Visionary management consultant and entrepreneur James H. Lowry was born to
Chicago postal workers William and Camille Lowry. He graduated from the
Francis W. Parker School in Chicago and Grinnell College in Iowa. Lowry
served in the Peace Corps in Tanzania and Puerto Rico before earning a
master's degree in public international affairs at the University of
Pittsburgh. In 1968, Lowry was McKinsey Consulting's first African American
recruit.
At McKinsey, Lowry convinced corporate clients of the value of investing in
minority communities and sought to increase the firm's number of African
American consultants. He continued this work while attending Harvard
Business School, where he served as class president in 1973. On assignment
from former Commerce Secretary Juanita Morris Kreps, Lowry produced a report
on the status of minorities in the twenty-first century that attracted the
attention of numerous municipal and corporate clients, including PepsiCo and
Ford. He founded James H. Lowry & Associates in 1975. Lowry's strategic
partnership with Ford led to the automotive giant sourcing more than $3
billion dollars of goods and services to more than 300 minority suppliers.
In 1981, he approached his former employer, McKinsey, about its
disappointing number of African American consultants, which he helped
increase to nearly 100 by 1999.
In 2000 Lowry was recruited to join the prominent Boston Consulting Group.
As a president of its Chicago operation, he has been credited for his
productive involvement in the North American Black Diversity Initiative, a
program that fosters the development of African American management
consultant professionals on college campuses and within the company. An
adjunct faculty member of Northwestern University's Kellogg School of
Management, Lowry developed a lauded education program for minority business
professionals in 2002. Lowry has a daughter, Aisha. He lives in Chicago with
his mother and his wife, Doris.