Business Intelligence Technology >> SuperData
As ERP systems spark a deluge of data on campuses nationwide, savvy schools are turning to business intelligence software to make sense of it all.
Who would have thought that a state funding crunch would have spurred campus
administrators to uncover millions of dollars in “found” revenue,
via business intelligence (BI) software? Surely not officials at the University
of Minnesota, where funding for higher education is at an all-time
low. In fact, over the last 30 years, the state of Minnesota has dropped from
sixth to 26th out of 50 in percentage of municipal budget support for public
colleges and universities. Overall, funding has declined by $100 million since
2003, and during the current fiscal year, state appropriations will provide
only 22 percent of the university’s total revenue. It’s no wonder
officials at the university had been tasked with the unenviable challenge of
developing new and sustainable revenue streams to ensure the school’s
future.
It was back in 1997 that university officials first responded to worsening
conditions by investing an undisclosed amount in a plan to uncover new revenue
streams and curtail inefficiencies across the board. In an effort to snuff out
redundancies that were presenting a significant drain on resources, administrators
implemented an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system, and a new strategy
to distribute responsibilities for day-to-day decisions across administrative
levels and departments. Then, to make sense of the data that the new ERP system
presented, and shape the information exactly as they wished, officials invested
in business intelligence software from Cognos (www.cognos.com).
Over the next few years, campus officials set up different programs in the
BI software to track unbilled tuition, grant maturity cycles, student matriculation
and performance, course management, and a host of other data sets across campus.
The software did its job masterfully. Earlier this year, school officials announced
significant cost savings and business process efficiencies across the board.
They unveiled increased matriculation rates, and cut selected courses that weren’t
drawing a minimum number of students. And then there was a surprising bonus:
School officials identified nearly $5 million in unbilled tuition during the
implementation of a student financial system, most of which they recovered on
the spot.
“To say we have been shocked by the results of the [business intelligence]
software would be an understatement,” says Susan Grotevant, director of
the Information Management Systems department. “It has single-handedly
helped us get a grasp on our [student, finance, admission and course data],
and make the most of an otherwise depressing funding situation.”
Grotevant isn’t the only one to discover the virtues of BI; as universities
continue to spend larger and larger sums of money on ERP systems to digitize
data, the need for similar software packages to make sense of the digitized
data and use that data to achieve business goals, has gone through the roof.
The logistics of this relationship are simple: As ERP systems such as Oracle
(
www.oracle.com), PeopleSoft
(acquired by Oracle; www.peoplesoft.com),
SAP (www.sap.com), and SCT
Banner (www.sungardsct.com) spark
a deluge of information, BI helps make sense of it all. And while critics joke
that the very notion of “business intelligence” is an oxymoron,
in many cases, BI software quite literally becomes the essential tool that enables
administrators to find the proverbial needles in their haystack of numbers and
figures.
Mining (and Analyzing)
the Haystack
When the University of Minnesota purchased its ERP system from PeopleSoft,
the underlying principle that guided the development of the ERP modules was
that instructional revenues should follow costs. Under an internally designed
plan dubbed Incentives for Managed Growth (IMG), the administration provided
financial incentives to individual colleges at the university, to offer new
courses and enroll additional students. In return, the school kicked back 75
percent of the net tuition revenues to the college of instruction, and 25 percent
to the college of enrollment.
Previously, the university had managed all of these financial planning and
recruitment decisions centrally; a scenario that, unhappily, allowed for cost
overruns and sometimes sizeable miscalculations. The adoption of the new IMG
system, however, required colleges to make their own decisions, as it also created
an information-rich decision environment that could reach to the lowest levels
of the organization. Suddenly, colleges and departments realized that they had
the ability to change revenue and educational outcomes by the types of decisions
they made. In order to do this, they needed more concrete financial and enrollment
data, and they needed it fast.
The data wasn’t exactly readily accessible, however. First, college and
department heads needed to transcend information silos to reconcile and integrate
financial and student data from multiple legacy and ERP systems. Next, they
needed to aggregate and organize this financial and enrollment information in
a way that facilitated analysis necessary for decision-making. Finally, they
needed to get the financial and enrollment information out of ERP systems and
off of paper-based reports, into a format that could be downloaded, manipulated,
and easily integrated using ordinary desktop applications.
“Historically, people would ask one question about how much a particular
course cost to run, and you’d do a report. They’d ask another question
about how much another course cost, and you’d do another report,”
says Grotevant, who remembers those reports as huge printouts of unintelligible
charts and statistics. “Once we embraced the [new management philosophy],
it became clear we were going to need to completely re-evaluate the way we had
used our data in the past.”
Grotevant says that she selected the PowerPlay software package from Cognos
because of the way department heads could customize it.
