Columbus State CC Managing Projects with TeamDynamixHE

Columbus State Community College has deployed TeamDynamixHE, a project management system for higher education from a company with the same name. The college, which serves 24,000 students in Columbus, OH, is spread across an 85-acre downtown campus, 10 suburban centers, and a virtual campus that enrolls more online students than any college in Ohio.

TeamDynamixHE provides Columbus' staff and contractors with a central repository from which to access current project plans from a browser. The application also enables the institution's IT team to manage project requests, prioritize and score all potential projects, and streamline the project startup and staffing process. Users can access customizable personal dashboards for a graphical display of daily responsibilities and current issues. The product also serves as a communication tool for the IT team by automatically notifying members of timelines, deadlines, tasks, and additions or changes.

"In today's environment, return on investment is more important than ever when considering project prioritization and trying to meet the increasing needs of our growing student population," said Bart Prickett, director of IT support services. "TeamDynamixHE provides an excellent way to organize projects and initiatives for the institution. From an efficiency standpoint, we are able to combine or eliminate closely related projects, saving time, money, and effort. In addition, the ability to track resources and provide reporting allows managers and officers the ability to plan, budget, and justify current and future initiatives during fiscally challenging times."

The new deployment replaces the college's combination of Intuit's QuickBase and a homegrown IT request system. Current users include 175 people in the college's data center, IT network and PC services group, educational resource center, enrollment services, public safety, and the center for educational workforce development. A few of these departments are also using the TeamDynamixHE TDTicketing module to track help-desk incidents and associated efforts for their departments.

TeamDynamixHE is currently used by Syracuse University in New York; Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, OH; and Columbus-based Ohio State University and Franklin University.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • abstract illustration of a glowing AI-themed bar graph on a dark digital background with circuit patterns

    Stanford 2025 AI Index Reveals Surge in Adoption, Investment, and Global Impact as Trust and Regulation Lag Behind

    Stanford University's Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) has released its AI Index Report 2025, measuring AI's diverse impacts over the past year.

  • modern college building with circuit and brain motifs

    Anthropic Launches Claude for Education

    Anthropic has announced a version of its Claude AI assistant tailored for higher education institutions. Claude for Education "gives academic institutions secure, reliable AI access for their entire community," the company said, to enable colleges and universities to develop and implement AI-enabled approaches across teaching, learning, and administration.

  • lightbulb

    Call for Speakers Now Open for Tech Tactics in Education: Overcoming Roadblocks to Innovation

    The annual virtual conference from the producers of Campus Technology and THE Journal will return on September 25, 2025, with a focus on emerging trends in cybersecurity, data privacy, AI implementation, IT leadership, building resilience, and more.

  • From Fire TV to Signage Stick: University of Utah's Digital Signage Evolution

    Jake Sorensen, who oversees sponsorship and advertising and Student Media in Auxiliary Business Development at the University of Utah, has navigated the digital signage landscape for nearly 15 years. He was managing hundreds of devices on campus that were incompatible with digital signage requirements and needed a solution that was reliable and lowered labor costs. The Amazon Signage Stick, specifically engineered for digital signage applications, gave him the stability and design functionality the University of Utah needed, along with the assurance of long-term support.