Title: Lea Pennock and Rick Bunt
1- Lea Pennock and Rick Bunt
- University of Saskatchewan
2Who We Are
Dr. Lea Pennock
Director, Student Information Systems 15 years
in the Office of the Registrar (experience at
three universities) sometime lecturer in English
Dr. Rick Bunt
Associate VP, Info Comm Technology 30 years
as a Professor of Comp Science sometime Dept
Head, Associate Dean, ...
3What Were Doing
- Like everybody, were renewing our administrative
support systems. - A strategic priority in the U of Saskatchewan
Institutional Plan. - We are committed to the renewal of our core
administrative support systems ... and to the
delivery of integrated, role-based, on-line
services to our customers, both within and
outside the University. These new systems will
provide exciting new functions and services, and
the powerful workflow and integration tools that
come with these products will enable the
interoperability we require and help us achieve
the cross-functional services that our users
demand.
4Where We Are
- PeopleSoft HR System implemented 5 years ago
- Luminis Portal released 2003/04
- Banner Student implementation underway
- Banner Finance implementation underway
- Coming attractions Library system upgrade, Donor
management system, ...
5What This Talk is About
- Its not about implementation of ERP systems,
- from either the technical side or the project
management side - Its about the cultural dimensions of
administrative system implementation - how the university community is predisposed to
view such projects - how to cultivate the community readiness and
buy-in we need to be successful
6Our Thesis
- Universities are unique places of business
- The collegial system
- The faculty factor
- A university environment defies some of the
expectations and assumptions upon which classical
project management is founded - A university project requires some different
approaches
7- How many academics does it take to change a light
bulb?
CHANGE ????
8An Agricultural Metaphor ...
9Outline
- Climate and soil conditions
- Preparing the ground
- Sowing the seeds
- Tending the crop
- Weeds and other pests
- Harvest
- Thanksgiving
10Climate and Soil Conditions
- The climate and soil conditions at a university
are far from ideal for the implementation of a
large administrative system - Universities are not particularly supportive of
new and innovative IT initiatives ECAR,
IT Leadership in Higher Education The Condition
of the Community, January 2004 - Faculty resist such expenditures
11Climate and Soil Conditions
- The climate can be especially cool for
initiatives seen to come from the administration
12Preparing the Ground
- Year-long Needs and Options phase
- Enormously worthwhile investment of time and
money - helped us to identify the various stakeholders of
the system - got us campus buy-in, but also buy-in from the
Senior Administration and the Board of Governors
(2 presentations) - gave us a chance to sell the idea that this was a
university-wide project, and - Gave our fledgling project team a chance to
establish credibility and confidence
13Preparing the Ground
- Site visits are very helpful during this phase
- To learn about both products and projects
- To make contacts
- Consultants and vendors can also help, but use
them wisely - They know about implementing software but we know
about whats important to our community
especially the importance of consultation and
process in a university setting
14Preparing the GroundProject Governance
- Create a governance structure that reflects your
institutional values collegiality,
representation, accountability, ... - Ensure you have academic representation (faculty,
students, deans). - Start at the top Provost/VP Academic chaired our
Steering Committee. - Dont duplicate decision-making structures and
bodies that already exist ? co-opt them.
15Preparing the Ground Its Not Just About
Software
- A project like this presents opportunities
- for re-thinking the way you do things
- for re-evaluating your institutional
decision-making processes - for re-configuring your governance structures
- for identifying (and sometimes altering) the
formal and the real authority for your policies
and processes - for discovering things about your institution
that nobody remembers the history of, or the
reasons for
16Sowing the Seeds
- Product Selection phase
- Continued focus on project as much as on product
- Developing an RFP is an exercise in refining and
thinking through your institutions needs - Site visits were (again) extremely valuable
- Invited broad campus participation and comment on
vendor visits/demos
17Sowing the SeedsSome Early Lessons
- The importance of faculty and student support
- The importance of external advice
- The importance of being up-front about what the
project will cost and what the returns will be on
that investment
18Sowing the SeedsCommunication Strategy
- Many messages need to be communicated to get
community acceptance of the project - Develop a communication strategy
- Vision and goal for the project
- System will support the academic mission of the
university teaching, learning and research. - Cant assume that the goals of the institution
are monolithic - Different audiences have different goals and
priorities.
19Sowing the SeedsCommunication Strategy
- More elements
- Need to build community trust in the project
leaders and the project team. - Get the faces of project people out there.
- Build positive image of team in the community
capable, enthusiastic, positive, committed to
institutional goals and attuned to institutional
values. - Put the project on the big stage a university
project.
