Evanston South, 5116, SA,
Australia
Trinity College Gawler Technographics
Discover the latest software purchases and digital transformation initiatives being undertaken by Trinity College Gawler and its business and technology executives. Each quarter our research team identifies on-prem and cloud applications that are being used by the 200 Trinity College Gawler employees from the public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources.
During our research, we have identified that Trinity College Gawler has purchased the following applications: Craft CMS for Web Content Management in 2022, Malwarebytes for Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) in 2020 and the related IT decision-makers and key stakeholders.
Our database provides customer insight and contextual information on which enterprise applications and software systems Trinity College Gawler is running and its propensity to invest more and deepen its relationship with Pixel & Tonic , Malwarebytes or identify new suppliers as part of their overall Digital and IT transformation projects to stay competitive, fend off threats from disruptive forces, or comply with internal mandates to improve overall enterprise efficiency.
We have been analyzing Trinity College Gawler revenues, which have grown to $40.0 million in 2024, plus its IT budget and roadmap, cloud software purchases, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions for Trinity College Gawler intention to invest in emerging technologies such as AI, Machine Learning, IoT, Blockchain, Autonomous Database or in cloud-based ERP, HCM, CRM, EPM, Procurement or Treasury applications.
Content Management
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pixel & Tonic | Legacy | Craft CMS | Web Content Management | Content Management | n/a | 2022 | 2022 |
In 2022, Trinity College Gawler implemented Craft CMS as its Web Content Management solution for the public website. Craft CMS serves as the site's content management layer for trinity.sa.edu.au, centralizing page templates, content entry, and digital asset management. This deployment aligns the application with institutional web publishing needs across the marketing and communications function.
The implementation leveraged core Web Content Management capabilities such as structured content models, templating, media asset handling, and editorial workflows to support admissions, events, and community engagement content. Governance reflected role based editorial permissions and a centralized publishing cadence, moving operational ownership toward the communications team and school administrators. The architecture is consistent with a lightweight CMS footprint suitable for a 200 employee education organization, with Craft CMS managing front end content rendering and administrative workflows on the public site.
|
CyberSecurity
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malwarebytes | Legacy | Malwarebytes | Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) | CyberSecurity | n/a | 2020 | 2020 |
In 2020, Trinity College Gawler deployed Malwarebytes as its Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) solution to protect campus endpoints. Malwarebytes was implemented to provide continuous endpoint protection, with the application configured to detect, quarantine, and remediate malware in real time across college-managed devices.
The deployment emphasized core Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) capabilities, including real-time threat detection, automated remediation workflows, and a centralized management console for policy enforcement and incident visibility. Configuration focused on endpoint scanning, behavioral detection rules, and automated cleaning actions to reduce manual remediation tasks.
Operational scope covered Trinity College Gawler IT operations and endpoint incident response, with the application supporting routine device hygiene and rapid containment of infections. The implementation directly impacted IT helpdesk workload and device restore processes by shifting remediation from manual restores to automated endpoint resolution.
Governance and process changes included instrumenting Malwarebytes alerts into existing IT ticketing workflows and updating remediation playbooks to leverage automated clean actions. According to Andrew Larner, Director of IT at Trinity College, "It has given us back 20% of our work week by not having to restore infected machines, and our vendor experience is exceptional," reflecting reduced restoration effort and a positive vendor relationship.
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