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Staff Report
Columbus State University President Stuart Rayfield is among the 100 Georgians deemed the state’s “most influential” leaders by Georgia Trend magazine. The annual listing recognizes Georgians who are successful in their careers, garner influence and have contributed to improving Georgians’ lives.
The honor comes less than two years after Rayfield assumed the helm as university president. In its January 2025 issue, Georgia Trend lauded Rayfield for early successes during her tenure, including formulating the university’s new five-year strategic plan.
“The people who make Columbus State University special are our greatest strength,” she explained. “That includes our students who choose to study and thrive here, our employees who support and educate them, and our alumni, donors, partners and host community who support us tirelessly. We also have incredible backing from the University System of Georgia.”
When Rayfield began her tenure in June 2023, the university was concluding an academic year with a 5 percent decline in overall student enrollment. Fast-forward 18 months to October 2024, when the university announced a nearly 4 percent overall enrollment increase over Fall 2023—including a 4.9 percent increase in new undergraduate students and an 11.9 percent increase in total graduate students.
With increased enrollment, tuition revenues and state appropriations have increased, and finances have stabilized. In addition, FY24 marked one of the highest levels of donor giving to the CSU Foundation in recent years, with gifts nearing $6 million. Last fiscal year also marked the first time in university history that its endowment exceeded $100 million.
“Columbus State exists today in its current form by the will of this community. We would not be here but for our community’s commitment to the idea of a local university and what it means to the region,” Rayfield said. “Community—both our campus community and our numerous partnerships with our host community—is our cornerstone.”
Rayfield explained the university’s symbiotic relationship with the community is at the heart of its new five-year strategic plan, which she describes as “ambitious and measurable.” If the community is the plan’s cornerstone, its pillars are the strategic plan’s tenets: student success, responsible stewardship, community impact and economic competitiveness.
Rayfield said she spent the first year of her presidency listening and learning. That foundation, besides fostering a new strategic plan, led her to make strategic appointments to her executive team and strengthen and initiate vital community and academic partnerships. It has also included building the infrastructure to support redesigning student enrollment and retention strategies, realigning the core curriculum with the career competencies required of today’s employers, implementing a slew of new capital projects, and starting a new effort to redefine campus culture.
She’s also building pipelines between Columbus State and the state and region’s employers. Workforce-focused programs like the university’s cybersecurity stackable certificate and nexus degree programs have brought Gov. Brian Kemp and a cadre of state and federal officials to campus since she began her tenure.
SHARING THE SPOTLIGHT
Rayfield appears o0n Georgia Trend’s list alongside other influential Columbusites, including Aflac Chairman, CEO & President Dan Amos; Synovus Chairman, CEO & President Kevin Blair; W.C. Bradley Co. President & CEO James G. Hillenbrand; and Columbus Mayor Skip Henderson. She also joins University System of Georgia Chancellor Sonny Perdue and nine other public and private Georgia university presidents on the list.
Two Columbus State alumni also appear on the list with Rayfield: Robert Bunch ‘98 (certificate), president of Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia, and Kevin Tanner ‘01 (master’s in public administration), commissioner of Georgia’s Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities.
Visit the Georgia Trend website for the digital version of its “100 Most Influential Georgians of 2025” edition. Rayfield’s professional biography is available on the university’s website.