Community Colleges Have Different IT Needs — and Different Staffing Challenges. Here's What Works.
Community colleges enroll nearly half of all U.S. undergraduates. They serve the most diverse student populations in American higher education — first-generation students, working adults, career changers, recent immigrants, and students with disabilities accessing higher education for the first time. And they do all of this with IT budgets and team sizes a fraction of what four-year institutions deploy.
Two-year colleges are not small four-year universities. Their IT challenges are structurally distinct: smaller teams doing more, tighter budgets with less flexibility, heavier reliance on state funding cycles, open-admission enrollment patterns that create unpredictable demand spikes, and workforce development technology requirements that no four-year institution faces. The community college IT staffing approach that works for this sector looks different from staffing a research university — and most IT staffing firms do not understand the difference.
The Unique IT Challenges of Two-Year Institutions
Smaller Teams, More Hats
A community college with 8,000 students might have an IT team of six to twelve people responsible for everything a university IT department of 60 covers — network infrastructure, help desk, ERP administration, cybersecurity, academic technology, and increasingly, AI governance. The network administrator is also the security officer. The ERP administrator is also the data analyst. The help desk manager is also the systems administrator.
This means that when one person leaves, the team does not lose one function — it loses multiple functions simultaneously. And because salaries at two-year institutions are often below even the already-below-market four-year university scale, turnover can be significant.
Budget Cycles Tied to State Appropriations
Unlike four-year institutions that can offset enrollment declines with endowment draws, research funding, or aggressive financial aid discounting, community colleges are heavily dependent on state appropriations that arrive on political rather than operational timelines. A hiring decision that makes sense in October may be impossible to execute in April if the state budget is in continuing resolution.
This creates a strong preference for contract staffing at community colleges — the commitment is defined and bounded, rather than permanent headcount that must be sustained regardless of the next appropriations cycle.
Workforce Development Technology Requirements
Community colleges run programs that no four-year institution manages: CDL simulation labs, healthcare simulation centers, manufacturing technology training environments, culinary program equipment, and automotive technology shops — all of which have IT components that require management, integration with academic systems, and security. These specialized technology environments require staff with knowledge of industrial simulation systems, healthcare IT platforms, and vocational training technology that is simply not part of the four-year university IT skill set.
Open Admission and Enrollment Volatility
Open admission creates enrollment patterns that are significantly more volatile than at selective four-year institutions. A community college can see registration surge by 20 to 30 percent in a single semester driven by economic conditions, new program launches, or workforce retraining initiatives. The IT team needs to be able to scale support capacity rapidly — which makes contract staffing a natural fit for managing surge periods.
The Roles Community Colleges Struggle Most to Fill
Network Administrator with Security Responsibility
At most community colleges, this role is a single position responsible for network infrastructure management AND cybersecurity — because there is not budget for two separate roles. The candidate needs to be genuinely competent in both areas: routing and switching, wireless infrastructure, VLAN design, firewall management, vulnerability scanning, and incident response basics. This is a difficult profile to recruit, particularly at community college compensation levels.
Contract augmentation is the most common solution for community colleges — a contract network engineer during infrastructure projects or security incidents, with a permanent generalist maintaining steady-state operations.
ERP Administrator (Colleague, Banner, or ctcLink)
Washington state's ctcLink initiative — a Workday-based ERP modernization across the state's 34 community and technical colleges — is among the most ambitious state-level higher education technology initiatives in the country. Elsewhere, community colleges run Ellucian Colleague or Banner, or are actively migrating.
ERP administrators who understand two-year college data models — the way workforce development credits and CEU programs interact with credit-hour reporting, the financial aid processing for Pell-eligible populations, and the IPEDS reporting requirements specific to two-year institutions — are genuinely scarce. Sourcing them requires a community college IT staffing partner who knows where to look.
Web Developer with Enrollment System Integration Experience
The community college website is a critical enrollment channel — often more so than for four-year institutions where brand recognition reduces the weight of the web experience. A web developer who can maintain a modern, mobile-first site AND integrate it with the admissions portal, Colleague/Banner, and the student portal is a high-value position that community colleges routinely post at web designer salary levels and then wonder why they cannot fill it.
Help Desk Manager
Community college help desk environments are challenging: diverse users with wide variation in technical literacy, high volume during peak registration periods, and a support team that is often small and composed largely of student workers. A Help Desk Manager who can build and maintain this environment — setting up tiered support, managing the student worker training pipeline, and handling escalations — is a critical institutional role that turnover hits hardest.
The Staffing Model That Works for Community Colleges
Based on our experience with two-year institutions across the Northeast, the model that works best for community colleges combines:
• A small permanent core: the IT Director, an ERP administrator, and a network/security generalist form the institutional backbone that needs continuity
• Contract augmentation for projects: ERP migrations, network infrastructure overhauls, cybersecurity assessments, and web platform transitions are all contract-appropriate engagements
• Surge staffing during enrollment peaks: contract help desk support during registration and financial aid processing windows manages the volume without permanent headcount
• Staff augmentation to cover departures: when a key team member leaves, a contract professional can fill the gap while the permanent search runs — preventing the single-departure cascade that can destabilize a small IT team
Overture Partners has worked with two-year institutions across the region on both permanent and contract placements. We understand that community college IT staffing requires candidates who are comfortable wearing multiple hats, can operate in resource-constrained environments without frustration, and are genuinely motivated by the community college mission. Our higher education IT staffing practice includes dedicated attention to the two-year segment — and our IT staffing in the Boston area relationships extend to community colleges throughout Massachusetts and the broader Northeast.
Smaller campus, bigger IT challenges. Talk to Overture about flexible community college IT staffing solutions built for two-year institutions.