TIPS on Leadership in Higher Education
Observations, Tools, and Tactics Edits and forward by: Jack Corby Support by: John A Stevens of Stevens Strategy, LLC Contact for Further Information or Questions: mtownsley@stevensstrategy.com or...
Taking Control of a Financial Crisis
What is a Financial Crisis Essentially, all financial crises are cash based. Simply put, if there is no cash, there is no college. In most cases, the crisis is cumulative, and the cause or causes...
Strategies and Practices that Erode Financial Stability
Overview: Private college leaders, especially presidents of small colleges, are tasked with maintaining the financial viability of their institution and avoiding strategic and management errors that...
Push and Pull-on Authority between President and Board of Trustees in a Financial Crisis
Presidents and boards of trustees often respond to a financial crisis with a destructive contest in which a board resists the presidents for greater authority. President’s takes the lead because...
Legal Documents that Constrain Strategic Actions in a Financial Crisis
Preface Strategic planners need to pay attention to corporate and legal documents that can delimit decisions needed to support strategic change. Corporate documents refer to the charter, bylaws, and...
How Private Colleges Suddenly Collapse!
Failure Has Many Causes Why are some colleges seemingly collapsing overnight? There are many causes for some private colleges surviving at the brink, but it takes a particular set of circumstances...
Measuring Financial Risk
Private colleges and universities are encountering unprecedented levels of financial stress that may even exceed the financial problems caused by the Great Depression in the 1930s. According to the...
Economic / Financial Equilibrium
Economic equilibrium for a college or university is a state of long-term financial sustainability. Richard Cyert, late President of Carnegie Mellon University and a noted economist, originally...
Vulnerability Gauge Measures Risk of Financial Failure for Private Colleges
Introduction For the past decade, our colleagues and columnists have remorsefully muttered about friends in terminally ill colleges. Now, we know “for whom the bell tolls.” As more old colleges are...
Financial Stress at Private Colleges and Universities
Michael Townsley, Ph.D. Senior Associate Stevens Strategy Private colleges and universities are encountering unprecedented levels of financial stress that may even exceed the financial problems...
Why Boards Are Reluctant to Take Action
Michael Townsley and Robert DeColfmacker By May of 2024, twenty private colleges have closed or announced that they are closing. If this pace continues, sixty private colleges could close by the end...
Pricing Power and Private Colleges and Universities
Pricing Power and Private Colleges and Universities As of the first week of May 2024, Chart 1 shows that twenty private colleges have closed with a simple factorial estimating that sixty will close....
Zombie Colleges
Zombie Colleges are the walking dead of private colleges. They have: no cash, cannot make payroll, pay bills or debt services, violated their debt covenants, and only a few faculty who work for...
Death Knell for Colleges Facing Risk of Financial Failure
Michael Townsley, Ph.D. March 31, 2024 Introduction For the past decade, our colleagues and columnists have remorsefully muttered about friends in terminally ill colleges. Now, we know “for whom the...
Private Colleges: Deficits and Closings
The higher education market is shedding colleges at a record pace. Despite the large influx of federal funds in 2022 to offset the effect of the pandemic (see Chart 1), fourteen private colleges...
For Whom the Bell Tolls?
First Published on Stevens Strategy Blog Nearly every week news flashes a report of another private college either closing or in deep financial trouble. Here is a short but not exhaustive list of...
For Struggling Tuition-Dependent Private Colleges: It’s Basic Economics
First Published on Stevens Strategy Blog Michael K. Townsley, Ph.D., Senior Associate Stevens Strategy Prefatory Remarks Notices of private colleges closing or merging have become regular...
Be Prepared for the
Paradigm Shift in Higher Education
The Wall Street Journal, Chronicle of Higher Education, and the New York Times are trumpeting what they see as major changes in demographics, finances, technology, and regulations for higher...
Is Your Institution Structurally Inefficient?
By Michael K Townsley & Robert DeColfmacker Executive Summary Efficiency in higher education is an amusing topic that is best left to economists. The reality is that all constituents of a...
Special Series: Technology >> Part 1: Strategy/Mission/Vision From 2005
Strategy, Mission and Vision Without task force input ...the president will be the author of an uncoordinated technical strategy that will fall short of institutional goals. If colleges and...
Modest Proposal For An Alternative to the Classic Four-Year Degree
Most non-professional bachelor degrees are typically structured around a strong liberal art component and include a modest collection of courses aimed at developing a basis for skills that might be...
MEMO TO THE BOARD AND MANAGEMENT TEAM: “The Times They Are a Changing”
By Mike Townsley & Bob DeColfmacker, Last year was the 50th anniversary of the Woodstock Music Festival and an appropriate time to reference Bob Dylan’s 1964 hit “They Times They Are a...
