Standing next to the NCAA College Football Playoff National Championship trophy in the UM-Dearborn Office of the Chancellor earlier this year, Erin Vestrand leaned over and gave it an air hug. After the Wolverines won the championship game, the trophy was on display in the Renick University Center for an afternoon, with a brief layover in the Administrative Building.
To Vestrand, a ’15 UM-Dearborn alum who now works for the university’s Office of Institutional Advancement as leadership annual giving officer, it symbolized the ups and downs that come in a sports program and in life. “I’ve been bleeding maize and blue since I was little — I have a picture of me tailgating with my family when I was 10, and I visited campus and went to games way before that. I think that familiarity helped me feel so at home when I did a UM-Dearborn campus visit in high school — I just knew UM-Dearborn was right for me,” she says. “On the football side of things, I’ve seen from Lloyd Carr to Rich Rod to Harbaugh and more. My dad and I experienced the highest of the highs and the lowest of the lows — sometimes we’d drive back from games in silence. So I had to see the trophy and get a photo. The first person I texted it to was my dad. He no longer attends games due to some health issues, but that trophy was a high moment we shared. He was so proud that he’d send me a text every couple days to resend the photo so it would be at the top of his texts so he could show it to people.”
In this month’s edition of Campus Colleagues, Vestrand talks about who and what inspires her, and the power of being open to new experiences.
UM-Dearborn professors and flexible thinking helped get her to where she is today.
Vestrand, who is from Riverview, knew she wanted to stay close to home for college and smaller class sizes — but she also wanted that Block M education. Always a social person, she thought she could make more connections at UM-Dearborn and get to know her professors better because it was a tight-knit community. She says it was the right choice.
At the time, Vestrand wanted to be a school psychologist in public schools — she says even as a newer student, her teachers were looking out for her. “One of my professors came up to me as I was getting into an elevator. It was Sociology Professor Pam Aronson. She told me about applying for internships, graduate school, and other opportunities on campus to get experience. It was this a-ha moment,” Vestrand says. “It felt great to know you had someone who cared about you enough to do that and be in your corner. During my time at UM-Dearborn, I had a lot of professor experiences like that.”
After doing job shadowing and seeing some of the limitations public schools face due to a lack of funding, Vestrand decided she’d be happier connecting students with what they needed through a different route.
“If students and programs need money, maybe I need to be the person who fundraises for them to get them what they need to be successful. If someone doesn’t have the books or transportation they need, we can fundraise for it. Fundraising won’t cure cancer directly — but it funds the ability of a student to work in a lab or get the education they need to one day find a breakthrough,” Vestrand says. “So it might seem like a stretch from where I started, but it made sense. It was a full circle moment for me.” Vestrand’s first fundraising position after graduation was at UM-Ann Arbor and she moved to UM-Dearborn when a position became open in 2017. “It was a no-brainer for me to come back home,” she says.