Archive Page 4

[CSG Winter 2011] IT Alignment, efficiency, strategy and governance, part 1

Jim Phelps is setting the stage – what does it mean to be a mature enterprise? 5 stages – Ad Hoc, Basic, Standardized, Managed, Adaptive – lower levels driven by technologies, upper levels driven by business strategiies. Adaptive is designed to pursue change and adapt quickly. Higher Ed governance structures are designed to resist change – to keep processes going through turmoil.

Why change? Not just because it’s fashionable – a lot of compelling drivers, like cost differential between cloud and on-premises services. Huge shift in how business is being conducted globally – See the article in Atlantic on The Rise of the New Global Elite, and the article in the Chronicle on European university mergers. Higher Ed has a terrible time making decisions.

Bernie takes over – asking Why Alignment so Important? Typically only about 1/3 of the total institutional IT spending is in the central IT organization. As we move into challenging days, the reaction may be to lower central administrative spending, but that may not help with IT. We need to help our institutions understand how IT works in the institution and how to rationalize.

Role of Governance – to understand leadership role in facilitation of conversations. Understand what customers are looking for, and to help lead and socialize directions. Strategically choosing governance groups is critical. Choose who will be part of which groups and what the roles are in continuous technology conversations. Often groups like to think they get to tell the central IT shop what to do, but we need to help them understand their role within the governance continuum. Looking for a shared set of strategies to move forward.

IT Strategic Planning Goal – “Identify and invest in technology projects that are transformative and provide competitive advantage…” Terry asks who is the competition? Competing with other institutions, as measured by rankings, research dollars, – but what happens when everyone’s strategy is to be in the top 3? Tracy notes that the differences are how we translate the goals into our culture and practices. Some of us are focusing on international programs, some on bridges with K-20, etc. Mike Pickett says that while the rhetoric may be the same about seeking competitive advantage, we want to make sure that IT is not perceived as a competitive disadvantage.

UMN has rolling 6 and 2 year plans, and then work on quarterly work plans, where they try to focus on the planned vs. unplanned activities. Trying to manage an IT investment portfolio and bring everybody into the conversation. Project selection criteria include the kind of project, what value it brings to the institution, and how its financed. Focused on strategic and operational priorities.

What criteria do you need to have in place to make a decision? definition, functional owndership, business case, and finance plan. Some projects are in planning and development phase where these things are not yet clearly understood. How do those get decided and resourced? Iowa says those that have strong champions get resourced. At Brown they have a committee chaired by the CFO – everything that’s over $50k or is a new service is supposed to come through that group.

Looking at Risk – Org and Tech readiness, architecture fit, definition is well understood, infrastructure compatibility. Looking for Value on Investment – look at over 5 year term. Looking to figure out how to shrink effort on non-strategic work and increase resources available for strategic initiatives. It’s an art form with a political calculus.

Joel says this is less about the org chart and more about the real relationships with people so everyone really understands their role. John from Duke notes that lemmings are perfectly aligned – sometimes you want to see a diversity of approaches, like with learning management systems where all the current answers are crummy. Sometimes you need to embrace chaos. Terry agrees that we need to consider alignment and efficiency vs. effectiveness. We don’t have that many arrows in our quiver to gain efficiencies – automation, de-duplication of services, and standardization. How do we try to live in a mode of pushing efficiencies while meeting the ever more disparate needs of our audience? Tracy says that part of the CIO’s role is to balance the gaining of efficiencies with the fact that two years from now people may have money again and will be driving towards flexibility.

Elazar – created new governance structure at UCSF – IT Steering Committee chaired by a faculty member – 5 groups under it. Everything that is substantial in university (including medical center) goes through this group.

My Top Listening of 2010

There sure has been a bunch of great music from this year that I’ve been enjoying! I realized as I listened to my big 2010 releases playlist that there are some themes that emerged, so I’m doing some lumping here.

Theme #1 – Old Guys (and Gals) Rule

  • Robert Plant – Band of Joy

    I was never much of a Led Zep fan, primarily because Plant always sounded like a cat that was having its tail stepped on. I began to get interested when he collaborated with Allison Krause, mostly because it seemed like such an odd couple. But this new album floored me. Spooky, rootsy music with lots of atmosphere, but always retaining soul. Banjos and upright on some tunes, lots of electric distortion on others, and sometimes all of the above together.

