Research: How IT Can Proactively Prepare for Enrollment Cliff, Support Institutional Initiatives

With institutions of higher education experience enrollment declines — and steeper drops projected over the next few years — IT departments must align their efforts with their institutions’ strategies for addressing the downturns, according to a new brief from advisors at Info-Tech Research Group

The guide, Understand the IT Implications for the Enrollment Cliff, aims to guide IT practitioners in ways they can help their institutions navigate the enrollment cliff impacting higher ed, the firm said.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has also contributed to the enrollment cliff, as it has disrupted many traditional education models and raised concerns about the value of higher education,” says Mark Maby, research director for education at Info-Tech. “This decline poses a significant financial challenge for colleges and universities that rely on tuition revenue. The risk of closure and consolidation is very real.”

In many cases, Maby said, institutional leaders are unaware of the technology implications of their strategic initiatives to address declining enrollment trends, and IT departments may not even be plugged into those initiatives.

a graphic titled Understanding the IT Implications for the Enrollment Cliff shows a line graph of projected declines in enrollment through 2028

Higher Ed Strategic Responses & Examples of How IT Can Support Them

Some of the most common strategic responses to enrollment declines, and example IT implications, included in the research are: 

  1. Increasing marketing and recruitment efforts. Example of IT could support this would be implementing a CRM to maximize recruitment efforts.

  2. Expanding course offerings to attract more non-traditional students and students seeking micro- and stackable credentials. Example IT support might include implementing a more flexible student information system to meet the changing needs.

  3. Investing in student support services. Example IT support for this initiative would be implementing a student success platform to support advising, mental health services, career connections, and more.

  4. Offering more financial aid and scholarships. Example IT support would be a student portal that integrates with the financial aid system.

IT Should Also Take Proactive Steps 

However, Info-Tech said, IT practitioners can take a number of steps to not only support their campus’ enrollment initiatives but also to prepare for the impacts of steep enrollment declines should they occur.

Info-Tech advises IT departments to take a proactive approach that includes “developing a comprehensive plan that focuses on cost reduction through internal centralization efforts and external partnerships with other institutions,” the research brief advises. 

“Additionally, it is crucial to assess the external context of the institution, conduct interviews with key stakeholders to understand their priorities, and determine how IT can support and enhance the institution's competitive advantage,” Maby said.

Given the decline in enrollment and potential for institutional mergers or closures, Info-Tech recommended that IT departments should focus on the following factors:

  1. Cost Reduction

    1. Internally: Reduce vendor spending through strategic vendor management and cost optimization; develop greater centralization by reducing duplication between central IT and distributed IT.

    2. Externally: Create shared services between institutions.

  2. Strategic Prioritization 

    1. PESTLE Analysis: Conduct a PESTLE analysis to understand the effects of external factors on a specific institution: political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental.

    2. Stakeholder Interviews: Use the PESTLE outcomes to discover the primary objectives of your institution’s stakeholders with respect to their enrollment priorities and adjacent IT prioirites.

    3. Porter's Five Forces: Determine the competitive forces facing your specific institution and higher ed at large in order to align IT initiatives to better support the institution's competitive strategy.

      1. Power of Students: Strategic Enrollment

      2. Power of Suppliers: Faculty and Facilities

      3. Threat of New Entrants

      4. Threat of Substitution: Degree Alternatives

      5. Competitive Rivalry

Download the Understand the IT Implications for the Enrollment Cliff report or learn more at InfoTech.com

Featured

  • abstract smartphone translucent screen displaying AI interface

    Apple Introduces Redesigned Siri AI

    At its recent Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple introduced Siri AI, a redesigned version of its voice assistant that Apple describes in its own announcement as "a profoundly more capable and personal assistant." The update is intended to make Siri more conversational, more context-aware, and more useful across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro.

  • Abstract futuristic digital network with glowing padlock icons

    Microsoft Intros New Agentic AI Security Multi-Model Defense System

    A new multi-model agentic AI security system built by Microsoft's Autonomous Code Security team helped researchers find 16 new vulnerabilities across the Windows networking and authentication stack, the company anounced in a recent security blog post.

  • scientist using digital interface

    Anthropic, NVIDIA Move AI Agents Deeper into Scientific Workflows

    Anthropic has introduced Claude Science, a new AI workbench for scientists that integrates research tools, produces auditable artifacts, and connects to specialized life sciences models and workflows from NVIDIA.

  • Global Network Connectivity

    Report: Global AI Use Rises as Adoption Gap Continues to Widen

    AI usage has reached 17.8% among the world's working-age population, while adoption remains far higher in developed economies than in the Global South.