Lindner Alum Receives Prestigious National Award
National awards keep stacking up for Myron Mike Ullman III. Ullman, Bus 69, Hon Doc 06, recently earned the National Retail Federations
for his role as a highly accomplished retail industry leader, who has driven the growth, development and transformation of world-class companies.
He received the groups highest award at their January conference in New York City.
In 2014, Ullman received two national leadership awardsthe Woodrow Wilson Award for Corporate Citizenship and the John W. Gardner Legacy of Leadership Award for his lifetime of work, including leading world-class retailers JC Penney, Macys, LVMH Moet Hennessey Louis Vuitton, Duty Free Shops (DFS Group) and Wharf Holdings.
Ullman currently serves as Executive Chairman of J.C. Penney, where he served as CEO, from 2004 to 2011 and re-assumed at the request of the Board of Directors in 2013.
While serving as CEO of J.C. Penney, Ullman led a turnaround of the business, which had experienced a meaningful decline in performance, including stabilizing its financial base and operations across more than 1,000 stores and dramatically improving performance.
Related Stories
Marian Spencer Scholar Marcus Elliott graduates as a leader
April 22, 2026
Marcus Elliott, one of the first Marian Spencer Scholars at the University of Cincinnati, is graduating with a marketing degree, a sales role lined up and a powerful story of growth, mentorship, leadership and giving back.
Center for Business Analytics renamed the Center for Business Analytics and AI
April 21, 2026
The Center for Business Analytics, housed within the Carl H. Lindner College of Business, has been renamed the Center for Business Analytics and AI.
The magic behind retail powerhouse Macy's
April 20, 2026
USA Today recently did a deep dive on Macy's, the iconic department store brand that is almost as old as the United States. The publication detailed how the brand grew from one of the country's first department stores to a retail giant intertwined with American culture. USA Today spoke with University of Cincinnati's Noah VanBergen for details on how the company became such a household name.