appointed the first dean of Auburn University’s new School of Business, which was located in Thach and Tichenor Halls. During Turner’s tenure, the teaching staff increased from 42 to 69, and the Business Advisory Council was established, which prepared the School of Business for entering the accreditation process.
  • In 1973, George Horton[2] became the second School of Business dean. A visionary leader, he served for 11 years and played a key role in creating the most rigorous business program in Alabama and guiding the program into national prominence. He encouraged the faculty’s scholarly output, and he guided the School through the accreditation process with the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). Horton left Auburn in 1984.
  • The third dean, Charles, Kroncke,[2] served for two years (1986-1988), during which time the School of Business became the College of Business, a Ph.D. program was established in Management, the faculty increased to 111 and student enrollment reached 3,600 students.
  • In 1989, Danny Bellenger[2] became the fourth dean of the College of Business. During his three year-tenure, he focused on expanding doctoral programs and establishing an annual giving program.
  • C. Wayne Alderman[2] served as the College of Business’ fifth dean from 1993-2000 and helped further the College’s reputation and advancements, including the formation of the Executive MBA and Physician’s Executive MBA programs.
  • Paul Bobrowski[3] served as the College’s sixth dean from 2004-2010. By the end of his tenure, the college’s MBA program ranks 35th nationally and 75th worldwide in a survey by Financial Times.
  • Bill Hardgrave’s[4] tenure as dean saw incredible growth and transformation, including the establishment of the Office of Professional and Career Development—the first college-embedded career placement resource on Auburn University’s campus; the establishment of the Master of Real Estate Development (MRED) program with Auburn’s College of Architecture, Design and Construction; the launch of Ph.D. programs in Business Analytics and Finance; the opening of the nationally known RFID lab; the transformational $40 million gift from alumni Raymond and Kathryn Harbert and renaming of the College in Mr. Harbert’s honor; and the announcement of a second major gift from Harbert to build a new business building for graduate programs—now known as Horton-Hardgrave Hall.
  • In 2018, Annette Ranft[5] became the eighth dean of the Harbert College of Business. During her three-year tenure, Harbert College had record applications and enrollment in undergraduate and graduate programs, launched a new supply chain management department, grew faculty in strategic areas by 25 percent, and opened the New Venture Accelerator in Auburn’s Research Park.
  • In 2024, Jennifer Mueller-Philips[6] became the ninth dean of Harbert College. The former director of the School of Accountancy, she also served as associate dean for academic affairs, where she worked to advance campus-wide entrepreneurship initiatives, strengthen student recruitment and retention and expand the college’s $1.5 million scholarship program. Currently, Mueller-Phillips holds the title of both dean and Wells Fargo Professor.

Facilities

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The Harbert College of Business is housed in Lowder Hall and Horton-Hardgrave Hall on Auburn University’s campus.  

Lowder Hall includes faculty offices, state-of-the-art instructional classrooms and labs, and administrative offices. The building was named for Edward and Catherine Lowder. Edward Lowder graduated from Auburn in 1932 and later became a Montgomery businessman. Their sons—Bobby, Jimmy and Tom—all graduated from the College of Business.  

Horton-Hardgrave Hall (HHH), which opened in 2019, houses the Harbert College graduate programs and provides some instructional and event spaces. The 100,000-square-foot building is named for two former deans, George Horton (1973-1984) and Bill Hardgrave (2010-2017). The construction of Horton-Hardgrave Hall was made possible through donations, including a $15 million lead gift from 1982 business alumnus Raymond Harbert and wife, Kathryn, also an Auburn graduate.

In 2020, Auburn University opened the New Venture Accelerator, which supports the creation and expansion of business ventures. Current and aspiring business owners learn to conduct market analyses, identify investors and develop pitch strategies through the guidance of a team of Entrepreneurs-in-Residence. The New Venture Accelerator is jointly managed by Harbert College and the Auburn Research and Technology Foundation.

