Title: Does a university need a CIO
1Does a university need a CIO?
- Professor Anthony C. Masi
- Interim Provost and CIO
- McGill University
- CANHEIT 2005 Keynote Address
- Montreal, 27 June 2005
Be courteous to others, please turn off all cell
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2Topics
- potential roles of a CIO at a University
- changing expectations for the CIO
- IST in a University environment
- - principles
- - architecture
- - infrastructure
- - investment and prioritization
- IST governance and administration
- ERP and project management issues
3The roles of a university CIO
- responsible for administrative systems, the
network, the ERP, customer support, academic
technology, the Library - articulates the IST vision and set expectations
- organisational architect
- executive manager in charge of the delivery of
services - change manager
- transformations that produce coordinated
transactions across functional boundaries - new business processes
4More roles of a university CIO
- ultimately responsible for the flow of
information within the University - defines the IST policy agenda
- responsible for the strategic alignment of IST
goals and objectives with the overall university
mission - executive manager of the project portfolio to
support administrative, teaching, and research
initiatives
5CIO profile business professional
- management skills in an area of the institution
other than technology - usually a power user
- not part of the embedded culture of IS/IT
organisation - depends on technical expertise of the IS/IT staff
- technically aware
- struggles to match technical infrastructures with
the universitys business needs - customer-centric
6Expectations that university presidents have for
the CIO
- leadership and communication skills
- - transform vision into action
- - create an environment of shared understanding
- - secure the foundation for technological change
- ability to apply technology to meet needs
- - know where technology solutions fit business
needs - - knowledge of critical success factors
competitive edge - - partner in strategic and operational planning
- innovation
- - continuous improvement and enhancement of
business - practices with creative use of IS/IT in
all parts of business - Adapted from CIO profiles prepared by the
Gartner Group
7The changing roles of the CIO
- positioning information technology as the
strategic underpinning for business success - How the CIO role evolves depends on
- the extent to which the university perceives
itself to be dependent on IST - the credibility of the IST team when faced by
senior administration at the university - the relationship of the CIO directly with the
President and relative to other senior
administrators
8IST in a university environment
- the power and presence of information systems and
technology has grown - but, the strategic importance of IST has not been
increasing, rather there are some signs
indicating that it is decreasing - if everyone has access to the same technology,
then technology itself can not be a competitive
advantage - IST appears to have become infrastructure
technology
9An IST quandary
- Either
- IST is only a cost now
- Information technology has increasingly become
a simple factor of production a commodity
input that is necessary for competitiveness, but
insufficient for advantage - Nicholas G. Carr, IT Doesnt Matter, Harvard
Business Review - Or
- IST represents untapped potential in business
today, the edge of the wedge - An inadequate IT infrastructure in higher
education will result in a decline in the quality
of students, faculty and research - Jack McCredie, Does IT Matter to Higher
Education?, Educause Review
10Workforce, organisation, and spending
- source of differentiation
- empower employees to use and adapt the tools
available to them - questions
- how best to invest in technology
- how to use IST to improve the University teaching
and research functions and the administrative
processes - IST spending
- may be cut and but a given level of
functionality must be maintained - aligning IS/IT
- university-wide strategic goals and objectives
11Alignment with academic priorities
- clearly articulated campus vision and priorities
- linking planning with the budget
- IST plan and planning activities
- dynamically stable environment
- effective IST governance process
- effective IST strategic planning and documented
objectives for initiatives - involvement and communications with key
constituents
12McGills IST principles and objectives
- enable academic priorities
- ensure information integrity
- create a common view and one version of the
truth - promote consistent, flexible architectural
integrity - utilise industry standards to rapidly deploy new
applications - reuse gt buy gt build measure, improve,
communicate, and be responsive - manage IST as an investment benchmark
13IST architecture at McGill
- core business processes at McGill and their
inter-relationships - information drives McGills core processes, so it
must be integrated - technical capabilities must be standardised
university-wide in order to support IST
efficiencies and facilitate process
standardisation and integration at McGill - many activities have to be standardised
university-wide to support data integration at
McGill - technology choices guide and are guided by
McGills approach to IST initiatives
14IST infrastructure at McGill
- infrastructure services are critical to achieving
McGills strategic objectives - university-wide infrastructure services have to
be implemented at McGill, requiring service-level
agreements (SLAs) - pricing infrastructure services at McGill
- McGills plans for keeping underlying
technologies up to date - outsourcing opportunities for infrastructure
services
15Investment and prioritisation
- strategically important process changes and/or
enhancements at McGill - consistency of the IST portfolio at McGill with
the universitys strategic objectives - relative importance of university-wide versus
unit-level investments at McGill - actual investment practices as a reflection their
relative importance to McGills strategic
objectives - how much to spend?
- what to spend it on?
- how to reconcile the needs of different
constituencies?
