David Krill is a 1964 graduate of Marquette University College of Business and holds a Masters Degree in Real Estate Finance (1965) from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He held numerous positions in commercial real estate finance during a career of over 40 years in the commercial real estate field. His most recent position was as the President and CEO of Associated Commercial Mortgage, Inc a wholly owned subsidiary of Associated Bank of Green Bay, WI. During his career, Mr. Krill was a key player in the origination, closing, and administration of over $1.5 billion in commercial real estate financing along with the “work-out” of close to $100 million in loans that needed to be re-structured.
Among his professional accomplishments, Mr. Krill has received the State of Wisconsin Governor’s Award for Contributions to the Mortgage Industry, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Wisconsin Mortgage Bankers Association, he holds the prestigious Certified Mortgage Bankers (CMB) designation, and is Past President and Director of the Wisconsin Mortgage Bankers Association. He is also a Founder and Chairman of the Wisconsin Mortgage Bankers Education Foundation. At Marquette University, Mr. Krill is Past President of both the College of Business Alumni Board and the National Alumni Board and is a current Member of the Mission and Identity Committee. He has been very active in the YMCA of Metropolitan Milwaukee and is currently the Chair of the Jesuit Partnership of the Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus.
Mr. Krill currently teaches REAL 157 Real Estate Cases and Equity Investment.
Real 157 is a case based course that will emphasize applied real estate analysis as it takes place in the REAL world on a day to day basis. The focus of the course in is the analysis of real estate for purchase, financing, development, and loan administration. The objective of the course is to take conceptual commercial real estate knowledge and apply it to Harvard Business School cases and actual Midwest Area Regional Bank cases. Many of the financing, accounting, marketing, legal, and other business and economic courses will be used in analyzing the cases discussed in the course.