Top Healthcare Executive Still Uses Lessons Learned at SDSU
Alison Fleury serves as the senior vice president of business development of Sharp HealthCare.
San Diego native, Alison Fleury, knew she was going to be an accounting major at San Diego State University while she was still in high school.
“I attended Bonita Vista High School and was very strong in math,” said Fleury. “By the time I reached my senior year, I had taken all of the math courses offered by the school, so I enrolled in an accounting course as a math course alternative. I excelled in the class and enjoyed it, so I enrolled at San Diego State as an accounting major.”
Fleury said she chose to attend the Fowler College of Business at SDSU for the same reason as many other students. “I was putting myself through college, so going to SDSU made financial sense,” she said. “Since SDSU had a strong accounting program, it was my top choice. I didn’t even apply to any other universities.”
Finding Her Mentor
During one of her first accounting courses at SDSU, Fleury met her mentor and most influential faculty member. “Pat Sbarbaro was a manager at Coopers & Lybrand (now PwC), who also taught Accounting at San Diego State,” said Fleury. “I established a great relationship with Pat, first as her student and later, as her student assistant. She helped me advance my skills to reach my career goals, and she gave me the three best recommendations for success: Learn to play golf, learn to play tennis and run for office in Beta Alpha Psi. I still enjoy tennis and golf today and I was president of Beta Alpha Psi my senior year.”
Fleury graduated summa cum laude from the Fowler College of Business in 1985 and was chosen as the top student in the Charles W. Lamden School of Accountancy that year.
Alison Fleury
SDSU Leadership Role Leads to Career Opportunity
Fleury said it was her leadership role within Beta Alpha Psi, an honor society for accounting, finance and management information systems students, that led to her first job out of college at Deloitte’s San Diego office as an audit associate. Upon arrival at Deloitte in June of 1985, her first client was Sharp HealthCare, and it was a relationship that would change her life. “Sharp was a very progressive integrated delivery system in the 1980s with a strong mission and values,” said Fleury. “It was growing rapidly through affiliations and I enjoyed the purpose, worthwhile work and ability to make a difference that Sharp had to offer.”
During her six years at Deloitte, Fleury was promoted to the position of audit manager at the firm-designated healthcare specialist. In 1991, she left Deloitte and joined Sharp as the director of financial and business affairs at Sharp Grossmont Hospital where she rose through the ranks to her current position, senior vice president of business development of Sharp HealthCare. In her current role, Fleury is responsible for the organization’s strategic planning, long-term financial planning, and financing initiatives, as well as the purchase and sale of real estate and health-related businesses and the formation of joint venture and affiliation arrangements.
Alison Fleury and her husband, Randy, show off the golf trophies they won at the Grossmont Hospital Foundation Golf Tournament in 2017.
Lean In
While Fleury has taken her place among Sharp HealthCare’s top executives, she still uses the skills she learned at SDSU, such as reading and evaluating financial statements and footnote disclosures, which allow her to analyze organizations’ financial and operational health. “And when I attend sessions or seminars (pre-COVID 19), I still sit at the front of the class, lean in and take copious notes,” she said. “I am grateful for the education and growth opportunities I received at San Diego State.”