Undergraduate Academics

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For the 2024-2025 academic year, Harbert College of Business has 6,180 undergraduate students enrolled across nine programs: pre-business, marketing, supply chain management, management, information systems management, finance, accounting, business administration and business analytics.

By the time of graduation, 90% of students graduate with real-world experience. The average starting salary for a Harbert College of Business student is $61,381.  

Annually, $1.65 million is awarded to Harbert College of Business students in scholarships.

Graduate Programs

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For the 2024-2025 academic year, Harbert College of Business has 977 students enrolled in Master’s programs and Graduate Certificate programs. Harbert College of Business offers the following Master’s programs: Online MBA, full-time MBA, Master of Real Estate Development, MS in Information Sciences, MS in Supply Chain Management, Master of Accountancy, Executive MBA, MS in Finance and Physician’s Executive MBA.

Ph.D. Programs

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Harbert College doctoral programs prepare candidates for careers in academia. Students can earn a Ph.D. in Finance, Supply Chain Management, Information Systems Management and Management.

There are more than 55,000 Harbert College alumni worldwide. In the 2024-2025 academic year, Harbert College’s diverse student body has representation from 33 countries. 

Rankings

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Harbert College of Business Undergraduate Rankings[7]

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Program Ranking among public institutions
Supply Chain Management #12
Business Analytics #15
Management #20

Harbert College of Business Graduate Rankings[8]

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Ranking (2024) Ranked by:
#10 Online MBA Programs Poets&Quants
#2 Best Online Master’s in Finance Programs Intelligent
#16 Best Executive MBA in USA for Public Institutions Eduniversal
Top 25 North American Graduate Supply Chain Programs Gartner

Faculty Eminent Scholars[9]

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Harbert College of Business faculty conduct research that advances the academy; their academic engagement drives business thought and practice; and their commitment to the student experience shapes the next generation of business leaders. Among these faculty are seven eminent scholars:

  • Brian Connelly, Luck Eminent Scholar: Management
  • O.C. Ferrell, James T. Pursell, Sr. Eminent Scholar of Ethics: Marketing
  • Jimmy, Hilliard, Harbert Eminent Scholar: Finance
  • Dave Ketchen, Harbert Eminent Scholar: Management
  • Franz Lohrke, Lowder Eminent Scholar: Entrepreneurship
  • David Paradice, Harbert Eminent Scholar: Business Analytics
  • Glenn Richey, Harbert Eminent Scholar: Supply Chain Management

Notable Alumni

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Naming gift set Auburn's Harbert College of Business on new trajectory". harbert.auburn.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  2. ^ a b c d e Harris, Scott (1997). History of the College of Business.
  3. ^ "50 Years of Business - Harbert College of Business". harbert.auburn.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  4. ^ "Bill Hardgrave", Wikipedia, 2024-09-14, retrieved 2024-10-23
  5. ^ "Wake Forest names Annette L. Ranft as Dean of the School of Business". Wake Forest University School of Business. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  6. ^ "Auburn names Jennifer Mueller-Phillips as new dean of Harbert College of Business". harbert.auburn.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  7. ^ "Needs headline U.S. News rankings". harbert.auburn.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  8. ^ "Harbert climbs in U.S. News & World Report 2024 online program rankings". harbert.auburn.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  9. ^ "Eminent Scholars". harbert.auburn.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  10. ^ Stan Diel (31 January 2014). "Auburn graduate to be named head of NSA". AL.com. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  11. ^ Mark Inabinett (16 October 2020). "Rookie Jack Driscoll returning to Philadelphia Eagles' lineup". AL.com. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  12. ^ Tim Nail (20 November 2020). "Auburn dedicates Harold D. Melton Student Center". Auburn Plainsman. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  13. ^ Jesus Diaz (7 July 2014). "This was the last flight of the first female US Air Force fighter pilot". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  14. ^ "Ravens". www.baltimoreravens.com. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  15. ^ "Los Angeles Chargers".
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32°36′12″N 85°29′10″W / 32.603374°N 85.486078°W / 32.603374; -85.486078