  • Mavis Staples – You Are Not Alone

    A joyous celebration by the legendary gospel and soul singer. Produced by Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, who had the good sense to record Mavis with her superb hard working road band.

  • Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Mojo

    To my ears the strongest Petty work since Damn The Torpedoes (that ought get a rise out of some folks). I read in Tape Op that before this Petty had been listening to lots of Muddy Waters, while Mike Campbell was spending time listening to old Zeppelin. Both influences show and work together beautifully. A rocking, bluesy, mature work from what is arguably the best band in the business.

  • Los Lobos – Tin Can Trust

    Are these guys simply too good to be popular? This is their best effort in a while, showing off the incredible range and sonic versatility they’re capable of. The one-two guitar punch of Cesar Rosas and David Hidalgo just gets better and better, and the songwriting and singing are equally strong.

  • Keith Jarret and Charlie Haden – Jasmine

    What can you say? This is another gem in a spread out series of Charlie Haden’s duets with marvelous pianists (previous efforts featured Hank Jones and Kenny Barron), and it’s wonderful. Charlie Haden, as always, makes every note count, and Jarrett plays right in sync with him. Gorgeous music.

  • Bettye LaVette – Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook

    While it sounds like a concept that might fail miserably (veteran neglected soul singer takes on hoary British rock anthems from ’60s to the present), it mostly works quite well. I’m particularly fond of her takes on the Beatles’ The Word and Paul McCartney’s Maybe I’m Amazed. And I like her good taste in picking Salt of the Earth, though her version doesn’t really add anything to the Stones’ original.

Theme #2 – In which I discover some younger veterans that I had never listened to before

  • Superchunk – Majesty Shredding

    I had never listened to their earlier stuff (this is their ninth album, and the first since 2001), but I really like this one. Great power pop, putting an equal emphasis on both words. Killer hooks, heavy guitar, terrific sound.

  • Jenny and Johnny – I’m Having Fun Now

    Thoroughly modern girl group surf music that’s more sophisticated than it sounds on first listen. Jenny is Jenny Lewis, formerly of Rilo Kiley. Johnny is Jonathan Rice, who has worked with Elvis Costello. Big Wave is the catchiest tune yet written about the economic crisis. Pure pop for now people.

  • Belle and Sebastian – Write About Love

    I’d tried little snippets of Belle and Sebastian before, but Bryn convinced me to give them a go again, and I’m glad she did! Perhaps a bit too earnest for some, but their tuneful, intelligent Scottish pop somehow soothed my hectic fall season as I started transitioning to a new job in a new city, and it’s stuck with me.

  • Spoon – GaGaGa

    I know – everybody’s been into Spoon like forever – where have I been? I like this. Don’t make me a target!

Theme #3: Not all good jazz is from the US

  • Moutin Reunion Quartet – Soul Dancers

    Francois Moutin is probably the number one on-call jazz bassist in Europe. His upright technique is awesome, but it never gets in the way of his musicianship. His own quartet, including his brother Louis on drums, really come into their own on this recording. All acoustic (well, some light electronic keys), but to me it seems heavily influenced by late quintet to early electric Miles, say Filles de Killimanjaro to In A Silent Way and early Weather Report, while still finding an original voice.

  • Sunna Gunnlaugs – The Dream

    Sunna Gunnlaugs is an Icelandic jazz pianist. I came across her after somehow becoming Twitter mutual-followers with her drummer (and husband), Scott McLemore. This is a quartet effort, and it’s one of the few new jazz releases from this year that I keep coming back to. Accessible and melodic, but not insipid or wimpy – there’s a core of strength and adventure running underneath the beauty that seems characteristic somehow of Icelandic music. Worth seeking out – get it from her web site: http://www.sunnagunnlaugs.com/shop.htm

That’s my list for now – I’ve got a bunch of stuff I haven’t gotten to that is showing up on other people’s end of year lists, like Brandi Disterheft’s Second Side (she’s a Canadian bassist and singer – where do these monstrously good young jazz bassists keep coming from?), the Drive By Truckers’ Big To Do, The Head and the Heart (a good sounding new Seattle band), and lots of others.

