|
COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (July 6, 2006) – Tennessee Tech University this
month welcomes its new vice president for University Advancement.
J. Mark Hutchins will join the TTU administration in that position on
July 17, and he says he thinks the opportunity will be a unique privilege.
“I love working in advancement services because of the way it connects
alumni, donors and university friends to faculty, staff and students,”
he said. “Those donors and potential donors have dreams for improving
the institution, and helping them achieve those dreams in turn directly
helps faculty, staff and students.”
Hutchins comes to TTU from Murray State University in Murray, Ky., where
he’s served for three and a half years as associate vice president
for Institutional Advancement.
That institution’s enrollment is comparable in size to TTU’s.
In his role there, Hutchins has supervised all facets of fund-raising
for the university. He’s helped to reorganize the operational structure
of advancement services, to implement online giving, to increase gift
income by 50 percent in a year and to raise the largest individual gift
in Murray State’s history.
Hutchins’ entire career, in fact, has been devoted to higher education,
and specifically to various aspects of advancement services.
Prior to his position at Murray State, for instance, he served as vice
president for Institutional Advancement and interim president at Wood
College in Mathiston, Miss., and before that, as director of annual giving
at Mississippi State University in Starkville.
“I’ve enjoyed making a career out of this because I love
being a part of the campus community, and I have a passion for helping
students,” Hutchins said.
At TTU, his duties will include managing, directing, coordinating and
supervising a comprehensive institutional advancement program that is
made up of fund raising, foundation development, alumni relations, public
information, photographic services, graphic arts and government relations.
As chief development officer, he will cultivate and solicit selected donor
prospects, particularly among major corporations, foundations and individuals,
with the goal of generating large gifts for the university.
“I believe my administrative experience, advancement success and
educational background fit well with the qualities TTU is seeking for
this position,” Hutchins said.
As an active member of the Council for the Advancement and Support of
Education, Hutchins has made presentations at various state and district
CASE meetings and has served as a faculty member for the 2001 CASE National
Conference on Annual Giving.
He earned a bachelor’s degree in business, with a minor in social
science, and a master’s degree in human relations and supervision
from Louisiana Tech University, and he is pursuing a doctorate in public
policy and administration from Mississippi State University.
He also holds the designation of Certified Fund Raising Executive.
He is married to the former Elizabeth Lipscomb from McComb, Miss., and
the couple has two daughters, Jan Kathryn, 11, and Claudia McCabe, 8.
Some of his personal interests include attending collegiate athletics
events, coaching his daughters in basketball and softball, hunting, fishing,
traveling and playing various musical instruments, including the saxophone,
clarinet and mountain dulcimer.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 17 July 2006
|