$100M From Alumnus Rebrands Chicago Booth’s Executive MBA Program

$100M From Alumnus Rebrands Chicago Booth’s Executive MBA Program

Konstantin Sokolov has given his alma mater $100 million. Chicago Booth has renamed the executive MBA program in his honor

Chicago Booth’s Executive MBA Program is getting a new name — and a major upgrade — thanks to a $100 million donation from alumnus and investor Konstantin Sokolov. The gift, one of the largest in school history, will rename the program the Sokolov Executive MBA Program and provide significant new funding for scholarships, curriculum development, and faculty support.

Sokolov, founder of IJS Investments and a longtime advocate for economic development, says the gift celebrates the deep personal and professional impact of his Booth experience. He graduated from the Booth MBA program in 2005.

“The knowledge, relationships, and perspective I gained at Booth have shaped everything I’ve done since,” Sokolov says. “I’m proud to give back to a place that continues to define leadership in business education.”

GIFT WILL SPARK MAJOR EXPANSION OF KEY PROGRAMS

Sokolov’s donation will fund a new clinical professorship for faculty who teach in the EMBA program and strengthen Booth’s ability to attract top talent across its three global campuses in Chicago, London, and Hong Kong. With more scholarship and operating funds, Booth plans to continue evolving the program to meet the shifting demands of today’s business landscape — from digital transformation to cross-border leadership.

The Executive MBA at Booth has a storied legacy. Launched in 1943 to meet wartime demand for business leadership, it was the first program of its kind in the world. Today, the 21-month program draws professionals from dozens of countries who learn in cohort-based formats, expanding their leadership skills, networks, and global business fluency. Students benefit from Booth’s distinctive analytical approach and access to top faculty across continents.

A cornerstone of the newly named program is Booth’s Global Career and Leadership Development team, which offers personalized executive coaching, leadership workshops, and industry-specific insight sessions. The team also connects students with senior business leaders through events and Distinguished Executive-in-Residence opportunities. Sokolov’s support will allow Booth to expand these offerings and introduce new, tailored programming for experienced professionals navigating senior-level career transitions.

‘AN INVESTMENT IN THE NEXT GENERATION OF LEADERS’

The gift also comes at a symbolic moment: the 20th anniversary of Sokolov’s graduation from the program. He completed his Executive MBA in Booth’s Chicago cohort (XP-74), based at the downtown Gleacher Center, where he forged many of the relationships he still credits as central to his career. In 2024, Sokolov funded enhancements to the student lounge at Gleacher — a space that now bears his name.

Sokolov immigrated to the U.S. from Russia at age 21 before launching a career that would span telecom, energy, and private equity. His firm, IJS Investments, supports national infrastructure projects across multiple sectors. With this gift, he says he hopes to ensure that future EMBA students — regardless of background — have access to the same world-class education and professional growth that defined his own journey.

University of Chicago President Paul Alivisatos praised the donation as a powerful endorsement of Booth’s mission. “This gift will allow the school to continue fostering innovation, leadership, and excellence in business education,” Alivisatos says. “It’s an investment in the next generation of leaders who will guide business through times of change and complexity.”

Sokolov’s gift to Booth is among the biggest gifts at any business school, securing its place on an exclusive but growing list of business school gifts of at least $50 million.

Largest Philanthropic Gifts To Business Schools

School
Amount
Donor
Year
Chicago’s Booth School of Business $300 million David Booth 2008
Michigan’s Ross School of Business $250 million Stephen Ross
2004, 2013, 2017
University of Hawai’i-Mānoa Shidler College of Business $228 million Jay H. Shidler 2014, 2017
University of Illinois’s Gies College of Business $150 million Larry Gies 2017
Cornell’s SC Johnson College of Business $150 million H. Fisk Johnson 2017
Stanford Graduate School of Business $150 million Robert & Dorothy King 2011
UCLA Anderson School of Management $142 million John & Marion Anderson
1987, 2011, 2015
Carnegie Mellon’s Tepper School of Business $122 million David Tepper 2004, 2013
Stanford Graduate School of Business $105 million Philip Knight 2006
Virginia Darden School of Business $101 million David and Kathleen LaCross 2023
Chicago Booth School of Business $100 million Konstantin Sokolov 2025
Yale School of Management $100 million Eli & Edythe Broad 2019
UC-San Diego Rady School of Management $100 million Ernest Rady 2015
Florida State College of Business $100 million Jim Moran 2015
Columbia Business School $100 million Ronald Perelman 2013
Columbia Business School $100 million Henry Kravis 2010
Emory University’s Goizueta Business School $95 million The Goizueta Foundation 1997-2019
New York University Stern School of Business $86 million Leonard Stern
1988, 2015, 2021
Cornell’s Johnson Graduate School $80 million David Atkinson 2010
Arizona State’s Carey School of Business $75 million William Carey 2003, 2019
Johns Hopkins University’s Carey School of Business $75 million William Carey 2006, 2020
Chicago Booth $75 million Amy & Richard Wallman 2017
Florida’s Warrington College of Business $75 million Al & Judy Warrington 2014
Delaware’s Lerner College of Business $71.5 million Robert & Kathleen Siegfried 2025
Virginia’s Darden School of Business $68 million Frank & Marjorie Sands 2019
Virginia’s Darden School of Business $62 million Frank Batten 1999
Northeastern’s D’Amore-McKim School $60 million Richard D’Amore & Alan McKim 2012
Thunderbird School of Management $60 million Sam & Rita Garvin 2004
Babson College $50 million Arthur Blank 2019
Purdue’s Daniels School of Business $50 million Dean and Barbara White Family Foundation 2023
Southern Methodist University Cox School of Business $50 million David & Carolyn Miller 2019
University of San Diego Knauss School of Business $50 million Ellie & Don Knauss 2021
Tel Aviv Coller School of Management $50 million Jeremy Coller 2016
Boston University’s Questrom School $50 million Allen & Kelli Questrom 2015
New York University Stern School of Business $50 million William & Marjorie Berkley 2021
University of Pennsylvania Wharton School $50 million Marc & Carolyn Rowan 2018
Tennessee’s Haslam College of Business $50 million Jim Haslam & family 2014
Georgia Tech’s Scheller College $50 million Ernest Scheller 2012
Harvard Business School $50 million Tata Group 2010
Yale School of Management $50 million Ned Evans 2010
Texas’ McCombs School of Business $50 million Red McCombs 2000
Arkansas’ Walton College of Business $50 million The Walton Family 1998
Iowa State University Debbie and Jerry Ivy College of Business $50 million Debbie & Jerry Ivy 2017

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