Title: Administrative Process Redesign Initiative
1Administrative Process Redesign Initiative
2The Budget Challenge
- 25 growth in students over the past decade
- Two year budget shortfall resulting in reduction
of core support by 25 - Budget cuts impact staffing levels and services
- 20 million last year
- 31 million this year
- Central administration units cut more
- Academic units cuts assigned differentially
3The Budget Challenge
- Campus faces more shortfalls next year
- State has not resolved its fiscal challenges
- Contributions to the Retirement System will
restart in April and are critical to fund - Furlough and debt restructuring is a temporary
solution - Fundamental change is needed
4The Budget Reality
5Current Service Model
- Highly decentralized
- Administrative job structures typically include
very diverse responsibilities - Administrative jobs require attention to complex
policies, laws and regulations - Compliance requirements can drive organizational
structure in ways that are not strategic
6 Our Current Service Model
- 1,000 employees with PPS access
- 225 FTE involved in staff payroll processing 80
involved in academic personnel processing - 85 FTE involved in purchasing
- 340 involved in accounting finance
- Total payroll costs 80 million
7Challenges With Current Service Model
- Lack of standard processes practices
- Jobs include many diverse, complex
responsibilities. Difficult to complete master - Reductions in administrative staff put more work
on fewer people
8Challenges With Current Service Model
- Training this many employees is difficult
- Error rates (e.g. 1 in 10 PPS entries has an
error. Special payroll actions have even higher
error rates.) - Lack of technology infrastructure
- Impedes efficiency effectiveness
- Cannot collect or analyze data
- Encourages shadow systems
9The Opportunity Vision
- Working with campus stakeholders, we will improve
the operational efficiency and effectiveness of
administrative processes and structure so that we
can support our mission of teaching, research and
service.
10Provost Lavernias Charge
- Identify service center structure
- Identify and describe services to be included in
the service center and those that will remain
internal to schools, colleges and divisions - Identify staffing model
- Provide an estimated cost of implementing the HR
shared service center and investment payback
period - Identify a governance structure
- Identify the elements to include in a service
level agreement - Identify a timeline and process for implementation
11Key Drivers for Implementing Shared Services
- The top four drivers for implementing shared
services - Process efficiency
- Cost reduction
- Quality improvement
- Internal customer satisfaction
- Other key drivers include
- Creates an alternative to replicating
capabilities in every operating unit or
centralizing them - Combines customer focus with economies of scale
and efficiencies - Allows business units to concentrate on
developing and improving core activities and
focus on external customers
Source Deloitte 2007 Global Shared Services
Survey
11
12Service Models
SHARED SERVICES
Customer Focused Services Independent
Entity Flat Structure Leading Practices Cost
Process Effectiveness
DECENTRALIZED
CENTRALIZED
Negatives
Negatives
Redundant Inefficient Non-Standardized
Unresponsive Detached from Business Inflexible
Customer Focused Business Intelligence
Economies of Scale Standardized Processes
13Potential Shared Services Functions
- Human Resources
- Compensation
- Records management
- Benefits administration
- Training development
- Onboarding/Offboarding
- Labor relations
- Policies and procedures
- Finance
- General ledger
- Payroll
- AP/AR
- Planning and budgeting
- Tax
- Cash management
- Travel and expenses
- Credit and collections
- Customer Service
- Call centers
- Communication and media relations
- Materiel Management
- Strategic sourcing
- Procurement
- Warehousing
- Inventory management
- Transportation
- Information Services
- Standards
- Technology planning and development
- Desktop support
- Applications development
- Data center operations
- Application maintenance
- Telecommunications
- Hardware and software
13
14Shared Services Is Not
- Centralization
- A power grab
- Simply moving deck chairs around
15Shared Services Is About
- Providing high quality, consistent customer
service - Working with our current budget reality
- Leveraging economies of scale
- Streamlining business processes
- Providing opportunities for employee success
through job design career development
16Benefits of Shared Services
Reduce Expenditures
- Eliminates duplicate processes
- Eliminates redundant labor and systems
- Aligns labor skills and costs with specific tasks
- Creates awareness of costs, shaping usage
behavior - Cost reduction potential of 20 to 50
Improve Operations
Leverage Information
- Increases service levels
- Eliminates non value-added processes
- Focuses efforts of shared services staff
- Improves customer satisfaction
- Allows collection and analysis of standardized
data - Ensures comparability
- Enables better decisions
- Adapts easily to growth
- Provides one-stop shopping
16
17Unknowns
- Exact structure of Shared Service Centers
- The work that will be completed by
- Department
- Dean/VC
- Central administrative unit
- Service Center
- Reporting structure
- Timing for implementation
18Shared Services Projects typically have four
phases
Typical Shared Services Road Map
Assess
Design
Build
Deploy
- Design Business Processes
- Design Organization
- Design Enabling Technology
- Select Locations
- Develop Hiring Plan and Recruit Shared Services
Leaders - Refine Communications Plan
- Create Workforce Transition Plan
- Develop Training Plan and Management Development
Program - Design Facilities
- Design Service Management Approach Details
- Develop Service Management Processes
- Build Performance Support and Training Materials
- Recruit Shared Services Personnel
- Create Service Level Agreements
- Develop Key Performance Indicators
- Develop / Deliver Build Communications
- Build the Organization
- Conduct Deployment Planning
- Execute Deployment Plan
- Confirm Service Level Agreements
- Conduct Training and Work Shadowing
- Develop / Deliver Deployment Communications
- Test Shared Service Center Readiness
- Execute Workforce Transition Plan
- Shared Services Vision
- Scope of Shared Services
- Current State Analysis
- Benchmarking/ Opportunity Assessment (done)
- High Level Operating Model
- Process Split Definition
- Change Management Strategy
- Business Case
- Implementation Roadmap
Current Project Focus
Pilot
Group 2
Group 3
Program-, migration- and change management
(ongoing)
Management Checkpoint
19Next Steps
- Forming executive steering committee
- Conducting customer focus groups
- Provide information about Shared Services
- Better understand the needs, interests concerns
of campus stakeholders - Inventory current administrative restructuring
efforts - Analyze technology requirements for SSC
- Evaluate structure options
- Determine which services will be assigned to
department, dean/vc, central administrative unit
shared service center - Complete return on investment analysis
20Discussion
- How would you like to be engaged?
- What are your needs, interests concerns?
- How do we suggest we engage staff, department
chairs faculty? - What can we do to make this project most
successful? - When should we come back together?
21Questions?