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New Models of Regional Leadership

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Title: New Models of Regional Leadership Author: Doug Henton Last modified by: Rebecca Richardson Created Date: 2/25/2000 5:46:40 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Models of Regional Leadership


1
Presented by Doug Henton Collaborative Economics
2
SETTING THE STAGE
  • What are the new realities?
  • The realities facing everyone
  • Additional realities facing universities/colleges
  • What are the new requirements?
  • New thinking about leadership
  • New thinking about university/college mission
  • What are the new opportunities?
  • New common ground between institutions and their
    regions
  • New benefits for all partners in regional
    collaboration

3
NEW REALITIES Regions, Universities/Colleges,
and Stewardship
  • The Idea-Driven Economy
  • The Proximity Edge
  • The Talent Imperative
  • The Big Regional Sort
  • A New Definition of Success
  • A New Focus on Place-Based Assets
  • The Search for Regional Stewards

4
THE IDEA-DRIVEN ECONOMY
  • Raw material is ideas (the ingredients)
  • Ideas are organized into innovations (recipes)
  • Companies that dont innovate, die
  • Successful regions institutionalize innovation
  • Innovation requires expertise, interaction, and
    diversity

5
THE PROXIMITY EDGE
  • Open systems of innovation require many
    ingredients close by
  • Face-to-face interaction and proximity critical
  • Businesses competing on the basis of innovation
    locate based on regional knowledge,
    relationships, and mindset

6
THE TALENT IMPERATIVE
  • Skilled people are the most important resource
    for innovation
  • Both highly educated populations and specialized
    concentrations of talent
  • Not just young people, but older workers and
    immigrants who will be responsible for much of
    the future labor force growth

7
THE BIG REGIONAL SORT
  • Regions with most college graduates continue to
    attract morea growing divide
  • Fast growth does not always equate with gains in
    college graduates (e.g., Las Vegas)
  • In some regions, universities and community
    colleges may be one of the few assets to attract
    knowledge workers and retool older workers and
    new immigrants

8
A NEW DEFINITION OF SUCCESS
  • Growth in real income per capita, not population
    or job growth per se
  • Success through wealth comes from innovation,
    which results in increased productivity and
    growing prosperity
  • Keys are education level, science and technology
    activity, export-oriented industries,
    entrepreneurial initiative, innovation across
    industries and sectors, talent strategy,
    reduction of poverty and inequality

9
A NEW FOCUS ON PLACE-BASED ASSETS
  • Natural environment
  • Distinctive amenities
  • Lifestyle choices (young, baby boomers,
    immigrants)
  • Innovative place
  • Tolerance, inclusiveness
  • Speed

10
NEW REALITIES MEAN NEW RESPONSES ARE REQUIRED
  • Most complex challenges today are regional in
    scale.
  • Traditional business, government and civic
    responses are not adequate
  • Boundary-crossing is now required
  • Few know how to engage in this kind of regional
    civic leadership

11
CHALLENGE OF REGIONAL COMPLEXITY
  • Four regional, often distinct, conversations
    today
  • INNOVATIVE ECONOMY how to succeed in the
    innovation economy and ensure everyone
    participates
  • LIVABLE COMMUNITY how to create communities where
    people want to live
  • SOCIAL INCLUSION how to ensure inclusive and
    equitable communities
  • COLLABORATIVE GOVERNANCE How to form
    public-private alliances to tackle complex
    challenges

12
FRAMEWORK FOR REGIONAL STEWARDSHIP
13
THE SEARCH FOR REGIONAL STEWARDS
  • Complex challenges overwhelm traditional
    approaches and systems
  • Leaders are often fragmented, unaware of one
    another, or focused too narrowly
  • Stewards are emerging at the center of four
    conversations, forging new approaches
  • Universities and community colleges are logical
    stewards of place

14
A NEW LEADERSHIP MODEL
  • Regional Stewardship commitment to place
  • Traditional Leadership commitment to an
    issue/cause
  • Stewards understand the interdependence between
    the economy, society, and environment
  • Regional stewardship is both an individual and a
    regional capacity

15
NEW EXPECATIONS
  • New expectations for university/college
    contributions to the regionroles in all four
    conversations
  • New expectations that universities/colleges step
    forward as stewards of place as they are
    uniquely situatedembeddedwith a sense of place

16
UNIVERSITIES EMERGING AS REGIONAL STEWARDS
  • FROM
  • Teaching
  • Research
  • Service
  • TO
  • Learning
  • Innovation
  • Shared Leadership

17
TEACHING TO LEARNING
  • FROM
  • Classroom
  • Teaching inputs
  • One-way content delivery
  • Preparation of next generation
  • TO
  • Classroom w/o walls
  • Educational outcomes
  • Two-way exchange
  • Continuous preparation of all generations

