Photo courtesy of: Greg Land

The Future-Ready Campus: Higher ed at a crossroads

April 14, 2025  |  Dr. TJ Logan James Vigil

The Future-Ready Campus

Higher education at a crossroads


The urgent need for transformation and the tools to make it happen

Higher education is at a crossroads. For more than a decade, institutions have been bracing for the long-anticipated enrollment cliff—a demographic reality that is no longer on the horizon but here today. Simultaneously, declining public trust, pressure from state and national politicians on policies and practices, changing student demographics, rising operating costs, escalating deferred maintenance, questions about perceived value, and an increasingly complex student mental health landscape are accelerating a reckoning across the sector. These structural headwinds demand that institutions rethink not only how they operate, but what they are and whom they serve. The institutions that survive—and thrive—will be those willing to confront a hard truth: the traditional higher education approach is no longer sustainable. Transformative change is not optional. It’s essential.

Successfully navigating these complex systemic challenges will require institutions to collaborate thoughtfully across internal silos and to bring together key stakeholders—students, parents, employers, legislators, boards, and others—to ask difficult questions, make hard decisions and build comprehensive roadmaps to achieve long term sustainability.    

According to the National Association of College & University Business Officers, these road maps should include strategies to: 

  1. Strategically invest in, and adopt, essential technology to strengthen data security, strategically integrate A.I. into operations to increase efficiency and effectiveness, and improve real-time decision making grounded in reliable data.  
  2. Comprehensively support and maintain the workforce by creating a campus-wide culture of leadership and continuous improvement; expanding professional development opportunities for employees to improve tech skills and become more literate in working with diverse student populations; developing a hiring profile that prioritizes critical thinking and tech savvy skills; and offering competitive salaries. 
  3. Effectively communicate mission and values to take back control of and change the current public narrative on higher education 
  4. Collaboratively ensure successful student outcomes by increasing the focus on student well-being; increasing and strategically allocating student aid; measuring performance of student success initiatives and sunsetting what does not work; and increasing collaboration between academics, athletics, student affairs, and other campus departments to develop innovative and unique approaches to achieving student success goals. 
  5. Sustainably navigate resource constraints by reviewing funding and budget approaches to strengthen alignment with strategic priorities and economic engines, and optimize value creation of institutional resources; diversify revenue sources; develop strategies to address and strategically prioritize deferred maintenance backlog; evaluate service delivery models; and renegotiate third-party contracts.  

Successfully addressing these issues for long-term sustainability will require structures that align decision-making with strategic priorities and mission; ensure investments are optimized to deliver maximum impact; support the development and implementation of an actionable and agile plan; and a representative spectrum of key internal and external stakeholders in the process.

What’s next: The future-ready campus

This moment calls for bold action—and no institution can afford to stand still. This essay is the launch of The Future-Ready Campus, a thought leadership series exploring the strategies, structures, and decision-making approaches that are helping colleges and universities navigate the realities of today’s landscape and reimagine what’s possible. Each installment will unpack real-world examples, challenge conventional thinking, and spark new conversations about the future of higher education within the context of the list above. Whether you’re confronting enrollment pressures, constrained resources, or questions of long-term relevance, we invite you to explore what transformation can truly look like—and how to lead it.


 TJ Logan and James Vigil are seasoned leaders at Brailsford & Dunlavey, bringing a combined five decades of experience in higher education administration and strategic consulting. Logan, Executive Director of the firm’s higher education practice, specializes in student housing, auxiliary services, and student affairs. Prior to joining B&D, he served as associate vice president for the Residential Experience at The Ohio State University, where he focused on sustainable auxiliary operations and financial models. He holds an Ed.D. in Educational Technology from the University of Florida and an MBA from Kent State University. He can be reached tlogan@bdconnect.com.

James Vigil, Director at B&D’s management advisory practice, offers 30 years of expertise in higher education administration, including finance, auxiliaries, facilities, information technology, and public safety. Before joining B&D, he was Vice President for Administration and Interim CFO at Shepherd University, leading initiatives in organizational restructuring and capital investment planning. He earned his M.A. in Corporate Communications from West Virginia University and a B.A. in Business Administration from the University of St. Thomas. He can be reached at jvigil@bdconnect.com.

"The leadership and information from B&D, and the clarity with which they provide it, brings added credibility to the process and ensures that a range of university stakeholders, including senior leadership and our board, are fully informed for – and confident in – their required decision making.”

B.J. Crain, Former Interim Vice President for Finance and Administration
Texas Woman’s University

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