16Process transformation
- To optimize IST value these processes must be
combined to enable transformation - Adapted from Metagroup Research
ITinfrastructureandarchitectureplanning
IST programand projectmanagement
University strategicplanning
17Governance and administration
- avoid silos and create horizontal structures
- with whom people work is at least as important
as to whom they report in a dynamic environment - know when to redesign
- - new roles and relationships are catalysts for
- change and organisational transformation
e.g., having the Libraries report to the Deputy
Provost and Chief Information Officer
18Governance and administration /2
- involve senior managers
- committees, approval processes, and performance
reviews - interlocking committee structures
- exception requests from the President are not
technology issues, but strategic choices - governance arrangement matrix
19Governance and administration /3
- make choices
- highlight conflicting goals for debate
- avoid confusion, complexity, and mixed messages
- clarify the exception-handling process
- exceptions are learning opportunities
- serve as a release valve
- provide the right incentives
- assign ownership and accountability
- IST management steering committees
- EDSIC, SPARC, FIS and SIS specialists in
Faculties
20Governance and administration /4
- McGill units reporting to the Deputy Provost and
CIO - Network and Communications Services (NCS)
- Information Systems Resources (ISR)
- IST Customer Services (ICS)
- Instructional Multimedia Services (IMS)
- Planning and Institutional Analysis (PIA)
- Office of Academic Management
- Teaching and Learning Services (TLS)
- McGill Libraries
21McGill ERP in context
- ERP SunGard-SCT Banner
- 10 year commitment to FIS, SIS, and HRIS
- developing operational data stores into a
full-blown enterprise data warehouse (Planning) - implementing workflow (HR, Faculties,
appointments) - imaging and document management (Archives)
- already implemented BSRs development and alumni
tool - privacy and security issues
22McGill ERP in context /2
- McGills customisation of Banner web Minerva
- organisational charts and scenario builder for
HRIS (Nakisa) - SciQuest Higher Markets e-Procurement link to FIS
(still need true provisioning software solution) - real-time linking of LMS (now WebCT CE, but
migrating to Vista) to SIS and eventually to
library systems and services - student and faculty recruitment and prospect
management tool - Using Luminis data integration suite (Documentum
under consideration) to link the ERP to the
Oracle Portal - meta-directory solutions to identity management,
authentication, and authorisation via nSure from
Novell
23McGill ERP in context /3
- SSO (single sign on)
- optical backbone network (CFI-funded, with
chargeback) - SAN (Hitachi three tiers) and backup (Veritas)
- Other licenses
- Oracle campus license
- Exchange and other Microsoft applications
- Elms
- McGill on-line course evaluation (MOLE) via
Minerva and real time link to Banner SIS
24McGills ERP implementation life cycle
ERP ProjectLaunch
Go-Live
Improvement
Stabilization
Business Performance
Time
McGill Fall2004 Adapted from a Working Council
for CIO Publication
25The ERPs short-term promises
- stabilise processes and technology
- provide an environment where people can learn to
use the new tools - provide users with the time to translate the
training they have received into action in a live
environment - deploy additional resources to the faculties and
local administrative offices to assist in the
transition
26ERP is the beginning, not the end
- ERP implementation provides a stable transaction
platform - ability to leverage the ERP investment in new
directions - goal of standard processes and data
27Some lessons learned
- "successful" and "painless" are not the same
thing - full-scale implementation of ERP could represent
a total replacement of IST functions and
processes - using a determined and realistic approach,
successful implementation is achievable
28Beware of the data issues
- information systems evolve over time in response
to the demands of the environment - opportunities to expand an ERP solution or to
provide targeted solutions for different
constituencies must ensure that IST
infrastructure does not drift from the effective
ERP-imposed standards - protect data standards and data integration
- departure from data standards introduces
inefficiencies in communication and understanding
as different units struggle to translate the
information they obtain from elsewhere
29The devil details and data
- battles over things that you never gave much
thought to before, like units of measurement - expect that more of those battles will be over
data than over functionality (who is the trustee
for citizenship for a student-employee, SIS or
HRIS?) - basic assumptions about what data mean may be
challenged through the implementation - differences in commonly used data may have
historically been shielded by the existence of
non-integrated applications - develop an approach to resolving these issues and
defining ownership of critical data elements
30Management failures data warehousing and data
visibility
- technical
- poor usability and insufficient scalability lead
to complex customisations - standards setting and enforcement
- data integrity failures and the magnitude of
legacy standards lead to dispersed standards
ownership - user absorption
- legacy report lock-in and an analytical skills
gap lead to a querying bottleneck - governance
- Inconsistent privacy controls and data-hording by
Faculties and administrative units leads to
uncoordinated usage
31Obstacles to data warehousing and data visibility
Problem
Ambition
Data management practice
1. data inconsistencyreports vary by data source
and reporting tool
"Single version of the truth" for data across the
university
data standards life-cycle management
2. shallow data standard data available at
top-level only
in-depth standard data for key business drivers
3. restricted access data access restricted to a
handful of power users Â
desktop access for data users in all offices of
the universityÂ
redefined business data ownership model
4. data latency lag in obtaining accurate dataÂ
more frequent refresh of data set
5. systems duplication siloed decision support
system
one decision support system based on data
warehouse
enterprise decision-support utility (business
intelligence solution)
Adapted from a Working Council for CIO
Publication
32Know the needs and ERP is supposed to meet
- understand business processes before you begin
altering them through ERP implementation - get a set of pre-implementation process
performance metrics in place before you begin - know the current-state
- identify areas where process improvements can be
undertaken immediately (morale boosters and early
payback)
33Difference between understanding it and liking it
- decision-making is sometimes a zero sum game with
winners and losers - have a fair and transparent process in place for
making these decisions - people need to understand how and why a decision
has been made and, importantly, that it will be
adhered to - implementations get bogged down when the
different constituencies stop believing that
everyone is in it together - they also get bogged down when project managers
sometimes fail to make critical (and unpopular)
decisions
34Managing by project?
