Business & Society

Stephen R. Covey Joins USU's Jon M. Huntsman School of Business

The Jon M. Huntsman School of Business announced Feb. 18 that Stephen R. C­ovey, an internationally recognized authority on leadership and a best-selling author, has agreed to join its faculty as a tenured, full professor at Utah State University and the first incumbent of the Jon M. Huntsman Presidential Chair in Leadership.
 
Dean Douglas D. Anderson called this great news for students at the Huntsman School of Business and predicted it will give the school added momentum as it continues to emphasize the importance of innovative, ethical leadership.
 
Covey is best known for his book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. His books have sold more than 20 million copies in 38 languages and Forbes named the 7 Habits book one of the top 10 most influential management books ever written.
 
“Dr. Covey’s life’s work has been to teach principle-centered leadership and that is a key part of what we do here at the Huntsman School of Business,” Anderson said. “We know the work we will do with him will leave a legacy in the lives of our students.”
 
The announcement, made in Salt Lake City by Utah State University President Stan L. Albrecht and Jon M. Huntsman, included news that the Huntsman School of Business is launching a drive to develop funding for a Stephen R. Covey Center for Leadership.
 
Anderson said the Stephen R. Covey Center for Leadership will house Covey’s works on principle-based leadership and “will leverage the impact and extend the influence of Dr. Covey’s life-long work and his writings.”
 
“The center will be created to bring together students, scholars and practitioners of leadership around the world,” Anderson said. “It will serve a vital role in preparing the next generation of principled leaders.”
 
Covey said, “Because of its deep commitment to the long-term promotion of universal, timeless principles of success in life and business — principles such as integrity, trust and service — I’m absolutely thrilled to associate myself with the Huntsman School. The leaders and faculty just seem to ‘get it.’ They understand that by instilling in today’s students a principled, new mindset and skill-set — one equal to the complex demands and challenges of today’s new global, economic, societal reality — they will produce generations of leaders who will not only serve and lead their families and communities with greatness; they will attract to the organizations and teams they lead, the world’s most talented, innovative, trustworthy people. Together they will solve the world’s toughest problems and will create true value. They will lead lives of extraordinary contribution.”
 
In 2007, Jon M. Huntsman donated $25 million to the Huntsman School of Business and pledged to support its ongoing efforts to become a top-tier business school. In May 2009, he said he would help fund two presidential chairs, offering the Huntsman School of Business the opportunity to draft top professors who will become key players in transforming the school. Presidential chairs are faculty positions that are either partially or entirely funded by private donations to the university.
 
“Stephen R. Covey is the ideal individual to help lift the school of business to a position of leadership among America’s premier institutions,” Huntsman said. “The insights he will impart to our students will generate a wave of leaders educated specifically to manage ethics-based organizations which practice trust and exemplify integrity. Dr. Covey is uniquely qualified to help bring to fruition the strategic vision for the school and to fulfill the promise of greatness which Dean Douglas Anderson and his gifted faculty truly represent.”
 
Covey said he has been impressed with work being done by The Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence, an organization in the Huntsman School of Business that helps companies and organizations focus on principles that create a culture of continuous improvement through employee-empowerment and effective leadership to become more competitive and efficient.
 
“I have great respect and interest in what The Shingo Prize has been doing and in the transformational work underway at the Huntsman School of Business,” Covey said. “Companies that have implemented principles taught by The Shingo Prize have made dramatic and measurable progress in achieving operational excellence.”
 
Anderson said Covey will be a “research scholar” and the school will benefit from the work he will continue to do worldwide.
 
“Professor Covey will give occasional lectures at our main campus in Logan, work with faculty and collaborate with the Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence, while he helps us establish the Covey Center for Leadership,” Anderson said.
 
Covey is co-founder and vice chairman of FranklinCovey, a firm with offices in 123 countries. Covey will continue to travel the world working directly with leaders and organizations that seek guidance implementing the principles he teaches. He has written or co-written more than a dozen books and has seven more in the works. Covey was recognized in 1996 as one of Time magazine’s 25 most influential Americans and one of Sales and Marketing Management’s top 25 power brokers.
 
“Dr. Covey believes in living his life in crescendo,” Anderson said. “This means his best years and our best years are ahead. It’s clear he’s not slowing down. We look forward to the amazing and innovative things we’ll be able to do together.”
 
The Jon M. Huntsman Presidential Chair in Leadership is partially funded by Huntsman in support of furthering the mission, vision and purposes of the Huntsman School of Business. Funds allocated to support presidential chairs may be used to support faculty salary, instructional activities, research or other creative activities of the incumbent chair holder.   

The Jon M. Huntsman School of Business at Utah State University seeks to inspire and equip students to become innovative, ethical leaders with refined analytical skills that will help them understand and succeed in the global marketplace. The Huntsman School of Business is one of seven colleges at USU, located in the Wasatch Range of northern Utah. More information on the Jon M. Huntsman School of Business and The Shingo Prize may be found at the respective Web sites.
 
More information about Stephen R. Covey’s work may be found at the Web sites: (www.stephencovey.com) and (www.franklincovey.com).
 
Contact for Stephen R. Covey: Boyd Craig, 801-787-4454; email, Boyd.Craig@FranklinCovey.com
Contact for Jon M. Huntsman: Jannie Spader, 801-584-5725, email, jannie_spader@huntsman.com
Contact for Jon M. Huntsman School of Business: Steve Eaton, office, 435-797-8640; cell, 435-760-4884, email: steve.eaton@usu.edu
Stephen R. C¬ovey

Stephen R. C¬ovey, an internationally recognized authority on leadership and a best-selling author, has agreed to join its faculty as a tenured, full professor at USU and the first incumbent of the Jon M. Huntsman Presidential Chair in Leadership.


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