Harvard names Thomas J. Hollister CFO

President Faust fills one of her senior vacancies.

Thomas J. Hollister, Harvard’s new chief financial officer

Thomas J. Hollister, a former banking executive, has been appointed chief financial officer and vice president for finance, as of the middle of May. He will fill an important vacancy in the University’s senior administrative ranks, created when Dan Shore, who assumed the post in 2008, departed last September to join a young technology company.

The vice president and CFO has historically directed University-wide budgeting, financial planning and reporting, debt and cash management, risk management, auditing, sponsored-research administration, and financial systems. He reports to executive vice president Katie Lapp, who announced the appointment. “We will benefit from his wealth of experience spanning all areas of finance—from capital markets, to banking and real estate,” Lapp said of Hollister in the news release. “He is smart, strategic, and has likely faced every conceivable financial challenge.”

Hollister began his banking career in 1979 at Bank of Boston, where he engaged in commercial banking and commercial real estate before becoming executive vice president of consumer and small-business banking. In 1998, he was named president of Citizens Bank of Massachusetts. He moved from operating to strategic roles, as vice chairman of Citizens Financial Group, where he led the merger with Charter One Bank, based in Chicago (one of many bank mergers and consolidations he oversaw), and then returned to Boston as chief operating officer and CFO of Global Partners LP, an energy distributor; he retired from that position in June 2013. He has chaired the boards of nonprofit organizations (Tufts Medical Center and Wheaton College—both useful background for a university CFO), and serves on the executive committee of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce (which he also chaired, and where he is identified as managing director of Wesquo Capital Partners LLP, a private real estate investment-management firm based in Nantucket). With experience in real estate, banking, and the Boston business community, he may, as Harvard's financial vice president, have valuable perspectives to offer on the University's expansion in Allston, also overseen by Lapp. According to his Bloomberg profile, Hollister graduated from Amherst College and earned his M.B.A. from Boston University.

Shore became CFO just as the financial crisis and ensuing recession caused a stomach-churning, $11-billion decline in the value of the Harvard endowment. Beyond the demands of managing the severe, short-term strains on the University’s finances, he and other senior officers tackled longer-range issues. In concert with the reformed Harvard Corporation, they created a process for managing major facilities and capital investments; adopted multiyear budgets linked to endowment distributions that are “smoothed” to buffer the effects of volatile investment returns; and much more closely linked the University’s needs for cash to Harvard Management Company’s investment strategies for the endowment.

Hollister faces different challenges—in the happier environment of an endowment that had, as of last June 30, nearly regained its nominal pre-crisis value, and a capital campaign that has secured gifts and pledges of $5 billion as of the end of 2014. The issues today revolve around changes in research universities’ financial model, as federal support for sponsored research is more tightly constrained, and in family circumstances and the student population that may limit increases in tuition (now more than $60,000 annually for undergraduates, with increases currently running about 3.5 percent annually) while requiring more financial aid. (The Harvard Campaign’s ambitious goals for financial-aid endowment funds aim to address at least part of the latter pressure.)

The filling of the CFO vacancy follows President Drew Faust’s recent announcement of the promotion of Paul Andrew to the vice presidency of public affairs and communications. Important remaining appointments include the new deans of:

Read the University announcement here.

Read more articles by John S. Rosenberg

You might also like

Harvard Graduate Student Workers Strike

Union demands higher pay, protections for non-citizen members, and changes to the harassment complaint process.

Boston Board Approves Harvard’s Enterprise Research Campus Framework

City planners adopt principles to guide future development of the commercial innovation district in Allston.

At Harvard Talk, Retired Supreme Court Justice Breyer Defends Shadow Docket

The current law professor also spoke about affirmative action, partisanship, and the limits of “bright-line rules.”

Most popular

Death penalty critiqued by Carol and Jordan Steiker

Sibling scholars Carol Steiker and Jordan Steiker seek to change how America thinks about capital punishment.

Bill Gates on AI and Innovation

At Harvard, the Microsoft co-founder discusses his biography—and artificial intelligence. 

Explore More From Current Issue

A woman in glasses gestures while speaking to two attentive listeners at a table.

How to Cook with Wild Plants

From wild greens spanakopita to rose petal panna cotta, forager and chef Ellen Zachos makes one-of-a-kind meals.

Mercy Otis Warren in period attire writes at a desk by candlelight, surrounded by books.

The Woman Who Penned the Case for War

Mercy Otis Warren’s poetry and plays incited the Patriot movement.

Historical scene depicting a parade with soldiers and a town square in the background.

When the Revolution Hit Cambridge, Harvard Moved to Concord

College students broke hearts and windows during their year in exile.