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Ron Brill
Ron Brill
from Wikipedia

Ronald M. Brill is an American former retail businessman and is a co-founder of the Home Depot. He worked with Arthur Blank and Bernard Marcus at Handy Dan Home Improvement and was fired from that company at the same time they were. Brill was Home Depot's first official employee. He worked with Home Depot for over 20 years, serving as the company's Chief Administration Officer from 1995-2000.

Key Information

Brill attended Fairleigh Dickinson University.[1]

Brill has made an impact on the Atlanta community through his and his wife's, Lisa Brill, philanthropic efforts. He is on the Governing Board of the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta[2] as well as the Governing Board of Woodward Academy.[3] Brill has been on the Boards of Trustees of Atlanta Jewish Federation, Robert W. Woodruff Arts Center, Emory University Board of Visitors, Wharton Executive Education Advisory Board, the Board of Directors of the Atlanta High Museum of Art and the Pilchuck Glass School.[4]

Brill was a director for The Home Depot, Circuit City Stores Inc.[5][6] as well as Pharmaca Integrative Pharmacy.[6]

Ron and Lisa Brill

Brill was honored by the community at the MJCCA’s Harry Maziar Golf Classic, June 20, 2011.

In 2019, in recognition of his 75th birthday, his ongoing service to Woodward Academy and his long history of ethical leadership, Brill's family endowed the Ron M. Brill Chair for Ethical Leadership Development at Woodward Academy. [7]

Ron Brill and Home Depot Co-Founder and friend, Arthur Blank

References

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from Grokipedia
Ronald M. Brill is an American businessman recognized as a co-founder and the first official employee of The Home Depot, the world's largest home improvement retailer. Joining the company at its inception in 1978, Brill held key financial positions, initially as controller and treasurer, then advancing to vice president of finance in 1981, senior vice president and chief financial officer in 1984, executive vice president in 1993, and executive vice president and chief administrative officer in 1995. He maintained the chief administrative officer role until his retirement in 2001 after 23 years with the company. Post-retirement, Brill has contributed to philanthropy, notably through the establishment of the Ron M. Brill Chair for Ethical Leadership Development at Woodward Academy in 2019, funded by his family in honor of his 75th birthday. He has also served on the board of the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta, supporting community initiatives in the region where he relocated in the early 1980s for his Home Depot role.

Early life and education

Family background

Ronald M. Brill was born circa 1944 in New York, and is of Jewish heritage. Little publicly available information exists regarding his parents, siblings, or specific childhood circumstances that may have shaped his early development and interest in business.

University studies

Ron Brill attended in , where he pursued studies in . He graduated in 1966 with a degree in .

Business career

Early roles in retail

After graduating from Fairleigh Dickinson University in 1966 with a degree in accounting, Ron Brill began his professional career in finance at Arthur Andersen and Company, where he held various positions from 1966 to 1976. In this role, he gained foundational expertise in auditing and financial oversight, skills that would prove essential in the retail sector. In 1976, Brill transitioned to the retail industry as Director of Audit Services at Handy Dan Home Improvement Centers, a chain owned by Daylin Inc. specializing in hardware and home improvement products. There, he collaborated closely with executives Arthur Blank, who served as chief operating officer, and Bernard Marcus, the president and CEO, contributing to the financial auditing and operational integrity of the company's stores. His responsibilities included overseeing audit processes to ensure compliance and efficiency in a competitive retail environment. During his tenure at Handy Dan, which lasted until 1978, Brill honed key skills in tailored to hardware retail operations, such as cost control, auditing, and in a warehouse-style format. These experiences provided him with practical insights into the challenges of scaling retail businesses amid economic pressures, including corporate that ultimately led to his departure from the company alongside Blank and Marcus in April 1978.

Founding of Home Depot

After being dismissed from his position at alongside and , Ron Brill was recruited by the duo as the first official employee of The Home Depot in 1978. Serving as the company's inaugural finance officer, Brill played a key role in the initial planning phase, particularly in financial structuring, working closely with to secure the startup capital needed for launch. His expertise helped establish the fiscal foundation for the venture, enabling Marcus and Blank to refine their vision of warehouse-style home improvement retail. With merchandising guidance from , who brought specialized knowledge in product assortment and store layout, Brill supported the operational preparations leading to the opening of the first two Home Depot stores in Atlanta, Georgia, on June 22, 1979. These locations, each spanning 60,000 square feet in former discount spaces, marked the realization of the founders' do-it-yourself retail concept.

