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Michael R. Cunningham
Michael R. Cunningham
01:20

Michael R. Cunningham

National University System

San Diego, CA USA

"I never just accept rejection; I learn from it. It’s a badge of honor to get rejected because the hardest thing in the world is to put yourself out there."

Career Roadmap

Michael R.'s work combines: Business, Education, and Accomplishing Goals

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Day In The Life

Chancellor & CEO

I oversee a network of educational institutions serving over 40,000 students.

01:13

Day In The Life Of A College Chancellor

My Day to Day

As Chancellor, I'm in charge of a network of educational institutions that connect a diverse population of students to innovative programs relevant to their lives, careers, and the marketplace. There are over 4,400 faculty and 40,000 students who I must look out for. This comes with A LOT of emails. I tend to get up pretty early to start getting through as many as I can. I go to A LOT of meetings mainly to go over skills data and ensure our students are getting what they need to succeed.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

I grew up my whole life assuming I would be a fireman because that's what my family did. I never questioned it until I got to college and realized that wasn't really what I was passionate about. I went against these expectations and decided to pursue business instead.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Business Administration and Management, General

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Marketing/Marketing Management, General

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Graduate Degree

    Graphic Communications, General

    New York University

  • Doctorate

    Administration, Leadership, Technology

    New York University

Life & Career Milestones

I've taken a lot of twists and turns

  • 1.

    Born and raised in New York City—my father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were all New York City firemen and I grew up assuming that would be my path, too.

  • 2.

    Was a star wrestler in high school and won a scholarship to attend the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

  • 3.

    While in college, I realized that being a fireman was not the right path for me and that I wanted to pursue business instead—earned a bachelor’s degree in marketing and business.

  • 4.

    My first job out of college was as a salesman on Wall Street, working for a printing company that was owned by the father of one of my wrestling teammates.

  • 5.

    Started my own printing business, but was struggling to keep up with the technological shifts in the industry, so I went to NYU to get my master’s degree in graphic communications management.

  • 6.

    After selling my business and retiring at age 40, I made the decision to pursue a second career in education due to the impact it had on my life—received my Ph.D. from NYU and began teaching.

  • 7.

    I've taught at NYU, Cal Poly, and San Diego State University—was named dean of San Diego State’s College of Business Administration and later became the president of National University.

  • 8.

    I'm now the chancellor and CEO of the National University System, overseeing a network of educational institutions that employs more than 4,400 faculty and serves over 40,000 students.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Myself:

    I don't want to be a fireman.

  • How I responded:

    I grew up my whole life assuming I would be a fireman because that's what my family did. I never questioned it until I got to college and realized that wasn't really what I was passionate about. I went against these expectations and decided to pursue business instead.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • I decided to embark on a career change late in life. After selling my company and retiring, I went back to school so I could start teaching. It had it's challenges, but it was worth it.

  • Running my own business was really challenging. It was 24/7. I've gotten better at work-life balance as I've gotten older.

  • There were times with my business that I struggled to make payroll and almost went out of business, etc. I ended up partnering with a couple of other printing salesman and we were able to turn things around and grow.