Managing the Metrics
U.S. Department of Education (DOE), credit rating agencies, banks, regional accrediting commissions, and boards of trustees want assurance of financial viability from colleges and universities....
Tectonic Shift Coming in Course Pricing
Tectonic Shift Coming in Course Pricing On May 4th, Richard DeMillo’s[1] article, “So You’ve Got Technology; So What?” in the Digital Campus published by Chronicle of Higher Education boldly claimed...
Is Your Institution Structurally Inefficient?
Executive Summary Efficiency in higher education is an amusing topic that is best left to economists. The reality is that all constituents of a college or university know that the institution in...
Managing the Metrics
U.S. Department of Education (DOE), credit rating agencies, banks, regional accrediting commissions, and boards of trustees want assurance of financial viability from colleges and universities....
Has Tuition Discounting Lost it’s Luster? Predictions from the Past that Came True
NACUBO just published its survey of tuition discounting and the results are disturbing. For the first time, a number of private colleges reported that new student enrollment declined despite increases in a tuition-discounting program…
Colleges in Crisis & How to Survive
Debra Townsley, author of articles on strategy and presidential leadership and Michael Townsley have a new book – Colleges in Crisis. The central theme of this book is that the massive decline...
Rules For Delegating
Presidents and chief administrative officers need to develop a fine hand at delegating authority. The blog on Scarce Resources speaks to the limited amount of time and energy that the top level administrators have.
Gauging Risk Using College Outcomes
The February 2, 2022 issue of Inside Higher Education carried the article “Using College Outcomes to Gauge Risk for Students” by Doug Lederman. [1] The article addressed how to protect veterans from choosing a college that might not survive.
Chief Financial Officer
Chief financial officers (CFO) are gatekeepers for the financial resources that fund the mission of the institution. CFOs are more than a necessary evil to keep the money straight. They have a...
Turn -Around Transition Principles
Before we talk about the Transition Principles, I want to sketch out a small scenario about interviewing and taking a presidency at a college in need of a turn-around. The characteristics of the institution I present is not built upon any single college and…
Student and Labor Markets Shortages: Conundrum for Private Colleges
Several years ago, higher education leaders expected to see a nice bump in the size of the student pool between 2021 and 2024. However, recent data indicates that enrollments are continuing…
Brinkmanship, Planning, Smoke, and Mirrors
Small independent colleges may require planning of a different kind. If you think about it, the literature of educational planning is in some ways bizarre. Much of the literature assumes that...
Why Colleges Struggle to Change in Times of Crisis
The quickly evolving financial crunch, which is due to a sharp decline in the student pool over the next decade, is not unexpected by boards of trustees and presidents. For example, Susan Resnick,...
Hiring a New College President
Hiring a college president is fraught with uncertainty about the capability of a president to lead an institution during a time of massive change in higher education…
Scarce Resources
Every college president faces the same challenge of figuring out what to do with the limited resources that they have available. Usually, scarce resources are defined in terms of money…
Chief Financial Officer – Private Institutions
Private commuter colleges are a rare breed in higher education. They operate like a community college but offer undergraduate and graduate degrees. These colleges typically operate with multiple...
Salient Institutional Relationships for the Chief Financial Officer
A CFO’s contribution to the mission of an institution – building and sustaining its financial viability - depends upon the relationships that she/he has with salient positions within the...
Financial Strategy Paradigm
It is not uncommon in higher education that an institution should establish a balanced annual budget as its main strategic financial goal. There are several significant reasons why the “single year net income goal” is both…
Economic Equilibrium
Economic equilibrium is a state that defines the long-term financial viability of an institution of higher education. Richard Cyert[1] defined the conditions needed to achieve economic equilibrium as…
Can Private Colleges Survive from 2014?
A slow, plodding revenue growth strategy may no longer provide private colleges with the financial reserve needed to survive. For decades, marginal increases in enrollment, tuition, and other revenue sources were good enough to…
Advertising in an Era of Fierce Price Competition
Typically, when market demand shrinks or supply greatly exceeds demand for a product or service, fierce price competition comes into play among competitors. The ongoing decline in student demand for enrollment is already showing considerable evidence…
Small Paper on Dashboards
The Voluntary Institutional Metrics Project has worked for two years designing a common dashboard for institutions of higher education. The purpose of the dashboard is to display the cost of a degree, the default rates for graduates, and the skills attained by graduates…
Deficit Prevention
In 1986, more than 900 independent colleges derived at least 75 percent of their revenue from students, according to a 1989 study by Minter and Associates. This figure has probably changed little in...