Order the Change, and Change the Order
- By William H. Graves
- 10/29/04
To become high-performance academic institutions, we must develop IT with
our eyes on innovation and its measurable outcomes.
When British mathematician, logician, and philosopher Alfred North Whitehead
quipped, “Progress requires order where there is change and change where
there is order,” he couldn’t know how well his concept would apply
to managing and using technology in higher education. Bringing order to rapidly
changing technologies may be the CIO’s role, but applying technology to
change the traditional academic order must be the shared role of faculty and
executive leaders.
Yet the academic order should never be changed for the sake of change—or
for the sake of technology. An institution’s academic priorities should
drive its efforts to fund and manage IT in support of innovation. Help your
colleagues to grasp this, and your institution will be well on its way to becoming
a high-performance institution. It will succeed, however, only by monitoring
and reporting its results against the expectations and metrics of the society
and constituencies it serves. But first, you and your colleagues must commit
to:
- moderating the randomness of grass-roots innovation
with the determined discipline to fund innovative projects of verifiable institutional
value
- funding those projects for their potential to
advance stated strategic objectives
- monitoring those projects using quantitative
institutional performance indicators
- making sure those indicators are embraced by external
policy and oversight bodies
If you’re not certain which innovative projects to select and how to
measure their progress, just look at the vise squeezing today’s leaders
between opposing forces of a) pressure to improve accessibility and accountability,
and b) pressure to manage unreliable revenue sources. The following accountability
and accessibility pressures can help you identify and use performance
issues and related metrics to screen projects for their potential to improve
institutional performance:
- Accountability as an academic quality issue. Measure
and report student learning as evidence for academic quality, i.e., benchmarks
for grades, retention/ graduation rates, and so on.
- Accountability as an expense issue. Measure and
report the unit expense of learning, such as the expense per credit, per FTE,
and per graduate.
- Accountability as a responsiveness issue. Respond
rapidly to economic development/workforce needs with academic programs designed
to meet the needs of strategic groups of employers, professionals, and students.
- Accessibility as a flexibility issue. Deliver
services and selected academic programs more flexibly and conveniently via
a “flex” model emphasizing online self-service supported with
individualized, as-needed expert help.
- Accessibility as a capacity issue. Accommodate the growing demand for higher
education.
- Accessibility as an affordability issue. Hold the consumer price index
line on the rate of tuition/fee hikes.
The Revenue Side of the Vise
Funding projects to improve institutional performance will not be easy when
revenue pressure is building from:
- Shrinking percentage of revenues coming from
state and federal subsidies and programs
- Increasing internal need to fund more and larger
need-based grants
- Increased competitive tuition discounting
- Inelasticity of tuition, partly in competition
with tuition at for-profit institutions
Indeed, many academic leaders are preoccupied with building endowments and
generating more revenues from grants, contracts, and market-driven programs
to offset the above downward revenue pressures. Meanwhile, they are also capping
enrollments and raising tuition to manage revenue shortfalls, thereby increasing
pressure on accessibility and accountability.
Walter Wriston, retired Chairman of Citibank, would cringe at the situation.
He is credited with having said, “Leadership not only requires managing
expenses, but also creating new wealth.” Applied to competitive success
in higher ed today, no truer words were ever uttered.
"Technology-enabled service process redesign is how
service industries reduce cost and give customers flexible, individualized service
options in an online world."
Yes, managing expenses is necessary, but no longer sufficient. Wriston’s
counterintuitive insight, in higher ed terms, is that by responding positively
to pressures to improve accessibility and accountability (to create new academic
wealth), an institution willing also to manage its expenses can improve its
academic outcomes, cost structures, revenues in excess of expenses, and competitive
position—in other words, its institutional performance.
Redesign Services to Create New Wealth
Wriston might ask, “How can a competitive level of IT expense be managed
in sync with investments in service innovations, to yield improvements in accessibility
and accountability, and reduce revenue pressures?” The solution to this
challenge, as practiced elsewhere in the service economy, uses technology to
redesign services to improve service quality and flexibility while reducing
unit costs. The redesign strategy usually targets a flex service model emphasizing
convenient online (asynchronous) self-service while also reducing unit costs
and providing access to individualized, expert service interventions when needed
or requested.