- Portal and data integration (new services)
- Databases, directories, and identity management
(transparency and easy of use) - infinite storage, backup, recovery, and BC/DR
(business continuity and disaster recovery) - Office enabling software solutions (support)
- Clientless ERP for end users (upgrades)
- Encapsulation and interfaces (filling the gaps)
- Learning management software (remembering the
mission) - Libraries catalogue updates, information
management, search engines, academic integrity
software (text matching and reference materials)
35Conclusions
- enterprise-level technologies only offer a
platform for business execution - level of execution is dictated by people
- success in implementing information technologies
that will enable people to maximise the
application of talent in pursuit of goals - IST availability and usage plays a role in the
improvement and potential standardisation of
individual and business unit performance - implementation success is to be found at the
project level - contingencies will always force the
modification of enterprise-level software
packages learn to live with it
36New question
- Given that a university really does need a CIO,
what should that CIO do? - Using the University of California, Berkeley
approach as a model of the right things to
consider, let me turn my attention to some final
thoughts.
37Ask and answer appropriate questions
- How can the groups reporting to the CIO
participate in developing new research and
learning paradigms based on the ongoing
transformations of IST? - Where and when should our campus be an innovator,
early adopter, or follower in the IST
environment? - What are the critical issues for teaching,
research, administration, and public service that
IST can help address? - What is the appropriate role for IST to play in
transforming the teaching and learning processes?
- On what strategic IST initiatives should we focus
over the next five years?
382. Articulate strategic vision
- Who are we? guiding principles
- Where are we now? stakeholders perspectives and
environmental scan - Where do we want to be? vision, objectives,
goals - How will we get there? initiatives and
incremental operational improvements - How will we know how we are doing? performance
measures and benchmarking
39Articulate strategic vision /2
- alignment with and support for university
priorities - accountable allocation of resources
-
- integration, inclusion, innovations, and ease of
use - security, stability, safety, and reliability
- ubiquity of basic standards
- excellence in conceptualisation and execution
- measuring up to best practices among peer
institutions
403. Focus balancing act
414. Engage opportunities and challenges
- Teaching and learning
- support the activities that are at the heart of
the universitys mission - Research
- support all disciplines
- connect the campus with the world
- Security, reliability, access
- secure and reliable
- maintain the access required of an open
university - Funding, governance
- state-of-the-art services
- limited, or even shrinking, resources
- Expertise
- attract and retain dedicated professionals
425. Projections guiding actions
- ubiquitous campus data network will serve as a
major tool supporting learning, research,
outreach, management, and all forms of scholarly
and personal communication - students will increasingly own their own
computers, but the University must provide a
broad set of information resources freely
available to all, including email, Internet
access, web services, computing labs, and digital
library materials - computing to support sponsored research
activities must come to be supported by grants
and contracts and not funded through campus
allocations
436. Continuing problems
- budgets are shrinking rapidly each year it is
becoming more difficult to maintain the
information systems currently in place and to
find investment funds for new initiatives - increasing attacks from hackers threaten both the
stability of the campus information
infrastructure and the privacy of sensitive
personal and financial information stored on
campus systems - campus culture of decentralization leads to a
fragmented environment with many inefficiencies
and overlaps in the provision of important IST
services
447. Strategic initiatives
- ubiquitous wireless data and voice services
- experiments using technology to transform the
learning environment for undergraduates - new infrastructure partnerships between the
research community and university-wide IST
providers - enhanced security architecture to protect the IST
environment and resources
45Your turn
- Questions
- Comments
- Suggestions
- Criticisms
- Complaints