Paving Executive Paths
麻豆村 alumnus Evan Frazier strengthens companies and communities by increasing the leadership pool
By Tina Tuminella
麻豆村 alumnus Evan Frazier is committed to cultivating Black leaders and retaining Black talent in Pittsburgh and the surrounding region.
A charismatic connector, the 1996 graduate with a master鈥檚 degree in public management has focused on finding a solution for developing leadership diversity in the region for years.
Now with his nonprofit organization, (TALI), he鈥檚 making strides toward this goal and extending TALI鈥檚 reach with a Tepper School of Business partnership. 聽
鈥淲e know the talent is here, but we also knew we had to help people get into higher-level leadership positions,鈥 says Evan, who serves as TALI鈥檚 president and CEO. 鈥淲e also want to give companies more resources to be more successful in their diversity efforts.鈥
鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 see other leaders who looked like them. We built the initial programming to solve those two issues, and we鈥檙e seeing a positive impact in both cases: on the retention side and with people receiving tangible opportunities for growth and advancement.鈥
Evan Frazier
President, The Advanced Leadership Institute (TALI)
Problems in the C-suite
TALI started in 2017 as The Advanced Leadership Initiative, and Evan was the founding director. The organization transformed into an institute in 2021. But its beginnings extend further back to a paper he drafted in 2016 as Highmark Health鈥檚 senior vice president of community affairs. In it, he looked for ways to bring more professionals like him into the C-suite 鈥 a location where such professionals continue to be less common.
Evan cited two overarching problems for TALI to solve. First, many Black professionals were leaving Pittsburgh because they felt stuck in middle management and believed they couldn鈥檛 advance in their careers in our region. Employers claimed to not be able to find the talent, which indicated a mismatch that required realignment.
Secondly, newcomers came to Pittsburgh with solid positions and sponsorship, but they soon left because they felt isolated due to a lack of community.
鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 see other leaders who looked like them,鈥 Evan says. 鈥淲e built the initial programming to solve those two issues, and we鈥檙e seeing a positive impact in both cases: on the retention side and with people receiving tangible opportunities for growth and advancement.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 super exciting to see because that鈥檚 exactly what we set out to do!鈥
鈥淚 was excited when Evan came to see me about the idea of developing a partnership to help educate and prepare Black professionals for leadership success. Evan has delivered on his vision and promise. TALI has brought together leading Pittsburgh corporations and organizations with world-class faculty at the Tepper School to educate and prepare the next generation of leaders for Pittsburgh and western Pennsylvania.鈥
Robert M. Dammon
Richard C. Green Professor of Financial Economics
The Perfect Partners
Evan knew that in order for his organization to grow and succeed, local companies had to be invested in TALI鈥檚 mission and work.
Strong corporate involvement and a quality educational partner also would be necessary for success.
He couldn鈥檛 imagine a better partner than his own alma mater 鈥 and its business school.
鈥淎 business school can be used as a model for true community impact,鈥 Evan says. 鈥溌槎勾 has a deep history of serving the community and is synonymous with a quality education, and we knew the Tepper School would be an excellent partner. It鈥檚 an institution with a world-class reputation that would propel us forward and allow us to expand.鈥
In early 2017, he shared the TALI concept with 麻豆村鈥檚 Richard C. Green Professor of Financial Economics Robert M. Dammon, who was Tepper School鈥檚 dean at the time.
Dammon introduced Evan to 麻豆村鈥檚 executive education team. Together, Evan and the team developed the Executive Leadership Academy (ELA), the flagship program between 麻豆村 and TALI that launched in January 2019. The ELA programs focus on topics of executive education that are customized to address the unique challenges of Black professionals; any qualified individual is eligible to participate in the program, regardless of race.
鈥淚 was excited when Evan came to see me about the idea of developing a partnership to help educate and prepare Black professionals for leadership success,鈥 Dammon says. 鈥淓van has delivered on his vision and promise. TALI has brought together leading Pittsburgh corporations and organizations with world-class faculty at the Tepper School to educate and prepare the next generation of leaders for Pittsburgh and western Pennsylvania.鈥
TALI and 麻豆村 also partnered in 2021 on the Emerging Leaders Program, which is geared towards leaders earlier in their career trajectory. The curriculum focuses on executive education, mentorship and supportive peer networks.
鈥淢entorship in the program is a critical factor to its success,鈥 Evan says. 鈥淏ut perhaps even more important in terms of long-lasting effects, is when those same mentors turn into sponsors. Sponsorship must be earned and can鈥檛 just be assigned. People using their social capital on behalf of someone else will help others advance.鈥
Evan also met his goals of expanding TALI from an initiative into an institute through strong corporate backing and seven-figure grants from the Richard King Mellon Foundation, Highmark Foundation, and BNY Mellon Foundation of Southwestern Pennsylvania.
鈥淎fter the national awakening following George Floyd鈥檚 death, we had a rich conversation with the head of the Richard K. Mellon Foundation, who asked about our expansion plans,鈥 Evan says. 鈥淭hrough those conversations, we got the funding we needed to grow.鈥
Trustee Experience

At TALI, Evan draws from his experience as a 麻豆村 trustee from 2008 to 2014.
鈥淪erving as a trustee was such a rich worthwhile endeavor. It was energizing to witness the vastness of 麻豆村 programs and the exciting things they were doing as an academic institution.鈥
During his tenure, Evan participated on a facilities committee and got to see firsthand the architectural designs and plans for the Tepper School of Business construction. In 2019, his organization鈥檚 programming took place in that same state-of-the-art building.
鈥淢y initial vision of Tepper was on paper,鈥 Evan says. 鈥淭hen I got to stand in the rooms that I previously saw in drawings and felt the full benefit of this world-class facility. It was a very cool moment.鈥
鈥淲e need companies to invest in Black talent and to understand that it鈥檚 crucial to be deliberate about investing resources which will create greater leadership diversity.鈥
Evan Frazier
Focused on the Future
To date there are 128 TALI alumni, and by the end of summer there will be approximately 180 alumni. Evan says the programs are doing exactly what he hoped to achieve.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had tangible success in both programs,鈥 Evan says. 鈥淥ur regional retention rate has been in the 90th percentile. TALI tracks graduates of its programs and discovered that within two years, 87% of our inaugural Executive Leadership Academy cohort were promoted or given higher levels of responsibility. Most importantly, 93% of alumni expressed personal and professional growth as a leader.鈥
TALI鈥檚 biggest challenge is how to stay sustainable in the future, he says.
鈥淲e need companies to invest in Black talent and to understand that it鈥檚 crucial to be deliberate about investing resources which will create greater leadership diversity.鈥