Once youve reached the top of your game, a big part of leadership becomes about giving back to those on their way upwhether thats your time, energy, or lessons learned.

Its a lesson that telecommunications tycoon, Robert Hale, is trying to instill in the next generation of leaders.

The billionaire surprised students of the UMass Boston undergraduate class of 2023 with $1,000 each on their graduation daybut the generous gesture wasnt empty.

As thousands of students lined up to receive their gift,  Hale, the cofounder and CEO of Granite Telecommunications handed out two envelopes with the cash evenly split.

One $500 envelope was labeled gift and the other give.

The first $500 is for you, Hale explained, according to NBC Boston. Its a celebration of all you have done to be here today. Youre leaders. Celebrate.

He then entrusted students with gifting the second $500 envelope away to somebody else or another organization who could use it more than you to experience the joy of giving.

With a cohort of 2,500 students graduating that day, the gifts amassed to $2.5 milliona relatively small dent in Hales estimated $5 billion fortune but whether they actually donate the money is left up to them.

The philanthropic billionaire

Hale founded Granite in 2002, less than six months after his previous company, Network Plus, filed for bankruptcy.

Fast forward to today, Granite is experiencing high levels of success (it generated $1.6 billion in sales alone in 2021, per Forbes) and with a 70% stake in the business, so is Hale. 

Hes been sharing that success with those less fortunate for some time now.

In 2019, The Chronicle of Philanthropy listed Hale as one of the top 15 most generous Philanthropists in America, with reports claiming that he has donated over $280 million towards cancer research, educational institutions and other charitable causes.

Plus, this isnt the first time hes turned his philanthropic efforts to students.

In May 2022, Hale gifted $1,000 each to 150 graduates at the Roxbury Community College in Boston, per NBC Boston and the year prior, he also gave $1,000 to every 490 graduates at Quincy College in Massachusetts. 

On both occasions, the gift came with the same ask to donate half of the cash.

The gift of giving

While it is not uncommon for billionaires to make substantial donations to colleges and universities, often resulting in the naming of buildings or departments in their honor, direct cash donations with a set of instructions for students are rare.

Its unclear what inspired Hale to do so, but he pointed to the need for good as humanity faces numerous challenges, including artificial intelligence displacing jobs, economic turbulence, and war in Ukraine.

These trying times have heightened the need for sharing, caring and giving, Hale said in his most recent announcement speech. Our community and our world need you, it needs us more than ever to be compassionate. 

If you give a little more than you get your life will be better because of it, I promise you, he added.


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