Ep. 85 - Jay Gonzalez: Guaranteeing ROI — How Curry College Is Reinventing the College Business Model
What happens when a former gubernatorial candidate, healthcare CEO, and state budget director steps into the college president's office? You get a leader who doesn't accept "that's how higher ed has always done it" as an answer.
In this episode, host Jeff Dillon sits down with Jay Gonzalez, the 15th president of Curry College—a leader whose resume looks nothing like a traditional academic career. From running a $32 billion state budget during the Great Recession to leading healthcare organizations and running for governor of Massachusetts, Gonzalez brings an outsider's perspective to one of higher ed's most pressing challenges: proving the ROI of a college degree.
Gonzalez shares the story behind Curry's audacious job guarantee program, which promises students a job within six months of graduation—or the college pays their federal student loans for up to a year. He explains how Curry is investing in predictive analytics to identify at-risk students before they struggle, launching a new app to modernize the clunky student portal experience, and building a Neurodiversity Center for Excellence that's partnering with major employers.
But perhaps most intriguingly, Gonzalez reveals Curry's Center for Innovation—an entrepreneurial arm designed to move fast, test new revenue streams, and partner with ed tech companies on product development. For small colleges feeling the squeeze of enrollment pressures and limited resources, this episode offers a playbook for thinking differently about sustainability, technology, and student success.
Tune in for a conversation that challenges conventional wisdom about what college leadership can look like—and what colleges can achieve when they stop optimizing the old model and start reinventing it.
Key Takeaways
* Nobody Is Totally in Charge—And That's a Leadership Lesson: Gonzalez draws on his experience in government to navigate higher ed's diffuse power structures. Understanding what faculty, students, parents, donors, alums, and the board each care about—and finding the path that gets as many of them on board as possible—is the core of the job.
* The Curry Commitment: A Job Guarantee That Holds the College Accountable: Curry guarantees students a job within six months of graduation if they meet minimum requirements (GPA, internship, four-year graduation, engagement with career readiness programming). If the college fails, it pays the student's federal student loan for up to a year or provides free grad credits. Few colleges have made this kind of promise.
* Retention Is a Sustainability Strategy: Keeping a student through graduation isn't just a mission win—it's a revenue strategy. Losing a student after year one means three years of lost tuition. Gonzalez frames retention technology (predictive analytics, mental health platforms, data unification) as both a student success tool and a financial imperative.
* Technology Must Serve the Student Experience, Not Add Friction: Students arrive with expectations shaped by Spotify, DoorDash, and TikTok. When they hit clunky portals, paper forms, and outdated workflows, it signals that the institution isn't thinking about them. Curry is addressing this with a new all-in-one app and digital IDs—small moves that reduce friction and modernize the experience.
* AI Is Being Embraced Through Grassroots Experimentation: Rather than a top-down mandate, Curry launched "Amplify AI," a task force with faculty, students, and staff exploring training, forums, and classroom applications. The approach balances academic integrity concerns with the reality that students and the workplace have already moved on.
* The Neurodiversity Center for Excellence Is a Differentiator and a Growth Platform: Curry has a 55-year history of supporting students with learning differences through its PAL program. The new Neurodiversity Center extends that expertise beyond campus—partnering with biotech and healthcare companies to support neurodivergent workers and exploring ed tech partnerships to scale impact.
* Small Colleges Need a Governance Process for Tech Purchases: With limited resources, Curry established an EdTech committee to vet all new product pitches through a single lens of strategic priorities, value proposition, and cost. This prevents individual departments from making uncoordinated bets and helps avoid being oversold on shiny solutions.
* The Center for Innovation Is Curry's Entrepreneurial Arm: Designed to move quickly outside cumbersome academic approval processes, the Center focuses on new revenue streams—non-credit certificates, professional development, international student programs, and potential ed tech product partnerships. It signals a willingness to think beyond tuition dependency.
* Five-Year Vision: Technology Enables, Not Distracts: Gonzalez's hope is that every Curry student has a rewarding experience marked by close relationships, rich academics, and career preparation. Technology's role is to minimize hassles, remove barriers, and enable that experience—not to become the focus itself.
The Signal Newsletter:
https://edtechconnect.com/newsletter [https://edtechconnect.com/newsletter]
Find Jay Gonzalez:
LinkedIn
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jay-gonzalez-b25882184/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jay-gonzalez-b25882184/]
Curry College
https://www.curry.edu/ [https://www.curry.edu/]
And find EdTech Connect here:
Web: https://edtechconnect.com/ [https://edtechconnect.com/]