Title: Stanford MIT Benchmarking in Higher Education: A Beginning
1Stanford / MIT Benchmarking in Higher
Education A Beginning
- Final Presentation
- November 13, 2002
2Benchmarking in Higher Education Discussion
Agenda
- Overall takeaways
- Methodology highlights
- Timeframe
- Staffing and costs
- Specific lessons for the next team
- How and when do we expand?
- Recommended next steps
3Overall takeaways
- Valuable Benchmarking is indeed valuable
- Requires the most senior-level involvement
commitment - Already seeing benefits
- Helps us define credible data imperfect data can
still be useful - Challenging
- Significant but quantifiable amount of time
- Difficult to calculate costs FTEs across
multiple depts - Must have project manager
- Raises expectations
- Has real costs
- Project costs
- Ongoing data analysis, reporting
- Investments in tools and process improvement
4Overall takeaways
- Methodology
- Must invest in multiple site visits
- May be somewhat standardized for similar
operations - Likely will need to adapt for different types of
operations - Timing
- Think in terms of a full year to study
implement - Immediate benefits in 6 months 6-12 months to
settle in - Other partner(s)
- Consider after 6 months
- Key governance questions to resolve
5See more detail in Appendix 2 Project Methodology
6Key Aspects of Methodology
- Scope Carefully select and define!
- Cant over emphasize this!
- Overall goals then specific goals
- Immediately do Whats so? for each partner
- Scope determines time, methodology, output, costs
- Metrics
- Research and draft key metrics early
- Team leaders should identify key intuitions,
standards, and metrics - Draft the Data Early
- Even before fully understanding operations
- Identifies potential problem areas, provides
practice
7Timeline for Benchmarking Transaction-Based
Operations
Scope definition takes several months prior to
team launch
On-site visits
See more detail in Appendix 2
8The project requires significant staff time
9Specific lessons for next team
- Scope Define very clearly
- Time Recognize a big chunk of staff time
- Visits On site for 1-3 days 2 per campus
- Video Use video conferences when possible
- Size Limit team to 10-12 prime participants
- Tools Email list serves, doc sharing, and
project management tool - Practice Complete draft data early!!!
10Expansion of Help Desk study requires careful
planning
- Previous Goals
- Obtain data to use for comparisons
- Use data to make funding adjustments, decisions
- Improve operations
- Timing 6 months before expanding
- With Whom?
- Education large public, large private?
- Industry internal versus external Help Desk ops
- Associations
- Help Desk industry associations, norms
- Higher Ed associations, conferences
- External vendors, consultants?
11Expansion also requires funding and policies
- Funding and staffing
- How much willing to invest to expand to other
institutions? - Will affect scoping
- Significant time commitment
- Governance How? Who manages?
- Sharing data
- Use an OpenCourseWare approach?
- Privacy, what risks in sharing financials?
- Share FTE performance, but not financials?
- Process to select new areas for study?
12Lets first investigate to find a partner
- Large - to understand scalability
- Wider range of services, larger population
- Stronger use of tools technology
- Organization with low in-house development
- Also consider
- Segmentation of customers
- Standards and control local versus central
- Use of tiers, self-help
13Recommended Next Steps
- Continue to implement targeted HD metrics
- Implement quick wins
- Invest in modifications for Remedy and
Casetracker - Do preliminary research on potential partners
- Re-evaluate in May 2003