Alumni Career and Professional Development Resources


Once a Hawkeye, Always a Hawkeye. As a University of Iowa graduate, you are part of a network of many proud alumni. On this web page you’ll find information to help connect you with other Hawkeyes, in addition to resources to help advance your career and further your education at Iowa.

Pomerantz Career Center

The University of Iowa’s Pomerantz Career Center helps Hawkeyes become leaders in their career and community. Browse the Pomerantz Career Center site for professional resources, including Big Interview, a platform that allows you to learn and practice interview skills ahead of your next big interview. Alumni within one year of graduation are eligible for career advising.

Job Opportunities

Hire a Hawkeye! Post or browse job opportunities through Handshake, an online recruiting tool that connects Iowa alumni who are hiring and seeking jobs.

Mentorship Opportunities

The Mentoring@Iowa website shares mentoring programs available on campus and provides resources to help mentors and mentees make the most out of the mentorship experience. It is also meant to promote a transparent and intentional culture of mentoring in which mentors and mentees enrich each others’ professional and personal experiences, whether at the University of Iowa or beyond.

Network on LinkedIn

LinkedIn is a great tool for searching job opportunities, growing your professional network, and connecting with fellow Hawkeye alumni.

Graduate and Professional Programs

The University of Iowa offers graduate and continuing education programs to help you advance your career and reach your next professional milestone.

Get Involved

University of Iowa alumni are located all over the world. Reconnect with classmates or find Hawkeyes to help grow an alumni network near you.

  • Attend an Event

    Attend a virtual event or see when the university may be coming to a city near you.

  • Find a Regional Iowa Club

    Iowa alumni and friends have welcoming networks in cities across the globe. Get involved in game watches, volunteer opportunities, and more.

  • Join an Alumni Affinity Group

    Iowa graduates with shared connections are invited to join an alumni affinity group. Some of these organizations are an extension of student activities, while others connect alumni with shared experiences and identities like race, culture, sexual orientation, or military service.

Iowa Magazine
Explore the latest stories from Iowa Magazine.
Related Content

Lou and Jan Crist give back to the University of Iowa program they cherish.

An Iowa City couple's $1 million gift is the latest philanthropic cornerstone for the future UI Stanley Museum of Art, which reaches $22M in fundraising. Image: BNIM An architect?s rendering of the new Stanley Museum of Art, which broke ground in 2019 and will open in 2022. Where cranes, backhoes, and a half-block construction crater now stand, Craig (75JD) and Nancy Willis (77BA, 80JD) see a future Iowa landmark that will inspire new generations of art lovers. The longtime university benefactors and Iowa City community leaders have committed $1 million toward the building campaign for the new University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, which is set to open in 2022. The project broke ground in 2019 near the corner of Burlington and Front streets, adjacent to the UI Main Library and Gibson Square. In recognition of the Willises' support, the plaza entrance of the new museum will be named for the couple. Nancy and Craig Willis "We've really developed an appreciation for art as a result of our relationship with the institution, the collection, and the people at the museum," says Nancy Willis. "This is an opportunity for us to express our appreciation for that enrichment." The Willises' gift is the latest milestone in the Stanley Museum of Art's ongoing My Museum building campaign. To date, more than 480 donors from 28 states have made donations totaling more than $22 million. That includes the lead gift of $10 million from the family of the late Richard (63MS) and Mary Jo Stanley of Muscatine, for whom the new museum is named, and a $1.5 million donation from Chris (94BBA) and Suzy DeWolf?of Cedar Rapids to name the gallery that will house Jackson Pollock's Mural. All told, museum leaders hope to raise $25 million of the new museum's $50 million price tag through private donations. "This is a university that has cultivated a love of the arts among its students, and that love persists among its alumni," says Stanley Museum of Art Director Lauren Lessing. "Nobody I've spoken to questions the need for this art museum; they all understand how important it's going to be for the future of the university and for the art community here in Iowa City and beyond. Their gifts are helping to make this building a reality." Since the flood of 2008 shuttered the original museum, the UI's 16,500-piece art collection?which is valued at more than $500 million and includes works by Grant Wood, Pablo Picasso, and Henri Matisse?has been without a permanent home. The new museum, designed by BNIM, a Des Moines-based architecture firm, will be a 60,000-square-foot facility with 16,500 square feet of gallery space. The three-story building will be situated four feet above the 500-year flood plain and feature below-ground parking, visual classrooms, and an outdoor sculpture garden. The Willises have become two of the museum's most steadfast supporters since first getting involved with the organization in the 1970s. The couple, who work as real estate attorneys, have served prominent roles on numerous boards and committees for the museum, in addition to showing support for Hancher, the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and UI Healthcare, among many other university and community organizations. This past fall, the UI presented the Willises with its top honor?a Distinguished Alumni Award for their outstanding contributions to the university. The Willises credit the university for sparking their lifelong passion for the visual arts?first as museum patrons, then as art collectors themselves. Over the years, they have built relationships with art dealers met through the UI and visited many of the world's top art galleries. They say their travels have only deepened their appreciation for the university's cultural offerings. "The pieces in the university's collection are, in a way, old friends," says Craig Willis. "And it will be nice to be able to visit those old friends again. We're also excited about new acquisitions and traveling shows, which will be another great aspect of the new museum." Raised on a farm in northwest Iowa, Nancy Willis says her first exposure to the art world, like many students, came at the UI. She's hopeful that the new museum and its accessible location in the heart of campus will spark the same interest in the next generation. "We're establishing a venue that will expand horizons, expand the way we look at things, and expand life experiences," Nancy says. "This will be something that students will take with them wherever they go around the world." Learn how you can contribute to the My Museum building campaign for the new UI Stanley Museum of Art. Read a few of the personal stories behind the new museum, including profiles of campaign supporters Randee and John Fieselmann, Joan Mannheimer, and Ramon and Victoria Lim.

The university's alumni advisory body

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