CNI Fall Meeting 2010 – Cyberinfrastructure Framework

Cyberinfrastructure Frameork
Alan Blatecky – acting director, NSF Office of Cyberinfrastructure

5 crises
Computing tech
Data, provenance, and viz
Software
Organization for multidisciplinary science
Education

Science and scholarship are team sports
Collaboration/partnerships will change
- building dynamic coalitions in real time
Ownership if data plusnlow cost fuels growth and number of data systems
- federation ant interop become mire important

Innovation and discovery will be driven by analysis
Mobility and personal control will drive innovation and research communities. -
- eg using accelerometers foe earthquake detection
Gaming, virtual worlds, social networksm will transform the way we do science, research and education

All the layers have to work together for the system to function. Cyberinf. Ecosystem.

The goal of virtual proximity – you are one with your resources. Collapse the barrier of distance. All resources are virtually present, accessible, and secure.

NSF

Data enabled science
Community research networks
New computational infrastructure
Access and connection to facilities

Impacts on NSF
CI as enabling infrastructure for S&E
New role for data
Multi-disciplinary approaches essential
Education – embedded and integral
More coordinated post-award management

Examples

Transient & data-intensive astronomy
- seeing events as they occur
- complex interconnected earth systems

Four data challenges
Volume
Growth
Distribution
Data sharing

Sea of data
- data enabled sciences
– immediate and long term support of data
– focus on data life cycle issues
– development of data tools – mining, visualization, algorithms
– broad computation science education program
- advanced computational infrastructure
– software elements -> integration -> institutes
– sustained long-term investment in software
- data services – integration, preservation, access, analysis
– community access networks – building virtual communities
— collab tools, secure systems to link peplum etc
- access and connectivity
– connections ton facilities and instruments
— ooi, sensor networks, telescopes (desktop connectivity hasn’t improved)
– cybersecurity
– networking, end-to-end

- data sciences

2010 CNI member meeting – Cliff Lynch intro

Cliff – 20th anniversary of CNI. How to observe? Focus on the future. Going to putntogehter an ebook – the next 20 years – analytic and prescriptive, but not scenarios. Look at where we’re likely to go in the next 20 years  in higher ed, scholarship, etc. Have to also talk about larger forces in society.

Why 20 years? Predicting the future is hard – failures of imagination and failures of nerve (Arthur Clark). Long enough to see change, but not be science fiction. Going to invite anyone who wants to respond to an opening essay that Cliff will write. Will reach out to some specific people. Will package up a selection of the essays in the ebook plus a print on demand option by end of CY 2011. Provide an offset to the short term focus of the last couple of years. When you look at some of the abrupt changes, the have long-term ramifications that need to be thought through. 

It is a good time to think about the long term. Things that have happened in the last year worth mentioning. Some quite incredible things.

Cyberinfrastructure and e-science. Can already see big steps happening in changing of scholarship. Emergence of plan for next gen networks coming out of NLR an I2  - provisioning 10gb lambdas for researchers. Emergence of sensor networks – example of high speed trading, where the speed of light makes a difference. Area of greatest interest here -data curation. Big announce,net is NSF data plan requirement. Major step because it brings researchers face to face with questions about data. What’s important? Where can I get help? Good to get the conversation going across a wide range of disciplines. We’ll see other finders follow suit. Getting services in place for researchers is a non-trivial issue. Guidance for researchers is vague. Review panels could use some guidance. This is a great collective experiment. Would be good to have a database of successful data management plans, use that as a way to get a grip on what we should do going forward. We don’t have a good understanding of data life cycles. Not hearing words lime “forever” in is context. Hearing things like “a few years after the grant” That’s good – we’re good at keeping data for 5 or 6 years. 

Open data movement. The idea that  Data should be open and shared gaining inexorable traction in some areas. . Not paying enough attention yo software. Erosion of reproducibility makes it difficult. The idea from people like Ian Foster, where everybody should be able to inspect and run the model. Entering an age of simulations and models.seeing things like a proposal out of eth asking for a billion euros to build simulation of social data incorporating input from 70 databases. New kinds of simulation, multiple-input agents.