The customizable programs
were known as “cubes,” and during the first few years of the implementation,
she and her colleagues used one cube to better understand how tuition revenues
are earned. By analyzing data about course enrollment and student behavior/matriculation,
colleges had the opportunity to recognize that admitting higher numbers of less-qualified
students (who generally take fewer courses and make greater demands on student
services such as advising) was not the best means for meeting higher net tuition
revenue targets.
But the benefits from BI didn’t stop there; better analysis and other
cubes offered the colleges additional opportunities to increase net revenue,
including using gift aid more strategically to attract and retain students of
higher ability; requiring higher minimum course loads; developing tools to help
advisors and instructors identify and counsel students in academic trouble;
managing class sizes; understanding and managing tuition discounting; and gaining
a better sense of what type of student succeeded at the university. At the end
of the day, BI provided college and department officials with the information
they needed to provide a higher-quality undergraduate experience.
Then of course, there was the unexpected: When they investigated data about
tuition payments, school administrators uncovered flaws that, for years, had
existed in the PeopleSoft student financial system implementation, and the discovery
resulted in uncovering more than $5 million in unbilled tuition. The university
set out to recover this money with a combination of letters and phone calls
outlining the glitch. Save for a few cases, most of the money was recovered
without incident, a savings that Grotevant says “more than paid for”
the school’s investment in Cognos, right out of the gate. Slowly but surely,
by investigating inefficiencies and seeking to cut costs, the business intelligence
system was doing the job.
Today, Grotevant says the university has parlayed its Tuition cube alone into
revenues that have increased by $187 million, or 76 percent, since 2000. Other
cubes have yielded similarly breathtaking results—the Course Enrollment
cube, for instance, has enabled the school to tailor its course offerings to
general student interests and eliminate courses with sagging interest, again
reducing costs. In order to forecast the number and types of courses needed
down the road, future plans for improvement in the area of course management
call for extracting preference information from the school’s Advisement
and Academic Progress System (APAS), as well.
“I don’t see my job as providing reports, but instead, as providing
the resources for people who use information to make decisions,” Grotevant
says, adding that the school also is developing new cubes for Human Resources
and Student Aid. “In this day and age, with funding and other issues constantly
nagging at schools like ours, I don’t know how any institution can manage
without making the best of the information it has.”
Reinventing Admissions
The University of Minnesota isn’t the only school using business intelligence
to examine and drive admissions decisions; two schools in Florida are doing
it, too. At
Florida State University in Tallahassee, for instance,
BI tools from Business Objects (www.businessobjects.com)
have changed the admissions process completely. In the past, the school employed
an admissions model that provided every interested student with the same amount
of marketing literature. Recently, by incorporating data on characteristics
such as hometown, high school GPA, and more, the school began to get smarter
about how it spends its marketing money, conserving resources for those students
who are most likely to actually enroll.
Today, according to Rick Burnette, director of Student Information Management,
the results of the $200,000 investment in BI speak for themselves. For starters,
the school has increased the size of its freshman class by more than 1,500 since
1999, a rise of roughly 35 percent. Secondly, in the same period of time, FSU
has increased the average SAT score of its incoming freshman by 55 points, to
1201. Finally, the school has grown the number of minority students on campus
by approximately 10 percent.
“We came from an environment where we had static data and we couldn’t
lift it off of the page,” says Burnette, looking back. “But, from
dumb statistics you can get dumb conclusions, at least that’s what we
thought until Business Objects came along.”
Down the road, at Tallahassee Community College (FL), officials
relied upon BI software from SAS (www.sas.com)
to unlock data about their admissions process. Starting in 2003, administrators
switched the admissions process from a voluntary advising system for first-time
students, to a one-on-one program that included software to track how students
handled the transition to the school. How many hours of classes did they take?
How frequently did they drop classes? What was their average GPA? By pulling
in statistics from a variety of systems, officials were able to answer questions
like these, and correlate those answers to broader, overarching trends.
So far, says Barbara Sloan, vice president for Academic Affairs, the amount
of useful data has been staggering. While they have yet to incorporate this
data into formal policy changes, Sloan has been able to get a general sense
of how courseload corresponds to performance, and how dropping classes may actually
hinder a student’s ability to learn. She predicts that over time, the
school will be able to use the information to target its recruitment and admissions
resources, to make students more successful. With a few minor changes, she says
the school also should be able to break even on its initial $200,000 investment,
despite an annual $75,000 fee to keep the system going.
“As a dynamic institution that needs to keep up with change, we must
have relevant information at our fingertips,” she says. “In this
day and age, it’s high time to make decisions on hard data, not just anecdotal
information.”
Other Applications
There are other creative ways to implement BI. At Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute
(NY), officials use software from Hyperion Solutions Corp.
