Kate Tiedemann School of Business and Finance
Kate Tiedemann and Ellen Cotton
Kate Tiedemann and Ellen Cotton are the quintessential donor couple, doing all the right things for all the right reasons in all the right ways. Their bond with the business college at the St. Petersburg campus is long and deep.
Since Tiedemann's first gift of $10 million in 2014 to name the college, which was
               named the Kate Tiedemann College of Business before 返字心頭's 2020 consolidation, their
               giving has continued every year since. Following that gift, Cotton donated $1 million
               for scholarships to name the Ellen Cotton Atrium, plus another $100,000 to establish
               the Ellen Cotton Student Engagement Fund to support student organizations on the St.
               Petersburg campus. The duo also seeded that campus' Student Managed Investment Fund
               with $250,000. In 2019, they graciously gave another $3 million to endow the Tiedemann-Cotton
               Deanship at at what is now the Tiedemann School of Business and Finance. In 2020,
               they established the Tiedemann-Cotton Endowed Professorship in Finance, and in 2022,
               they gave another $14 million to expand fintech education and programming at the School.
Their stories are compelling. Tiedemann emigrated from Germany at age 18, not speaking
               a word of English. Over a decade later, operating from her garage, she founded Katena
               Products, whose precision ophthalmologic surgical instruments are now sold in 110
               countries worldwide.
Philanthropy has become her second career, funding the Katena Birthing Center at Saint
               Claires Hospital in Denville, establishing the Tiedemann Technology Fund at Morton
               Plant Mease in Clearwater and the Kate Tiedemann College of Business at 返字心頭 St. Petersburg.
               She and Cotton also support numerous Tampa Bay charities with transformational gifts.
In her own words, after spending 30 years making money, Tiedemann is devoting the
               next 30 years to giving it all away. She speaks openly about wondering what she could
               have done if she had had a college education and is determined to provide that opportunity
               for others. An education has the power to change a persons life.
Cotton is a successful banker turned entrepreneur, having owned and managed a Hallmark franchise. While growing up in a large family on Staten Island, the community provided support in their greatest times of need. In turn, she is driven to support education and students in financial need.


