Double alum named head of BMO Family Office

Shannon Kennedy returns home to Chicago as global head of BMO Family Office.
Shannon Kennedy鈥檚 (BBA 鈥88, MBA 鈥96) servant leadership-style and 30 years of experience bring a unique perspective to the world of finance.
Most of her career has been spent in wealth management, with stops at BNY Mellon and Northern Trust. In June 2019, Kennedy returned to Chicago as global head of BMO Family Office, which specializes in wealth management for ultra-high net worth families.
She recently sat down with us to discuss her new position and how 黑料门shaped her career.
Tell me about your new position.
BMO Harris is a great institution, and it was a great opportunity for me to take my 30 years of experience and try to build BMO Family Office, which was rebranded as I came on board.
I鈥檓 leading a group of professionals with a global client base focused on the exceptionally wealthy market, which is really fun. Right now, I鈥檓 getting to know the employees, and I鈥檝e started visiting each family. All the families are unique and it鈥檚 about figuring out what matters most to each of them.
What was your career journey?
My parents were teachers and I couldn鈥檛 afford college for a variety of different reasons, but I received a scholarship to go to community college and was planning to go into physical therapy. I nannied in New York City for two summers while in community college, and one of their older children was an investment banker. After talking with him, I fell in love with business, did a complete 180, and applied to 黑料门to study business. Chicago was my hometown, and I wanted to be in a city where I could get a job after school.
What made 黑料门special?
It was a great experience. I loved going to Madonna della Strada for Mass at night and studying in the library. But I think what makes 黑料门really special is not only the education, but the ethical values that it teaches.
I also met at 黑料门my husband of 29 years, Paul Gadbut. He now sits on the Dean鈥檚 Alumni Advisory Board for Loyola鈥檚 School of Continuing and Professional Studies.
What shaped your leadership and business style?
I never really wanted to be in leadership positions, but I kept finding myself in them. My inner belief in saying please and thank you, doing what you say you鈥檙e going to do, responding with a sense of urgency, and apologizing quickly when you make a mistake got me here.
I spend a lot of time at work, so you have to laugh at yourself and have fun, and treat your employees like they鈥檙e volunteers. I have a servant leader-style because of that.
Advice for young women in finance?
Finance is still very male-dominated but I think my three sayings can help:
- Hug the fear monster: I say this all the time. I think a lot of times people 鈥 women especially 鈥 are afraid to go for a position. If there鈥檚 ten things needed in a position and they only have experience with nine, they won鈥檛 go for it. Their male counterparts with five will go for it.
- Lean in: I think my biggest learning experience was moving. It鈥檚 scary to go to a new place, but that鈥檚 where you grow tremendously, despite the unknowns 鈥 lean in.
- No鈥檚 are free, just ask: Ask in a respectful way, but it鈥檚 free to ask.
How has Loyola鈥檚 Jesuit education impacted you?
I try to assume positive intent, and I seek to understand first before making assumptions. A quote from a mentor is 鈥渟hine through reflected light,鈥 and I try to embody that.
Outside of work, I think we all have a commitment and obligation to the community. If you have the ability to give financially, that鈥檚 great, but sometimes you have to give of your time, and I try to do that. It comes down to trying to give back, participate, and help others. I was tremendously helped when I was at Loyola. I have always had a pay-it-forward mentality because of that.
How would you describe Quinlan in 10 words?
Ethical, smart, collaborative, supportive, well-rounded, respected, integrity, fun, metropolitan, and diverse.
Learn more
- BBA in Finance →
- Next Generation MBA →
- Family Business Center at Loyola 鈫