Albuquerque, NM — March 2, 2026 — Amid rapid changes in the labor market and education landscape, higher education institutions are facing increasing expectations to personalize guidance, support earlier student decision-making, and strengthen workforce alignment—without compromising ethical standards, data responsibility, or the human relationships central to student success.
For Central New Mexico Community College (CNM), the question was not whether artificial intelligence could support these goals, but how it could be introduced responsibly. Early, career-connected exploration and integrated pathways were intentionally positioned not as recruitment mechanisms, but as foundational elements of long-term student success—helping learners make informed choices that improve persistence, completion, and alignment with future workforce opportunities.
In 2025, CNM and the Advisor AI team began a deliberate, phased collaboration—progressing from exploration to pilot implementation, evaluation, and ultimately program expansion. Throughout this process, the focus remained on designing more personalized educational experiences while integrating AI in ways that maintained the core values of trust, transparency, and human connection.
The collaboration followed a five-stage process—Exploration, Governance, Pilot, Evaluation, and Iteration—designed to balance innovation with institutional trust and accountability.
In the early months of the collaboration, CNM identified where prospective students—particularly high school learners—faced the greatest barriers to enrollment. Common areas included understanding program requirements, aligning interests with career outcomes, and navigating course prerequisites for high-demand pathways such as healthcare.
Exploration focused on questions including:
“Looking ahead, our goal is to continue illuminating best-fit pathways for thousands of prospective students each year, helping them see how CNM’s programs align with their strengths, interests, and ambitions”
— Jessica Candelaria, Program Director, Respiratory Therapy at CNM
Before any program deployment, CNM team conducted a cross-functional governance and risk review involving leadership from Information Technology, Student Affairs, and Enrollment. This phase ensured that AI adoption would meet the highest ethical, security, and human judgment standards. Key questions and criteria evaluated included:
Q: How does the AI system protect institutional and student data?
Advisor.AI uses a system architecture that separates data and model environments for training and testing. This approach is designed to restrict institutional data from being exposed to external models or unauthorized access by incorporating extensive guardrails.
Q: Does your AI system make autonomous academic and/or career decisions?
No. Advisor.AI neither approves nor takes action independently. All decisions remain under human control and aligned with institutional policies and governance.
Q: How does the platform avoid over-reliance on AI technology?
Advisor.AI avoids engagement-driven or addictive design patterns. Guidance is delivered in short, purposeful steps, and students are encouraged to consult advisors for high-stakes decisions—supporting informed use rather than dependence.
Following governance approval, CNM and Advisor AI moved quickly into a focused pilot phase—launching in under four weeks. The pilot brought together eight key leaders and subject-matter experts from advising, enrollment, and student success to ensure the system reflected real-world workflows and student needs from the outset.
Q: Typical implementations can take months. How long did it take to configure the platform to CNM’s resources and course catalog?
A: Within four weeks, the CNM and Advisor AI teams configured the initial pathways, aligned institutional resources, and trained key staff members. This rapid timeline demonstrates the efficiency of a streamlined setup process compared to traditional, months-long implementations.
Q: How did staff provide feedback and iterate during the pilot?
A: CNM teams participated in weekly review sessions, offering feedback on clarity, accuracy, and the overall student experience. Updates were implemented within days, allowing the platform to evolve quickly in response to staff insights and observed student needs.
“As institutions explore AI, the question isn’t whether to adopt technology—it’s how to do so responsibly, transparently, and in service of students. In Advisor.AI, we saw a powerful tool that prioritizes human judgment, ethical design, and institutional trust at every step.”
— Brian Sailer, Executive Director of Student Persistence & Completion at CNM
The program’s initial user testing and setup were completed in under four weeks. Early outreach—such as an in-person student event—helped introduce learners to the platform, sparked initial participation, and provided actionable insights to shape future roadmap.
During the initial weeks, CNM observed:
Insights from the pilot informed a multi-phase roadmap for expanding support across additional student populations, ensuring that lessons learned could be applied consistently and effectively.
The roadmap now spans:
“Iteration is where we turn insight into action,” said Rosenda Minella, Associate Vice President of Enrollment Management and Student Success at CNM. “By analyzing engagement data and listening closely to both staff and students, we can refine pathways, strengthen guidance, and ensure that each new cohort benefits from what we’ve learned in the past.”
The CNM–Advisor.AI collaboration demonstrates that responsible AI adoption is a process, not a product. By starting with exploration, establishing cross-functional governance, piloting with intent, evaluating meaningful outcomes, and iterating based on real feedback, CNM has created a replicable, human-centered model for higher education.
This approach shows that technology can expand access, strengthen trust, and enhance student and advisor experiences—without replacing the expertise and judgment that drive student success.
About Central New Mexico Community College
Central New Mexico Community College is the largest community college in New Mexico, and has the largest undergraduate student body in the state. serving more than 30,000 learners each year through career-focused, transfer, and workforce training programs. CNM is committed to expanding access and providing clear, supportive pathways that help students achieve their educational and professional goals while supporting the workforce needs of the state’s economy.
About Advisor AI
Founded in 2023, Advisor AI’s mission is to transform student success and economic mobility by delivering guidance that is personalized, comprehensive, and accessible to every learner. Built on research and collaboration with more than 100 colleges, the platform was developed by higher education leaders and ethical AI experts committed to responsible, evidence-based innovation. Advisor AI partners with institutions to provide trusted, AI-native infrastructure that strengthens advising and connects education to career outcomes.