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Wired Campus

The latest on tech and education.

Collaborative That Once Criticized Software Companies Becomes One

By Jeffrey R. Young August 22, 2014

Ten years ago, a group of universities started a collaborative software project touted as an alternative to commercial software companies, which were criticized as too costly. On Friday the project’s leaders made a surprising announcement: that it would essentially become a commercial entity.

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Ten years ago, a group of universities started a collaborative software project touted as an alternative to commercial software companies, which were criticized as too costly. On Friday the project’s leaders made a surprising announcement: that it would essentially become a commercial entity.

The software at issue, called Kuali, does the boring but important work of managing accounting, billing, e-commerce, budgeting, and other campus functions. Colleges can pay software companies tens of millions of dollars for these mission-critical tools, and the vision of Kuali was to take a do-it-yourself approach. The nonprofit Kuali Foundation helped manage development of free software that any college or university could use, in what was called a “community source” model. From the beginning the software has been open source, meaning that anyone can look under the hood of the software and make changes to it.

The Kuali project did develop a complex software tool that is used by 59 institutions. But one problem was that the project was not able to make updates and improvements fast enough to meet the demands of the colleges that used the software. And some colleges apparently worried that the group wasn’t financially sound.

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Barry Walsh, a longtime leader of the Kuali Foundation, said in a conference call on Friday that “angst” about the “pace and path to sustainability” of the project drove the change.

The Kuali Foundation will continue to exist as a non-profit, but it will be an investor in a new commercial entity to back the Kuali software development. Leaders insisted that they would maintain the values of the project despite creating the kind of organization that they once criticized. For one thing, the source software will remain free and open, but the company will sell services, like software hosting. On Friday the group issued an FAQ with details about the change.

“We would like to go faster for enhancements and improving the user experience
as things go mobile and as things go multi-device,” said Brad C. Wheeler, chairman of the Kuali Foundation and chief information officer at Indiana University, in an interview. “There’s nothing here that’s sort of a rescue mission.”

His explanation for the change came down to this: Times have changed. Today, he said, college leaders perceive companies as more stable than communal projects. And he pointed to the emergence of companies like Instructure that sell hosting but make their software open source.

In its FAQ, the group acknowledged that some users of Kuali might walk away because of the changes. “But we will also gain new members excited by the potential of the new technology, new delivery models, and new leadership,” the document says.

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
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Portrait of Jeff Young
About the Author
Jeffrey R. Young
Jeffrey R. Young was a senior editor and writer focused on the impact of technology on society, the future of education, and journalism innovation. He led a team at The Chronicle of Higher Education that explored new story formats. He is currently managing editor of EdSurge.
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