Smartsheet is one of the most common tools in a university, and it usually arrived without a procurement decision. A department needed to coordinate work the ERP could not handle, Smartsheet was easy and fast, and it spread. For project coordination that is a reasonable choice. The question this page answers is narrower: what happens when that Smartsheet board becomes the system of record for a process that touches student data, approvals, or audit evidence?
The difference is not usability. It is governance. Smartsheet is built for flexible work coordination. Kissflow is built to run governed institutional processes, where IT controls access, every action is logged, and the audit trail is captured as the work happens.
Tools like Smartsheet are the most common form of shadow IT on campus, and shadow IT is no longer a rounding error: Zylo's 2024 index puts it at more than one-third of the average software estate. In higher education the exposure is acute, with Verizon logging personal data in 83 percent of confirmed education-sector breaches and Sophos reporting 66 percent of institutions hit by ransomware in a single year. A coordination tool running a governed process is precisely the gap those numbers describe.
This is a comparison of fit, not a verdict on quality. Many departments genuinely prefer Smartsheet, and for the right work it does that work well.
Smartsheet fits lightweight project tracking, task coordination, and shared planning where there is no compliance weight and no student data.
Kissflow fits the governed execution layer: cross-department approvals, exception handling, and student-facing workflows that need routing, role-based access, and an audit trail.
|
Capability |
Smartsheet |
Kissflow |
|---|---|---|
|
Primary design |
Flexible work and project coordination |
Governed process and application execution |
|
Governance model |
Owned by the department that adopted it |
Governed by IT-defined standards every app inherits |
|
Audit trail |
Records current state, limited decision history |
Every action timestamped and attributed by design |
|
Access control |
Sheet-level sharing |
Role-based access governed by IT permission sets |
|
Multi-step approval routing |
Manual, via reminders and updates |
Automated routing with escalation and conditional paths |
|
FERPA / data residency posture |
Outside central governance when adopted ad hoc |
SOC 1/2/3, ISO 27001, data residency across US, EU, APAC, Oceania |
|
ERP-adjacency |
Standalone |
Connects to Banner, Workday, Ellucian and runs alongside them |
When student records live in a Smartsheet board, the institution cannot fully answer who accessed them, cannot produce a governed audit trail, and cannot include the tool in its risk posture because it was never reviewed. That is not a knock on Smartsheet. It is what happens when a coordination tool is asked to carry a governed process. The stakes are concrete: the U.S. Department of Education describes the FERPA penalty for noncompliance as withdrawal of federal education funds. Kissflow gives the department the same flexibility inside a boundary IT can see, govern, and prove.
St. Augustine's College, a K-12 education-sector customer with a three-person IT team, consolidated 20 core processes and replaced 40 Operoo workflows and Microsoft Power Pages on Kissflow, at roughly 20 times lower total cost of ownership than the prior vendor-led approach. It is a school rather than a university, but the pattern, a lean IT team consolidating sprawl onto a governed platform it can run in-house, is the one a university CIO knows.
No. For project coordination and shared planning without compliance weight, Smartsheet does its job well. The fit question is whether a tool built for coordination should run a governed process that touches student data or audit evidence. For that work, governance is the requirement, and that is where Kissflow is built to fit.
No. The department keeps the ability to build and modify its own workflows without a developer. What it gains is the audit trail, access control, and IT visibility a coordination tool was never designed to provide.