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Alumni Success Stories
Mat
Vivona
Profile
of a Bulldog
 |
| In
2003 Mat Vivona received the University’s Pacesetter Award and
also became a member of the Alumni Association Board of Directors. |
There
are a myriad of factors a student considers when deciding what college
to attend, from the strengths of its various programs to where it’s
located. For Mat Vivona, Pacesetter Award winner and new member of the
Alumni Association Board of Directors, his long association with Ferris
began because of the school mascot.
“I didn’t even make the trip to Big Rapids
before starting classes,” Vivona recalls. “I just thought
the Bulldog was a cool logo, so I said I was going to Ferris.” Whatever
his reason, Vivona quickly discovered that he had made the right decision.
“When it came time for orientation, I just fell
in love with campus and the people, says Vivona. “The classes were
small and we didn’t have teacher’s assistants teaching. The
professors actually cared and took the time to know their students. I
don’t really think you’ll find that in any other university.”
In 1995, three years after Vivona graduated from Ferris
with a degree in Business Administration, his father, Mat Sr., lost his
life in a car accident, leaving Vivona to take over Troy-based Father
& Son Construction, the family business. Although he had been working
with the company since he was 15, running building permits and blueprints
to jobs when he was old enough to drive before becoming a full-time construction
supervisor, the sudden transition was the most difficult time of Vivona’s
life.
“Not only did I have to bury my best friend, but
there were a lot of people looking at me and wondering how I was going
to withstand the loss,” says Vivona. “Our top sales person
left. The bank had a lot of loan paper that my father had personally guaranteed,
which had to be paid back immediately. Our CPA quit for different reasons,
and I called off a wedding. 1995 was not a great year.”
Nonetheless, for the last 22 years, Father & Son
Construction has been listed as one of the top 100 remodeling companies
in the United States. Their marketing slogan and advertising jingles are
instantly recognizable to virtually everyone living in the greater Metro-Detroit
area. (When Vivona was on campus to give a talk in the Backpack to Briefcase
series, he asked the students if anyone knew their company jingle. In
response a student nodded her head vigorously and sang, “No job
too big, no job too small, Father & Son will do it all!”)
His company is also known for its consumer advocacy
- something you don’t always expect from a business owner.
“There was a situation we had with a customer
who spent more than $100,000 on various room makeovers and their shingles
were failing, through no fault of ours,” explains Vivona. “I
wanted our company to stand behind our work. We contacted the company
that made the shingles, and they refused to make good.” Vivona then
contacted a local television personality known for solving consumer problems,
which resulted in a $6,500 check to the homeowner from the manufacturer.
For that and other actions Vivona has taken on behalf
of his customers, the Detroit chapter of the Better Business Bureau asked
him to sit on its board and is currently serving as chair.
Vivona also has continued Father & Son Charitable
Golf Outings, which have benefited such charities as the American Red
Cross, Cancer Society and Leukemia Society. The outing was founded by
Vivona’s father, along with Father & Sons office manager and
sales manager. Vivona himself founded Father & Son Adopt-a-Family
program to assist the Salvation Army with helping needy families during
the holidays.
Vivona and his wife Carrie are members of the University’s
Phoenix Society, which recognizes those who have provided support of $100,000
or more, or an irrevocable deferred gift of $150,000 or more to the University.
The two met through a car deal. The sales manager at
Father & Son had a nephew who worked with Carrie, who at that time
was the receptionist at the dealership.
“I called and they introduced us when I went to
pick up the car,” recalls Vivona. I told her, ‘You know, that
salesman promised me that you come with the car!’”
Carrie was quick with a reply.
“I asked him whether I was going to be the hood
ornament or the back seat driver,” she says, laughing. “Two
months after we got married he called me up and said he needed me to come
work for him. I’ve been there for about six years now.”
Through it all, Vivona has remained a Bulldog. In 1994
he bought Ferris—not the University, but a real bulldog. Ferris
was named for Vivona’s devotion to the University. Another bulldog,
Lucky, followed Ferris.
From his Ferris license plate to his actions on behalf
of the University, Vivona personifies the kind of alumni whose mission
it is to keep Ferris State vibrant for generations of Bulldogs to come.
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