What Is An “IT Commons”?
        
        
        
        A few weeks ago I shared a news item about the new IT 
  Commons at Mount Holyoke College. Most of us, when we hear the phrase "IT 
  Commons" probably think of a specific physical location on a campus, where 
  IT resources are shared. 
At the University of Michigan, however, "IT Commons" means something 
  else. It's not a user-based idea; it's a planner and creator-based idea. It 
  means a deliberate, campus-wide shift toward an IT strategic planning culture 
  which is less centralized local-unit planning with incentives for wider collaboration 
  among IT units and also a shift to realign IT strategic planning with "existing 
  University governance, processes, and culture."
How is this working?
In 2003, the average, educated modern person who hears or reads the word "commons" 
  may well think of the essay "Tragedy of the Commons," written by ecologist 
  Garrret Hardin, who passed away just last month. Writing at the height of the Cold War in 1968, and drawing on earlier sources, Hardin 
  bemoaned that when using a shared resource (the "commons," a central 
  meadow where people grazed their cattle, individuals or smaller groups came, 
  quite rationally, to perceive their self-interest as lying in behaviors (putting 
  more of their own cows out to graze there) that eventually would destroy the 
  commons.
There is an echo of that perspective in the voice of U-M executive director 
  of Information Technology Central Services, Kitty Bridges, when she says "Technology 
  has made it possible for everybody to do everything. So schools and colleges 
  from the very smallest to the very largest are providing all services, across 
  the board, resulting in too much duplication of effort." http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/0304/Oct20_03/07.shtml. 
  In other words, each unit's resources may be used up first to handle the basics, 
  like e-mail, calendars, and file servers, and there may be no energy left over 
  to do work on higher-level things that could make a difference to the institution's 
  mission, like support for research and teaching.
And no one at the University of Michigan wants a centralized dictatorship, 
  either. James Hilton, associate provost for academic, information and instructional 
  technology affairs, says that the IT Commons is "rooted in the core values 
  and mission of the University, it reflects the diverse priorities of our many 
  units and programs, and it emphasizes the advantages of creative collaboration" 
  http://www.umich.edu/itcommons/3dmemo.html.
A slide show created for the University of Michigan's "IT Summit" 
  about what at the time was called "the 
  Roadmap Initiative" brings out some of the differences between where 
  the university saw itself then and where it wants to be:
Old Ways
  - Coordination mostly through 'command-and-control' edict of hierarchy
- No shared context for decision-makers 
- Locally-optimized, with little synergy
- Shared capabilities, entirely central
- Common capability as low-level infrastructure (e.g. fiber)
- Inconsistent (perceived unfair) pricing 
New Ways
  - Collaborative, shared purpose can be identified 
- Shared understanding of technology mission & decision-making
- Locally tuned
- Shared capabilities, sourced from best-in-class provider
- An organizational architecture that fosters both independent & shared 
    capabilities
- Resources allocated through clear budget process and services offered at 
    cost
Source: University of Michigan, http://www.umich.edu/itcommons/.
As Hardin noted about the Cold War situation he was addressing, there seemed 
  to be "no technical solution" that could be imposed by a central authority. 
  Indeed, at the University of Michigan, the vision "d'es not include mandatory 
  centralization of services" http://www.umich.edu/itcommons/3dmemo.html. 
The hope is to "realize cost savings that can be redirected toward unmet, 
  discipline-specific needs." And the means for accomplishing that is to 
  establish incentives that encourage collaboration in IT planning and its merger 
  with other, existing planning processes, such as budget planning, position requests 
  and searches, and unit and university-wide strategic planning.
It is likely that Hardin, who could be fairly irascible, would have loved to 
  point out that what we referred to above as "incentives" he would 
  call "mutual c'ercion, mutually agreed upon" a much less palatable 
  phrase. Hardin, in fact, was something of a fan, overall, of fairly dictatorial 
  management processes except perhaps in a select-population, resource-rich environment (which, maybe the University of 
  Michigan is). And it should be noted that the University of Michigan d'esn't 
  reference "The Tragedy of the Commons," anywhere in the IT Commons 
  site, choosing instead to provide as related background reading such materials 
  as Leadership and the New Science: Learning About Organization from an Orderly 
  University, by Margaret Wheatley, 1992, and The 
  Tipping Point: How Little Things Make a Big Difference, 
  by Malcolm Gladwell, 2000. 
How is the IT Commons working out for the University of Michigan? Time will 
  tell. Among the cross-unit collaborative teams currently at work are groups 
  addressing authentication/authorization, directory, network middleware services, 
  and massive data storage model definitely work best done in larger collaborative 
  groups with proper incentives, rather than addressed by splintered, unit-based 
  research groups. We asked Rich Boys, manager of computer systems services, School 
  of Information, at the University of Michigan about his take on the IT Commons 
  so far and he said "It's been a really positive experience so, and what's 
  nice is that it's gaining momentum on its own," so clearly the participants 
  find value in it.
What I like most about all the documents I read in researching this article 
  was this statement from a "Next 
  Steps" Summary: "Don't take it personally if you're left out of 
  a process or meeting crash it if you want to". Whatever you say about the 
  name, "IT Commons," that's certainly the right attitude and I may 
  well be taking advantage of the offer!