Colorado State - Innovator and Trail-Blazer 

Colorado State University is one of the first schools in the nation to go live with the Kuali Financial System, a first-of-its-kind "community source" system designed by and for higher education by a nationwide team of partners.

The transition to the new system-which involved the training of more than 400 campus users-took place in July 2009 and has gone smoothly, say campus officials, who hail Kuali as a primary example of how institutions can contain costs in higher education through innovation and collaboration.

The CSU system launch was made possible through the work of The Kuali Foundation, a non-profit, 501(c)(3) corporation that coordinates the development of free/open source administrative software under the Educational Community License. In October 2006, the Foundation announced the first release of the open source Kuali Financial System (KFS), funded in part by a $2.5 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Colorado State agreed to take the lead on pioneering use of the new system.

The code that drives the new financial system is a product of the Kuali Community, a consortium of higher-education institutions that are working together to develop open-source systems that directly address the needs of public colleges and universities. The Community Source concept requires institutional members to pay a nominal annual fee ($25,000) to the partnership and provide programmers to develop, maintain, sustain and enhance the system.

At CSU, the campus implementation team worked closely with both Kuali and campus users throughout the process to tailor the system to CSU's needs.

A team of about 100 people worked for two years to prepare for implementation of the new system at CSU, working double-time to bring the project in on time and at a cost far lower than anyone had originally anticipated, said Vice President for Information Technology and Interim Dean of Libraries Patrick Burns.

The Colorado State University Board of Governors recognized the need for an updated, integrated financial system at Colorado State University in 2006 and authorized the University to move forward. At that time, the cost to purchase an existing, off-the-shelf financial system was projected to start at around $5 million-$7 million or more, without the full functionality CSU needed.

Instead, the total cost for Colorado State's new system and its implementation came to less than $2 million, thanks to the University's willingness to partner in the development and launch Kuali, Burns said.

"We were able to implement the state-of-the-art infrastructure for a fraction of the cost of our peers through a partnership with the Kuali Foundation.

As a Carnegie doctoral-granting research university, CSU is obligated to keep meticulous financial records that are subject to review by state and federal agencies. "Kuali is the wave of the future," said Allison Dineen, CSU vice president of finance. "Basically, we keep 50 sets of books. Now we can keep them all on one database."

For the campus, the benefit of the new system is clear. It is web based, allowing all authorized users easy, online access. Documents in the system can be routed electronically for approvals - and then electronically stored, saving paper and staff time. Purchasing is integrated in. It also supports multi-year budgeting - important for research contracts. All in all, it will make management of CSU's finances easier, better and more secure, Burns said. 

"This will allow us to manage our finances, where as the old system only recorded our financial transactions," Burns said. "It's software designed by higher education for higher education. And we get a round peg to fit a round hole for a price that is far less costly."

" Controlling costs in higher education isn't just about cutting budgets," CSU President Tony Frank said. "We also need to be increasingly innovative and entrepreneurial in our approach to doing business. This is a great example of what we can achieve by taking such an approach. I think the CSU and Kuali staff who worked so hard on this initial launch should be very proud that their work will be a model for other universities around the world."

CSU Profile

  • Located in Ft. Collins, CO
  • About 24,700 resident instruction students
  • 5,469 degrees were awarded in 2006-2007
  • 4,164 bachelor's degrees were awarded in 62 programs
  • 965 master's degrees were awarded in 59 programs
  • 211 doctoral degrees were awarded in 38 programs
  • 129 professional degrees were awarded in Veterinary Medicine

Read more facts and figures about CSU