Getting to be strange world of artifacts. Digital preservation. Trying to get to a shared standard of what constitutes the historical record. Think of the change in news. Community journalism – a form of social network. If you look at how much time people spend I. Social media, you come to the conclusion that we should be preserving and archiving – LC getting the Twitter archive. Not only important retroactively, but turning out that some of the social media are predictive. A whole series of papers from folks like Hal Varian – things like twitter or search streams are good for predicting things like movie box office. Google has been working with CDC to predict disease archives by looking at queries about symptoms combined with geo-location. Interstingnhow difficult iti is to look at these in academic social science because of human subject issues.

Wikileaks – enormous dumps of data on the net that presumably have some historical value. Some libraries starting to amass data documenting human rights violations – the kind of puzzles we’ll be dealing with. The viciousness of responses is interesting. The network is getting to be a vicious place in ways that it didn’t used to be – e.g. The stutznet worm. A very complicated and sophisticated thing with some very specific targets. Lots of implications for what documentation of the social record looks like and our confidence in its integrity.

Rise of new scale phenomena – David Rosenthal has done some fine work. In a big enough system things are always broken, so you have to be able to design around that. The probability that you can read an entire disk is becoming a problem – need different ways of thinking. Resilient system design.

Mobile computing – not just about laptops or cell phones. Seeing devices in the middle, or image sensors, digital capture, overlays on the world. Old news – putting a camera in every pocket has had all sorts of social ramifications. Before the web, we used to have a zoo full of one-off apps, that wanted to be silos. Now we’re seeing that come back in the mobile world. Hundreds of apps, each talks to one specific info resource. Need to think hard about this as we think about integration of mobile. The potential to re-license content we already own is large.

Teaching and learning – seeing a maturation of LMS market. Being extended into collaboration suites. Also seeing a resurgence of other reads where computing gets involved – Intelligent tutoring, e.g. – actual teaching done with statistical models and machine intelligence. Long history of this that never gained traction in higher Ed, though it did in some niche markets commercially. This might be a direction for textbook evolution.

Been a lot of interest unleashing space – want to engage students at a deeper level, and have them take responsibility for their learning. Worry about saturation – engagement exhaustion. The problem is one of local optimization, at the level of the course. Need to think above the course – degree, certificate, etc. Will intersect with discussions of retention and time to degree.

We are busily building systems that collect data on students. Now want to exploit it – retention, student progress, etc. Need to use them wisely and transparently. If we’re not clear with students about data collection, we may lose the ability to make use of data streams. In consumer markets we are seeing the wheels of regulation move, which will complicate things while maybe not solving  them. 

Special collections entering a new golden age as they become digital. Fascinating things going on with individual personal collections. The public interest in private records is a frontier policy area.

Many services migrating out to the network level – software as a service. Lots we don’t u derstand. What do databases look like – linked data, trust, authoritative data, issues. Croppingnup in discussions of bibliographic control. We’ll also see it with names how does that connect to databases of things like grant proposals, biography, family history. The example of mathematical genealogy – your children are the people you advised on their thesis.

Will see lots of development with the relation between what campuses are doing and what’s going on nationally.

Goodbye UW, Hello Chicago!

Last Tuesday was my last day as an employee of the University of Washington.

I’m excited to say tomorrow I start in a new job as Senior Director for Emerging Technology and Communication with IT Services at the University of Chicago. I’ll be part of the leadership team that Klara Jelinkova, their relatively new Chief Information Technology Officer, has put together. I’ve known and admired Klara as a colleague for a number of years now as she’s held increasingly more responsible positions at the University of Wisconsin and Duke before coming to Chicago in March. Klara is one of the new generation of higher-ed CIOs – whip smart, completely grounded in the technologies, but understanding the role that modern IT organizations must play to work with and serve the university. I couldn’t imagine a better person to work for. The other folks I already know in the Chicago organization (Tom Barton, Greg Anderson, Bob Bartlett) are also top notch, and I look forward to working with a whole new group of colleagues.

While I’m sad to be getting ready to leave Seattle, I look forward to getting to know Chicago, a great and vibrant city. It’s gonna be hell on my downhill skiing, though.

I’ll be blogging about my experiences in getting to know Chicago and our work in IT Services as it happens, but I wanted to at least take a brief look back on my 16.5 years at the UW, and all that we’ve accomplished over those years, because over the course of that time we did play a part in changing the world.