18
RESEARCH TO INNOVATION
  • FROM
  • Idea generation
  • Individual inventions
  • Single discipline focus
  • Higher education institution-centered work
  • TO
  • Idea application
  • Collaborative innovations
  • Interdisciplinary focus
  • Regional collaborations

19
SERVICE TO SHARED LEADERSHIP
  • FROM
  • Episodic, short-term involvement
  • Tactical, individual contributions
  • Issue/cause focus
  • Accountability for services rendered
  • TO
  • Sustained, long-term involvement
  • Strategic, institutional commitment
  • Focus on community/ region well-being
  • Shared responsibility for results

20
AN ERA OF OPPORTUNITY?
  • Talent, innovation, and shared leadership have
    never been so important
  • Universities and community colleges are a
    critical asset for succeeding in this new world
  • Neither universities/colleges nor other regional
    leaders can do it alone, without crossing
    boundaries
  • Regional stewardship offers a path forward

21
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22
4 STEP PROCESS
23
STEP 1 Establish Regional Context
  • Identify and diagnose the region, paying
    particular attention to the four conversations
    (innovative economy, livable community, inclusive
    society, collaborative governance)
  • Identify and order stewardship priorities for the
    region
  • Identify primary regional resources and capacity,
    focusing on top stewardship priorities.

24
STEP 2 Assess University-System-State Resources
  • Identify university/college resources and
    capacities that are currently applied (or could
    be applied) to top regional stewardship
    priorities.
  • Assess policy/practice environments
    (campus-system-state) that help or hinder the
    institutions regional application of resources
    and capacity to stewardship priorities.

25
STEP 3 Develop Goals and Success Measures
  • Identify target areas for stewardship initiatives
    and for institutionalization of top stewardship
    priorities.
  • Establish success measures for top regional
    stewardship priorities.

26
STEP 4 Develop Stewardship Roadmap
27
KEY EXPECTATIONS
  • Effort must be simultaneously region and
    institution centered, rather than one or the
    other
  • Effort is a strategic conversation, not a program
    or budget discussion
  • Effort must focus on immediate actions and policy
    changes that have both short-term results and
    long-term impacts

28
THE MPM SEMINAR SIMULATION OF FULL PROCESS
  • 4 Step Process
  • 4 Meetings with homework and committee work
    over one year
  • Regional-Institution teams of 25-75
  • Prototype Process
  • 4 Step Process
  • 4 Sessions with debriefing time over 1-2 days
  • Regional-Institution teams of 5-15
  • Test Drive

29
STEP 1 ESTABLISH REGIONAL CONTEXT
30
EXAMPLES OF REGIONAL CHALLENGES
  • INNOVATIVE ECONOMYprimarily economically-driven
    concerns such as industry restructuring, job
    loss, entrepreneurship, commercialization of new
    technologies, climate for innovation
  • LIVABLE COMMUNITYprimarily quality-of-life
    driven concerns such as environmental quality,
    urban and neighborhood revitalization, land use,
    transportation congestion, housing, amenities
  • SOCIAL INCLUSION - primarily socially-driven
    concerns such as poverty, educational
    preparation, employment opportunity, community
    health, civic participation
  • COLLABORATIVE GOVERNANCE - primarily
    problem-solving concerns such as the need for
    regional alliances of local jurisdictions,
    local/state/federal collaboration, and
    public-private partnerships to address complex
    regional challenges

31
STEP 1 ESTABLISH REGIONAL CONTEXT
  • EXAMPLES OF ASSETS
  • REGIONAL ASSETSmajor regional collaborative
    initiatives, key public and/or private
    investments, major institutions that do or could
    address the challenge
  • INSTITUTION ASSETSleadership, expertise, major
    internal and externally focused initiatives, key
    investments/incentives/policies

32
STEP 1 ESTABLISH REGIONAL CONTEXT
33
STEP 2 ASSESS INSTITUTION/SYSTEM/STATE
STEWARDSHIP CAPACITIES
34
STEP 3 DEVELOP GOALS MEASURES
35
STEP 4 DEVELOP REGIONAL STEWARDSHIP ROADMAP
36
Oklahoma MPM Preparatory Steps
  • Presidents Orientation (June)
  • Determine Regions, Choose Facilitators, and Forge
    Agreements to Work Together Among Higher
    Education Institutions in the Same Region
    (June-July)
  • Facilitator Briefing Book and Training Session
    (August-September)
  • Assemble Regional Team to Attend MPM Seminar
    (Team to include approximately 10 institutional,
    business, and community partners)
    (August-September)
  • MPM Seminar (October-November)
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