Executive positions at Home Depot

Ron Brill joined The Home Depot as its first employee in 1978, initially serving as Controller from 1978 to 1980, where he managed the company's early financial operations during its startup phase. He was elected in 1980 and advanced to of Finance in 1981, followed by Senior and in 1984, overseeing the firm's financial strategy as it prepared for its . By 1987, Brill had also become a Director on the company's board, a position he held until his retirement. In his role as CFO, Brill directed key financial initiatives, including securing a $200 million credit line with Security Pacific Bank in 1985 to support expansion and navigating the transition to an everyday low pricing model in 1987, which involved significant profit-and-loss adjustments and efforts to rebuild investor confidence through meetings with Wall Street analysts. He also played a pivotal role in the 1981 IPO, participating in over 60 promotional presentations to investors, which helped establish the company as a publicly traded entity. As the company grew nationally, Brill's oversight extended to cost-control measures, such as repurposing damaged inventory for discounted sales to minimize waste and generate revenue, and selling underutilized real estate assets like Detroit properties at a profit to bolster liquidity. Promoted to Executive Vice President in 1993 and Chief Administrative Officer in 1995, Brill expanded his purview to include administration and non-retail purchasing, enforcing rigorous expense policies—such as delaying the adoption of photocopiers and fax machines until the mid-1990s—and reducing pre-opening store costs by $10,000 per location through streamlined processes. Under his leadership, The Home Depot expanded from its initial stores to 750 locations across the United States and Canada, plus two in Chile, as of fiscal 1998, while he implemented the Employee Stock Ownership Plan to align associate incentives with company performance. Brill retired from his executive positions in March 2001, after more than two decades of service that contributed to the company's transformation into a national retail leader.

Transition to IT asset management

Following his retirement from The Home Depot in 2001, Ron Brill pivoted to roles in retail, serving as a director on the board of Stores, Inc. from 2002 to 2010. This position allowed him to apply his extensive financial and operational experience from the retail sector to strategic oversight during a period of industry challenges for . Brill's transition into IT asset management (ITAM) began with his leadership at Anglepoint, a firm specializing in software asset management and IT asset optimization services for large enterprises. He served as CEO of Anglepoint by 2015, guiding the company through its strategic investment by Crayon Group and expansion of global licensing and compliance offerings. In 2020, he was elevated to President and Chairman, where he has overseen the delivery of managed ITAM services that help Fortune 500 clients maximize value from software investments and ensure regulatory compliance. Under his stewardship, Anglepoint has been recognized as a leader in Gartner's Magic Quadrant for Software Asset Management Managed Services for six consecutive years (2020–2025), as of the 2025 report. In addition to his executive role at Anglepoint, Brill has taken on influential positions in the broader ITAM community. He became Chair of the ITAM Forum's Board of Trustees in 2024, leading the non-profit organization in promoting best practices, , and certification in IT asset management worldwide. Concurrently, as of the ISO ITAM Standards Committee (Working Group 21), he directs international efforts to develop and refine global standards, including the ISO/IEC 19770 family, which provides frameworks for ITAM processes such as management, compliance, and lifecycle optimization. In June 2025, the committee published ISO/IEC 19770-10, offering guidance on ITAM implementation. These initiatives, involving over 175 members from more than 25 countries since the committee's inception in 2004, aim to standardize ITAM practices to reduce risks and enhance efficiency for organizations globally.

Philanthropy and legacy

Educational contributions

Ron Brill's most notable educational contribution is the establishment of the Ron M. Brill Chair for Ethical Leadership Development at , funded through a $1 million family endowment as part of the school's Onward Woodward campaign. This initiative, created in 2019 to honor his 75th birthday, supports the Institute for Ethics & Civic Engagement, which integrates ethical education across the pre-K through 12 curriculum to cultivate moral decision-making and civic responsibility. The Brill family played a central role in this philanthropy, surprising Brill with the endowment during a Governing Board meeting where he had served for 26 years. Their gift specifically bolsters programs focused on ethical problem-solving, enabling students to navigate complex scenarios with integrity and empathy. This family-led effort reflects a collective commitment to advancing Woodward Academy's mission of fostering inclusive, principled thinkers. Brill's personal philosophy on education centers on developing ethical leaders who appreciate diverse perspectives and effect positive change, a belief he has expressed through his longstanding support for the academy. He views ethical leadership as a foundational skill, best taught progressively from an early age to build students' moral compasses, drawing from his experiences as a co-founder and chief administrative officer at The Home Depot where principled decision-making was essential to organizational success.