It’s easy to forget that in the 1990s computer professionals at academic institutions were busy inventing the future. When I first came to the UW in 1994 it was not generally accepted in industry that internet protocol networking was going to be the way to go, nor that open protocol applications for email and other purposes would be adopted on a wide scale.

In 1994 we were excited about new emerging Internet applications and standards such as Gopher (invented at the University of Minnesota by my colleague Mark McCahill), IMAP (pioneered at Stanford and the UW by Mark Crispin and colleagues) and z39.50. The World Wide Web had been recently invented at CERN, the European particle physics research lab, and the Mosaic web browser, created at the University of Illinois’ supercomputing center, was wowing us with its ability to integrate images, text, and hypertext links in an open way that made it easy to create rich content.

Since that time we pioneered the use of developing technology time and again, we helped convince major commercial interests that the Internet was the way to bring people and business together online (for better and for worse), and we built a large and growing community of technologists and technology users at the UW.

Some of the areas where we can take some credit for being among the first include developing standardizing on IP-only transport on the network, creating a university web presence, building large collections of streaming audio and video, using IMAP as a widespread protocol for email, building web-based interfaces to administrative systems, creating an enterprise web portal before the word was even in use, creating widely-used independent tools for collaboration in teaching and learning, building a GUI interface for searching library resources, having a web-based single-sign-on system, deploying a campus-wide online events calendar, building web services interfaces to enterprise data, and many more.

Recently, we’ve been engaged in projects to really get a handle on how we organize, manage, and budget for IT work at the university. While not as sexy perhaps as some of our past technical adventures, I believe that being organized about how we plan for, manage, and communicate about IT services is a foundational discipline for being effective, agile, strategic, and innovative in supporting the work of the modern university.

The last couple of years have been tough ones in the UW Information Technology organization. It’s no secret that these are not easy times for public universities in general, and Washington’s state budget picture specifically doesn’t look too rosy. Constant cutbacks and layoffs have become part of “the new normal”, as admittedly outsized ambition and reach has been scaled back to a more modest scale.

Throughout all of the years, the people I’ve worked with at the UW have been a wonderful, extremely skilled and talented group. I’m honored to have worked among them, and I’m extremely proud of having played a part in the UW’s efforts over the years.

Harley Davidson – a great early example of working the social nets

A couple of weeks ago I went to visit my friend Jim Fricke in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Jim is the head curator for the Harley-Davidson Museum, and I spent an afternoon and the following morning browsing the museum and lending a bit of help to Jim and the crew who were installing the new Evel Knievel exhibit.

I’m not a motorcycle rider, and I didn’t really know very much about Harley’s history, so this was a voyage of discovery for me. The Museum is really good, loads of cool bikes and interesting exhibits and explanations. I loved the “engine room” where you could see why Harley’s engines are different than others, leading to the characteristic Harley sound. There’s a wall that shows the various engine variations over Harley’s history and you can listen to recordings of the different versions – how cool is that?

The story of how Harley was acquired by AMF and became part of a large corporate enterprise in the 1970s, with subsequent declines in quality and reputation, and then had a remarkable rebirth after a group of company executives repurchased the company in 1981 is legendary.

But what I was struck by as I went through the museum exhibits covering those events was the amazing foresight that those executives had in leveraging two overlapping social networks to resurrect the company’s quality and reputation. They realized that using the network of Harley dealers and through them rallying the owners of Harleys to help the company would be key to their effort. The creation of the Harley Owner’s Group (HOG) in 1983 is frequently cited as a stellar example of brand management, but I think it’s more interesting as a very successful pre-online example of using social networking to help inform and support corporate strategy.

A Drupal tip: Adding taxonomy vocabulary description to a Views header

This is a how-to tip for Drupal 6, which I’m documenting because I couldn’t find this answer anywhere and it took me a day of scratching my head to figure it out. Drupalistas might find this useful, the rest of you can move along, there’s nothing for you to see here.

I was creating a View that listed all the nodes that have a given vocabulary term assigned to them, where the vocabulary term is passed in as the argument (e.g. http://mysite.myschool.edu/sitename/type/Basic ), where “type” is the path to the View, and “Basic” is the vocabulary term).

I wanted to include the description of the vocabulary term appear at the top of the View. How to do that?

