Power Apps and Power Automate are already in your M365 agreement, which is exactly why so many institutions reach for them first. The capability is real, and the apps it builds work. The question a CIO has to weigh is not whether Power Platform can build an application. It is who maintains that application after the person who built it moves on, and whether the build returned the process to IT or left it with the department that owns it.
Kissflow is the governed alternative built so the process owner can maintain the application without a developer. Describe the use case in plain language, and Kissflow assembles the governed application: the workflow, the routing, the integrations, and the notifications. The output is a modifiable, auditable application, not generated code that needs a developer to change.
A Power Apps build typically needs IT involvement, and IT is the constraint. In the 2025 EDUCAUSE workforce study, 75 percent of higher education technology leaders described their workloads as excessive, with insufficient staffing the most cited cause. An approach that routes every new application back through the busiest team in the institution does not scale, however capable the tool. Meanwhile, the sector keeps modernizing, with SaaS administrative system selections rising from 1 percent in 2014 to 30 percent in 2024, which only widens the surface of edge processes that need building.
Power Platform is a capable suite, and for institutions with developer capacity and a settled M365 governance model, it can be the right tool. The strain in higher education is specific.
Build capacity. A Power Apps build typically needs IT involvement, which returns process ownership to the team with the longest backlog.
Maintenance. When a Power Apps application breaks or needs a change, the person who can fix it is often not the person who owns the process. Maintenance outlasts the builder.
Licensing and governance. Power Platform capability sits inside an M365 licensing and governance decision that many institutions have not fully resolved, so the real cost and control model is unclear.
|
Consideration |
Microsoft Power Platform |
Kissflow |
|---|---|---|
|
App creation |
Low-code build, typically IT-led |
AI assembles a governed app from a plain-language description |
|
Who maintains it |
Often, a developer, not the process owner |
The process owner, without writing code |
|
Output |
Configured the app within the M365 model |
Governed, human-readable application, modifiable, and auditable |
|
Process ownership |
Tends to return to IT |
Stays with the department that owns the process |
|
Governance |
Depends on the institution's M365 governance maturity |
Role-based access and audit are built in from day one |
|
Licensing decision |
Bundled into the M365 strategy |
Discrete and independent of M365 |
|
ERP-adjacency |
Integrates within the Microsoft estate |
Connects to Banner, Workday, and Ellucian; runs alongside them |
An application that a department cannot maintain is a pilot that becomes a liability the moment its builder leaves. Kissflow keeps the application in the hands of the person who owns the process, governed by the standards IT manages, so departmental innovation compounds instead of stalling. This is the difference between an app that ships and a capability that lasts.
St. Augustine's College, a K-12 education-sector customer, replaced Microsoft Power Pages and 40 Operoo workflows by consolidating 20 core processes onto Kissflow, delivering comparable portal scope at roughly 20 times lower total cost of ownership than the Power Pages vendor approach, and went live faster. A three-person IT team now runs and modifies the workflows in-house. It is a K-12 school, but the lean-IT, Microsoft-displacement pattern is directly relevant to a university weighing the same decision.
Yes. The argument here is not capability. It is maintainability, process ownership, and the build capacity each application requires. Power Platform apps often depend on IT or a developer to build and maintain, while Kissflow keeps the application modifiable by the process owner and governed by IT standards.
Because the cost of an application is not only the license. It is the developer's time to build it, the maintenance when it breaks, and the process ownership returns to IT. Kissflow's licensing is discrete, the application is maintainable by the department, and governance is built in, which is where the total cost of ownership comparison favors it.
No. Kissflow's AI generates governed, human-readable applications, not code. That distinction is the foundation of the governance and maintainability argument: a compliance officer or auditor can examine the logic, and the process owner can change it without a developer.