Driven to Serve
Spring 2016Β | By Eric Michael, ’96
Staying connected to your alma mater can be difficult from more than 1,300 miles away. In Miami, busy corporate executive Julie Stroh was searching for a way to sustain her bond with the place where she experienced βcultural enlightenmentβ β the University of Michigan. Volunteering with the U of M Club of Miami-Fort Lauderdale βseemed like a great way to fulfill a drive and desire and do something for an institution that had really helped me so much,β she says. But Stroh had no idea that her initiation into the world of alumni relations would lead to a radical shift in her career trajectory β and a new level of professional fulfillment.
βI was really transformed because of my experience with service and philanthropy. It totally changed my life,β she says. βItβs why I left the for-profit world and moved into higher education.β
After that transition, Stroh became a leader in alumni, community and government outreach positions at the University of Miami, where she earned her graduate degree in liberal studies, and Ball State University in Indiana, before joining the β¨in September.

Julie Stroh, associate vice president of alumni relations and executive director of the , believes the combination of service and philanthropy creates meaningful impact.
βServing and being engaged and involved at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ will give you access to things in your life that will make you a more successful person, but the real return on your investment will be the impact youβll make β the lives that will be changed because of generosity.β
βIβm a latecomer to higher education advancement but have been fortunate because of the great synergies between my entrepreneurial corporate background, my passion for education and my personal drive for service,β says Stroh. βI donβt function well as a person unless I feel that Iβm giving back as a significant part of my life.β
Itβs the combination of service and philanthropy that Stroh sees as the key to success for alumni who truly want to maximize the benefits of their association.
βWe have the opportunity and the ability to provide our alumni with connections to resources on campus, to career services and to or in your current community β meaningful connections,β she says. βServing and being engaged and involved at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ will give you access to things in your life that will make you a more successful person, but the real return on your investment will be the impact youβll make β the lives that will be changed because of generosity.β
Itβs a result that Stroh believes in because she has experienced it firsthand. βI think if someone were to ask me what I am most proud of in my professional life, Iβd say it was the opportunity to serve and give back to my institution.β