The short answer is to put a short snippet of PHP code in the header of the View. Step by step:

  1. Make sure that the PHP filter module is enabled in the Core – optional section of Modules.
  2. Edit the Header item of your VIew (in the Basic Settings). If you’re using a WYSIWYG editor, make sure your input format is set to PHP Code.
  3. Paste this code into the Header box:
    <?php
    $term = taxonomy_get_term_by_name(arg(1));
    print (filter_xss_admin($term[0]->description));
    ?>
  4. Update the View, then Save it. You won’t necessarily see the result in the Live Preview under the Views menus, but it should work in your site.

The slightly longer story here is that I think there’s a bug in the taxonomy_get_term_by_name() function that makes it so you have to reference $term[0]->description instead of $term->description. I filed that bug on the Drupal.org site at http://drupal.org/node/812164.

Hope that helps other folks besides me – leave a comment if it works or doesn’t work for you.

Levi-Strauss, remix culture, and mining the rock ‘n’ roll past

Logic Studio screenshot
Last week Wet Paint, my old band from the 70s, got together to play a college reunion gig in Bellingham. Great fun was had by all, and I think the band sounded better than it ever had.

Leading up to the gig I digitized our 1978 single from vinyl, and then I decided to try my hand at doing a remix of one of the sides, Steve Robinson’s very cool Shake A Maraca.

Doing a remix is an interesting process. Starting with the original tracks you visually slice and dice them into parts, adding various levels of audio processing to them, and then combine them with other audio. The tools for digitally manipulating music these days are nothing short of astounding in their power (and complexity). I used the latest version of Apple’s Logic, version 9, but there are a variety of competing tools.

Logic comes with a vast array of software instruments and pre-recorded snippets (known as “loops”) which can be utilized at will, and you can import audio from any other source you can find. So the process of the remix involves sifting through a huge library of available sounds and grooves, and trying to figure out what’s useful to the task at hand, and using those pieces to build up what hopefully becomes a compositionally coherent whole.

That got me thinking about the late Claude Levi-Strauss’ writings on “bricolage” in traditional cultures. Bricolage literally means “tinkering”, or as Wikipedia defines it, “to refer to the construction or creation of a work from a diverse range of things that happen to be available, or a work created by such a process”.

Levi-Strauss wrote about the use of bricolage in the construction of myths in indigenous cultures, saying:

The set of the ‘bricoleur’s’ means cannot therefore be defined in terms of a project… It is to be defined only by its potential use or, putting this another way and in the language of the ‘bricoleur’ himself, because the elements are collected or retained on the principle that ‘they may always come in handy’. Such elements are specialized up to a point, sufficiently for the ‘bricoleur’ not to need the equipment and knowledge of all trades and professions, but not enough for each of them to have only one definite and determinate use. They each represent a set of actual and possible relations; they are ‘operators’ but they can be used for any operations of the same type.

which sounds a lot like the current way music is built up digitally. He recognized that the results of the bricoleur’s technique “can reach brilliant unforeseen results on the intellectual plane,” which I think is completely true of using musical remix techniques, which can often bear only the slightest resemblances to the original source material.

Some of my old fogey contemporaries question whether the technique of building up new musical art by reassembling and manipulating digital pieces is as valid as making music by playing a traditional instrument. Get over it! While I personally will always treasure the pleasure of my hands and ears interacting with strings and wood, I don’t think that any one method of achieving sound necessarily holds any more validity than another – it’s what you can do with the tools that matters. I’m sure if I was just starting out with music, I’d be spending a whole lot of time in front of my computer mastering these tools.

All of which seemed relevant this week with the news of the Rolling Stones release of a remastered Exile on Main Street complete with ten new tracks, some of which had some vocal and instrumental parts finished this year. I’ve always loved Exile (though I think Beggars Banquet is still my favorite Stones album), and having just been spending this time mining my own 30-year-old past for a remix, who am I to question whether Mick and Keith should delve into their own unfinished creations? While I haven’t given the new material a good listen, I did really enjoy the All Songs Considered interview with producer Don Was on the project, and the pieces he played during the interview sounded great. If I had a back catalog like the Stones, you can bet I’d be spending time revisiting it – and it sounds a good deal better than any of the Stones’ new material has in some time!

