The higher education landscape is experiencing rapid evolution across learning delivery, student engagement, digital operations and organisational efficiency.
The adoption of AI is also increasing pressure on universities and TAFEs across Australia to undertake significant digital transformation. These changes are no longer limited to teaching and learning platforms. They now extend across student management systems, research platforms, CRMs, ERPs, cloud infrastructure, cyber security and data governance.
For higher education providers, transformation is becoming both an opportunity and a risk. The institutions that modernise effectively will be better placed to improve student experience, strengthen operational performance and protect the digital environments their students and staff rely on every day.
Improving Student Experience
The need to retain and attract students, particularly following the impact of international student caps and softer domestic enrolments, is a key driver for universities across Australia.
With many Australian universities holding strong global reputations, student outcomes and satisfaction remain critical to maintaining their position in an increasingly competitive market.
Improving the student experience now depends heavily on digital touchpoints across the full student journey. This includes access to course information, enrolment, payments, academic support, learning platforms, assessment systems, research tools and day-to-day communication.
There is also a growing push towards personalised learning pathways, better alignment between curricula and employer needs, and more intuitive digital experiences that support graduate outcomes.
As these systems become more connected, security and data privacy become central to the student experience. Students expect digital services to be seamless, but they also expect their personal information, academic records and learning environments to be protected.
Operational Excellence
Leading universities are increasingly implementing AI tools, including enterprise-level generative AI licences, to support teaching, administration, research analytics and productivity.
AI-powered tutors, automated assessment analytics and personalised learning pathways are also being piloted across the sector.
These initiatives have the potential to improve efficiency and insight, but they also introduce new challenges around ethics, governance, bias, academic integrity, data privacy and cyber risk.
For universities and TAFEs, operational excellence now depends on more than system implementation. It requires strong governance, secure infrastructure, clear change management and the right technology capability to manage risk while enabling innovation.

Tech in Higher Ed
LMS and Online Assessments
Learning Management Systems and online assessment tools underpin flexible and scalable education models. They enable:
- Blended and technology-forward learning
- Improved student engagement
- Faster and more transparent assessment processes
- Greater flexibility for students and educators
As reliance on LMS platforms increases, so does the importance of cyber resilience. When learning platforms are disrupted, the impact is immediate. Students may lose access to coursework, assessments, communications and critical support services.
Virtual Labs and Simulation Environments
Virtual labs and simulation environments are extending access to experiential learning. They allow universities to deliver practical outcomes at scale while reducing reliance on physical infrastructure.
These environments also increase the need for secure access, identity management, cloud capability and reliable platform integration.
AI Adoption
AI adoption across administration, research and teaching support is accelerating efficiency and insight while strengthening academic delivery.
Institutions are uplifting ERPs, CRMs, student management systems, research platforms and security systems to embed automation, predictive analytics and personalised support.
However, as AI becomes more embedded in higher education, cyber security, privacy and governance will become even more important. Institutions need to ensure that new tools are implemented responsibly, securely and in line with broader organisational risk frameworks.
How This Impacts Tech Recruitment
We are observing clear shifts in recruitment requirements across the education sector. Higher education providers increasingly need technology professionals who can support transformation while balancing security, governance, user experience and operational continuity.
Sought-after candidates currently include:
- Enterprise Technology and Digital Program Leads to drive strategy, governance and transformation roadmaps
- Data Scientists and Learning Analytics Specialists to interpret data and guide decision-making
- AI Integration Specialists to implement and optimise generative AI tools
- Cloud and Cyber Security Specialists to reinforce, secure and modernise digital infrastructure
- LMS and Digital Learning Designers to build modern, student-centred learning experiences
- Identity, Access and Security Governance Specialists to protect student, staff and research environments
In-Demand Roles in EdTech
- Change Managers to support adoption and embed new digital processes
- Digital and IT Project Managers to implement large-scale system upgrades and platform rollouts
- User Experience Specialists to improve digital interactions with students and staff
- Business Analysts to bridge the gap between technology teams, stakeholders and end users
- Cyber Security Analysts and Engineers to support monitoring, resilience and response across critical platforms
Roles with Increasing Relevance in EdTech
- Program Managers with strong ERP, CRM and platform transformation experience
- Product Managers to oversee software implementation, optimisation and function
- Software Developers and Engineers, particularly those with Salesforce or enterprise platform experience
- Change Managers with experience in software lifecycle, user adoption and business readiness
- Security Architects and Governance Specialists to help ensure transformation programs are secure by design
Opportunities in the EdTech Job Market
Large-scale digital transformations are creating strong opportunities for candidates with diverse experience, particularly those with a mix of commercial, government and higher education exposure.
It is no longer essential to come purely from a higher education background. Leaders are increasingly viewing these functions through an enterprise lens, with a strong focus on user experience, AI adoption, platform integration, cyber security and data governance.
There is also a high level of collaboration across universities, particularly in areas such as cyber security and digital transformation. Leading institutions are actively sharing insights on what has worked well and what has not, helping to shape more informed and consistent approaches across the sector.
From a systems perspective, leading universities are uplifting research management systems, CRMs, student management platforms, library systems and enterprise functions such as payroll and time and attendance.
At the same time, others are taking a more targeted approach, focusing on improving student management systems, digital learning environments and overall user experience to help retain and attract students within tighter budget constraints.