20Sowing the SeedsCommunication Strategy
- Different audiences need/want different things
- Students
- Comfortable with technology want anytime,
anywhere access to services, and want it now - Dont want (or need) to know which office has
responsibility for what - Faculty
- Comfort with technology varies substantially
- Like to do things for themselves but resist being
trained - Dont want to be taken by surprise
21Sowing the SeedsCommunication Strategy
- Deans, Dept Heads, Committees of Council/Senate
- Concerned about who has authority for what
- Concerned about downloading work, but sensitive
to institutional efficiencies - Administrative Staff
- High level of technical sophistication
- Need to know which office/person has
responsibility for what - Things like system speed and number of keystrokes
are very important
22Tending the Crop
- Implementation and Change Management
- Avoid temptation to hole up during
implementation
- Continue to grow, nurture, and coax your
community of support - not a task for the Project Manager, who is fully
consumed with in-project responsibilities - Need an effective Project Ambassador/Evangelist
who continues to communicate - Look for quick wins
23Weeds and Other Pests Myths, Misconceptions,
Rumours
- The system as tyrant the system is going to
drive our academic policies
- Replace this perception with the proposition that
we should make best use of the tool that weve
invested in. - Emphasize project over product project is
providing an opportunity for change.
24Weeds and Other Pests
- The system as agent of corporate control your
system is turning our university into a
corporationwere turning our control over to
central administration
- Quite the opposite distributed web-based systems
empower users by giving them more control of
their own data and processes - Distributing control can re-vitalize the collegium
25Weeds and Other Pests
- The system as black hole These funds could be
much better spent on other things (hiring
faculty, journal subscriptions for the library,
lab or classroom renovations, )
- Let faculty know that you understand and share
their anxieties, that you are not uncritical. Be
sensitive. - Talk about jointly-held goals/values rather than
cost - Find better analogies for costs
- new buildings, utilities,
- Inspire confidence, demonstrate the value of this
investment through the deliverables. Convince
them its good for them!
26Harvest
- Harvest incrementally
- Deliver in tiny bubbles rather than big bang
- Look for quick wins
- Under-promise, over-deliver ? soft roll-outs
27Thanksgiving
- Celebrate, and think big when you celebrate!
- Invite the President, the Provost, your vendors
CEO, everybody involved in the project, ... - This is an opportunity not only to thank the team
and celebrate their success but also to let the
university know that something significant has
happened. - Sometimes the best way to tell the Provost or
President that your team has done a good job is
to get them to say so in a speech to the team! - Dont wait until the very end to celebrate.
28Celebrate Creatively
You worked long days and nights without solace On
a product by no account flawless. Such a
fabulous team Youre the cream-de-la-cream! Wit
hout you, U of S would be PAW-less.
29Revisiting Dictates of Classic Project
ManagementAdjustments for the Academy
- Dictate Get buy-in from the top.
- Be aware of the non-hierarchical structure of
university decision-making. - Every bit as important to get buy-in from the
bottom.
- Dictate Scope creep is bad.
- Dont sacrifice opportunity in the name of scope.
- The academic community is accustomed to seizing
opportunities and needs to be assured that you
will be equally flexible should circumstances
arise.
30Revisiting Dictates of Classic Project
ManagementAdjustments for the Academy
- Dictate Customization is bad.
- Yes, customizing a vendor system is expensive,
but not customizing can be costly too. If the
system is perceived as an impediment, what you
gain in going vanilla will quickly be lost in
support and buy-in of users. - McGills approach vanilla with sprinkles
31Revisiting Dictates of Classic Project
ManagementAdjustments for the Academy
- Dictate Project charters contain fixed truths
and can be returned to as an enduring reference. - For faculty, the process of arriving at a
document often has more weight/value than the
document itself. - An academics business is continually to examine,
re-think the canon, and treat all texts as works
in progress.
32SummaryLessons Weve Learned
- Cultivation is time and money well spent.
- Representativeness has its place.
- You know youve made a convert when you hear your
words coming out of someone elses mouth. - Be conscious of the academic rhythms of your
institution. - Use existing structures and decision-making
bodies wherever possible. - Learn from others other projects, other
universities, user communities, ... - Look for quick wins.
33Lessons Weve Learned
- Not all institutions are the same be sensitive
to the formal and informal decision-making
processes of your own institution, its tolerance
for centralized coordination, standardization,
consistency, and its mood. - Can be a challenge for a vendor, consultant or
implementation partner - Not all projects are the same either you need to
be flexible about tailoring your approach to the
project. - And not all phases of a project are the same
different approaches serve different phases.
34Caveats
- Were not finished ? we dont know the
ending yet. - But
- Were getting positive responses
- from our Board of Governors
- from Senior Administration (President, Provost,
) - from our students and faculty
- Weve passed through cost justification with
very little pushback on cost - Our challenge now is to meet expectations, and
were confident we will!
35Questions?
lea.pennock_at_usask.ca
rick.bunt_at_usask.ca http//www.cs.usask.ca/faculty
/bunt/presentations/partners.ppt