I also think that the bricolage approach has a lot of relevance to software engineering and how we manage IT, particularly in higher education, and I’ll have more to say on that in a coming post.

[CSG Spring 2010] SaaS requirements for higher ed

Tracy Futhey is leading a conversation on SaaS requirements for higher education.

Spent summer gathering docs on shared services from various campuses. In August started looking at email and hosting. Engaged a team from NACUA in October. Came up with email Issues matrix in November and worked out a model contract in March and a draft RFP model in April.

Strategies adopted by sub-team
- Avoid hardcore Technical Requirements list. (outsourcing service/function is not dictating technical solutions)
- Recognize/Leverage limitations on free services (build RFP with expectation of payment for services)
- Assume reuse; organize materials accordingly
- Admit Rumsfeld was right: “there are also unknown unknowns, the ones we don’t know we don’t know”.

Issues spreadsheet – five big issues – Data Stewardship, Privacy, Integration, Functionalities, Service Level

Working with Educause to distribute as open source documents.

What may be next?
- Assess interest in glomming RFP (CSG + …?)
- Finalize plan for Educause to hold docs
- Issue common RFP in June/July?
- Responses in August?
- Campus discussions in fall? Vendor negotiation? (not clear vendor(s) will be responsive to our concerns, or that we will like the responses)
- Decisions by Jan 1, 2011?
- Pilots during spring 2011?
- Fall 2011 go-live dates?

[CSG Spring 2010] Service Management – Service Lifecycle Cradle 2 Grage

Romy Bolton (Iowa) and Bernard Gulachek (Minnesota) are talking about service lifecycle.

At Minnesota they think a lot about service positioning – not to just react to perceived need. An unquenching appetite with limited resources is not a good recipe. Tried to apply a general administrative services framework for the institution about where services should be placed along a continuum from distributed to centralized. Developed principles and examples to help communicate with people in the distributed units.

At Iowa they started “Project Review” process in the late 90s. Tuesday afternoon meetings – employee time with the directors and CIO. Open to everybody. Re-tooled project framework in 2007, service lifecycle management in 2008. Light ITIL framework

Emphasis on service definition, publication, end user request, provisioning. They still have project review, plus a project called Discovery to explore ideas, ITS Spotlight to call attention of staff to services. IT admins on campus have regular monthly meetings with 100+ people. Beginning to work on Do It Yourself provisioning tool.

Service definition starts in project planning phase
- identify service owner and provider
- identify KPIs for service
- Reassess risks and cost-benefit for service
- Identify critcality of service on scale of 1-4
- Update 5 yr TCO and funding source
- Document service milestones
- Update status in ITS Service Catalog as appropriate

Iowa uses Sharepoint as intranet and for publishing their service catalog and Drupal for IKE (their knowledge management site). They’re just building out the self-provisioning service.

Tom Barton notes that there’s something called a Service Provisioning Markup Language – sort of languishing, but maybe some new energy is flowing into it.

Iowa – triggers for Service Review: User needs; environmental change (e.g. the cloud for email); financial; security event; hardware refresh; new software version; end of life for product. Review is not a small effort. Business and Finance office helps gather info. Includes: Service Overview, Customer Input, Financial Resources, Utilization and customer base, service metrics, market analysis, labor resource, recommendations. Owned by the senior directors.

At Minnesota they do annual service reviews of all of their common good services – “just began to enforce that”, in part borne out of frustration at not being able to sunset services. Two or three people focus on this, working with service owners. The current example is what services continue as they roll out Google Apps.

Service Performance and Measurement

Designed for strategic conversations with stakeholders that go beyond the operational. Began gathering availability data about a year ago – looking at whether services are alive. Klara notes that defining whether a service is up can be complex, but that it can be easier to measure simply whether a user can access a service. They have a systems status page showing current status – mixture of automated and human-intervention. Using Cisco’s Intuity product to track monthly/annual measures. They give roll-ups of info to deans and IT leaders. Include benchmark comparisons with Gartner or Burton benchmarks if available. They publish the cost of services annually, so they understand what they’re paying for and how that’s changed over time. http://www.apdex.org is a new alliance for understanding application performance measurement.

At Stanford they’ve established Business Partners – senior people who know the organization who act as the pipeline in to the service managers. They meet with clients at a senior level.

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