Wriston’s Citibank, for example, d'esn’t use the phrase “distance
banking,” but instead uses “personal banking” to describe
seamless, anytime online access to customer accounts, online management/automatic
transfers of deposits and payments, online loan applications, automated teller
machines, toll-free or online access to a customer-service rep (usually on a
24/7 basis), and convenient offices where business can be conducted in more
traditional ways during regular business hours. Banks also achieve economies
of scale by outsourcing functions such as IT, by business process outsourcing,
and by merging with each other to drive down unit costs. They use technology-enabled
service redesign and the leverage inherent in outsourcing and scale to earn
a competitive edge.
In higher education, there are two primary, overlapping redesign strategies:
the common course redesign strategy described below
(to improve learning outcomes and simultaneously reduce direct instructional
unit expenses simultaneously), and the flex program redesign strategy for meeting
increasingly individualized expectations for instructional and administrative
service flexibility among both flex students and traditional students seeking
a residential experience.
New academic wealth comes from ordering the change (providing a well-managed/supported
IT infrastructure),
and changing the order (focusing IT
investment on institutional
performance priorities).
Common course redesign. Ordering the courses with
the largest enrollments (all sections counted as one) at any institution, and
stopping when cumulative enrollments account for 40 to 50 percent of all enrollments,
will result in 20 to 30 “common courses”—all taught at most
other institutions around essentially the same content. Common courses are typically
required or in demand as electives in general education programs, college prep
(developmental) programs, or high-demand degree programs. Their share of total
enrollments justifies using proven common-course redesign methods pioneered
in a program conceived by the Center for Academic Transformation (www.center.rpi.edu)
with funding from the Pew Charitable Trusts. Grants supported 30 institutions
as each planned and implemented a course redesign for one general-education
common course, with help from the Center. The results conclusively demonstrated
that such courses can be redesigned to improve student learning while simultaneously
reducing per-enrollment direct instructional expenses by an average of 40 percent.
Flex program redesign. Flex administrative services,
including marketing and recruiting services, are a critical success factor for
flex academic programs designed for students who cannot participate in (or prefer
not to participate in) instruction requiring significant real-time interactions
among students and instructors. Redesigning an academic program for flex delivery
requires matching an academic strength with a well-researched niche market (for
example, understanding the competition, the targeted student profile, and the
delivery characteristics required to enroll targeted students). Although successful
flex academic programs receive little press in contrast to their unsuccessful
counterparts, they abound: Benedictine University’s (IL)
Web Flex MBA, Tennessee Board of Regents Online Degree Programs,
UBonline at the University of Baltimore, UMassOnline,
and many others.
Changing Academic Order = New Academic Wealth
I’ll be discussing the common course and flex program redesign strategies
mentioned above, in future columns. In the meantime, a simple calculation will
illustrate how Wriston’s “new academic wealth” can be created
by changing the academic order:
Assume, for example, that 1) direct instructional expenses are at least 50 percent
of total instructional expenses, 2) at least 40 percent of total enrollments
are in 20 to 30 common courses, and 3) redesigning those courses will save 40
percent of direct instructional expenses (the average savings demonstrated in
the Pew-funded course redesigns). Then expense reductions could amount to at
least 16 percent of an institution’s direct instructional costs (8 percent
of total instructional costs), and instructional capacity could be increased
(provided the redesigns increase the student/faculty ratio, as they typically
do by realigning but not increasing instructors’ labor). By also redesigning
academic programs, including the general education program, for flex delivery,
capacity could be further increased, expenses further reduced, and revenues
and responsiveness increased through new flex markets.
Voilà! New academic wealth (that high-performance academic institution
we’ve been talking about), brought about by changing the order, and ordering
the change. Even policy and governance oversight bodies might conclude that
Wriston and Whitehead were onto something.