Community leadership in Atlanta

Upon relocating to Atlanta in 1979 for Ron Brill's role at the startup Home Depot, he and his wife Lisa immersed themselves in the city's Jewish community, with the (MJCCA) serving as the cornerstone of their family and civic life. With young children, the Brills centered their activities around the MJCCA's preschool, sports leagues, and family programs, fostering a deep commitment to Jewish communal engagement. Lisa Brill advanced to leadership as the organization's president from 1995 to 1997, during which she spearheaded the relocation from the facility to the expanded 52-acre Dunwoody Zaban Park campus, enhancing accessibility and programming for thousands of participants. Ron Brill joined the MJCCA's governing board amid the 2008 financial crisis, taking a pivotal role in eliminating a multimillion-dollar debt through strategic financial oversight and fundraising. He later chaired the capital campaign launched in November 2012, which raised $6.8 million by early 2014 toward a $7.5 million goal for renovations at the Dunwoody campus—including pool upgrades and expanded facilities—and upgrades at Camp Barney Medintz in northern Georgia. The campaign met its target in November 2014. Their joint efforts, including serving as honorary chairs for the 2019 Maccabi Games, have emphasized tzedakah (charitable giving) and intergenerational Jewish connection, solidifying the MJCCA's role as a vital hub for Atlanta's diverse Jewish population. The Brills co-led the 2001 JCC Maccabi Games, which drew over 10,000 attendees. Beyond the MJCCA, the Brills have supported collaborative philanthropy through the Jewish Funders Network (JFN), an aiding family foundations and donors. In 2020, amid the , Lisa Brill—alongside daughter-in-law Staci Brill—initiated the Atlanta Jewish Foundation Funder Collaborative in partnership with JFN, uniting about a dozen Atlanta-based family foundations and major donors across generations. This bottom-up initiative focuses on identifying and addressing pressing community needs, such as services and professional talent development for Jewish organizations, while promoting multi-generational wealth transfer and strategic giving. Ron Brill's participation underscores the family's long-term dedication to since 1979, modeling collaborative funding that strengthens the region's Jewish infrastructure without relying on top-down federation structures. The Brills' community leadership extends broader impacts to through Ron's foundational ties to Home Depot, whose Atlanta headquarters and early growth spurred local and job creation, enabling sustained philanthropic networks among the company's Jewish co-founders and executives. His advocacy for , rooted in decades of board service and , has influenced organizational integrity across Atlanta's civic institutions, promoting values of character and community responsibility in Jewish and general nonprofit sectors.

Personal life

Marriage and family

Ron Brill is married to Lisa Brill. Together, they have raised a family in Atlanta, sharing interests in outdoor activities, arts, and community involvement, with Lisa often joining Ron in philanthropic initiatives. The couple are the parents of three children: daughter Liz Brill, and sons Jonathan Brill, a 1991 graduate of Woodward Academy, and Matt Brill, a 1995 graduate of Woodward Academy. Matt is married to Staci Brill, who serves as a key family member in community efforts, including directing capital campaigns for local institutions. The Brills are also grandparents to Ryan and Olivia. The Brill family has demonstrated close-knit support through joint philanthropic contributions, notably establishing a $1 million endowment in Ron's name for the Ron M. Brill Chair for Ethical Leadership Development at on his 75th birthday in 2019, reflecting their shared values of education and integrity.

Later years and residence

Following his tenure at The Home Depot, Ron Brill has maintained a long-term residence in , Georgia, where he relocated in the early 1980s with his wife Lisa to join the company's founding team. In his later years, Brill has remained actively engaged in community and cultural leadership, serving on the boards of the Marcus Jewish Community Center of and the . He pursues personal interests including , , , and art collecting, while continuing to contribute to philanthropic initiatives that reflect his commitment to and community impact. Brill's reflections on his legacy emphasize the importance of in , as evidenced by the 2019 establishment of the Ron M. Brill Chair for Ethical Leadership Development at , funded by his family to support programs fostering ethical problem-solving among students. He has expressed pride in institutions like the Marcus JCC for their role in "touching lives every day," underscoring his ongoing dedication to and well into his eighties.

References

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