(www. hyperion.com)
to drill down into data sets, delivering up-to-date information about how much
money researchers have remaining on their grants. Ora Fish, Data Warehouse program
manager, says users also implement BI to coordinate financial information in
preparing quarterly financial statements. She adds that the biggest challenge
has been getting users to embrace the new technology, since they are so accustomed
to the labor-intensive method of “green bar” reports for similar
data.
To handle similar tasks, technologists at Yale University
(CT) also use Hyperion software, and they teaming it with reporting tools from
Oracle. There, Laura Craft, director of the Office of Information Management,
says an $800,000 investment in a new system has replaced what Yale employees
called the Rainbow Reports (named for the colored sheets of paper on which they
were printed) that were run off the mainframe and manually distributed. Today,
via Hyperion, nearly 10,000 reports (mostly financial) are generated automatically
and delivered through an electronic portal. In addition, another 10,000 reports
are run monthly on an ad hoc basis, as users need to research particular financial
data.
“This is now all transactional reporting,” Craft asserts. “Reports
are so easy now that after every batch, we have our people ask themselves: Are
these the right transactions? Did they hit the right accounts? Is everything
in compliance? [Business Intelligence] is a great way of understanding all of
those issues, and then some.”
At the University of Notre Dame (IN), where Craig Brummell,
director of ERP programs, uses software from Business Objects, officials are
optimizing administrative systems reporting through a massive ERP effort dubbed
Renovare. The endeavor ultimately will enable the school to implement more robust
information in every facet of university operations, including tuition flow,
endowment funds, and human resources data on staffing. Then, there’s the
University of Illinois, where Director of Data Warehousing
Andrea Ballinger has overseen an expenditure of $1 million on Business Objects
software to build other HR-specific cubes, including one where employees can
access a checkbook balance of their paid time off.
Information Systems people are using BI, too. At DePaul University
(IL), Senior Data Warehouse Analyst Russell Patterson says he and his colleagues
use BI software from Informatica (www.
informatica.com) to keep track of how many faculty and staff members are
using the department’s Web portal. The group uses the information to determine
loads on the system so they can plan for periods of high demand. Elsewhere on
campus, technologists utilize a similar function of the software to track which
students sign up for tickets to athletic events, and how many of the students
who sign up for tickets actually use them to attend.
“For us, business intelligence is incorporated to justify things such
as our portal or athletic fees,” Patterson explains, adding that DePaul
had used PeopleSoft’s BI functions for a while, but deployed Informatica
last year. “It’s a valuable part of making sure we on campus continue
to have the things that all of us appreciate.”
The Payoffs
As Patterson implies, quantifying ROI for BI implementations can be difficult,
since financial impact is frequently hard to gauge. Only in rare instances such
as the University of Minnesota’s case, can a school tab a specific figure
as a result of BI. (At Minnesota, administrators plan to use BI to save even
more money down the road.) At other schools, though benefits have been plentiful,
they’ve been harder to quantify.
Brummell at Notre Dame says that for him, after years of using various reporting
tools for disparate data, simply agreeing on a standard institutional reporting
tool qualified as a success. (At Notre Dame, as at many other schools, it is
BI software that enables users to replace voluminous, paper-based green-bar
reports with customized, targeted, Web-based documents that lay out data in
a sensible and easy-to-read fashion.)
“The whole process of business intelligence is an iterative one,”
he says. “Simply having this as an option has opened doors we never dreamed
of opening.”
At the University of Miami (FL), for instance, where officials
recently purchased BI software from MicroStrategy (www.microstrategy.com),
Daniel Thomas, director of the Database group, d'esn’t even try to figure
out return on investment. Instead, Thomas focuses on the practical ramifications
of the new system, noting that his people aren’t requesting more reports,
but instead, they are requesting “smarter” ones.
Fish at RPI quantifies return on investment in redirected personnel hours
as job expectations change and decision-makers get accustomed to information
availability. Whereas users formerly spent days each month sifting through reports,
they now spend hours, mostly scrolling through pre-packaged reports delivered
electronically. She says that RPI has gone so far as to create a layer of business
metadata to make the BI system even more intuitive for ad hoc reporting and
analysis on almost a daily basis, and has hired a new staffer whose sole responsibility
is to address campus reporting and analytical needs.
“The cultural changes that the new technology brings to the campus rollout
strategy were carefully planned and executed,” she says. “The rollout
strategy recognized the need for people to acquire new job skills and make other
adjustments before [business intelligence] could succeed.”
At Yale, Craft prefers to focus on the environmental impact of BI. Before
implementing the software, Craft chronicled the time spent each month generating
reports. Once the reporting system was up and running, she took another log,
and calculated how much time faculty and staff members saved when they no longer
had to sit there printing out reports, putting in parameters, and so on. In
any given month, she says, users save “days” worth of time. What’s
more, she adds, people who in the past were supposed to look at reports but
did not, now take the time to check things out and investigate the data that’s
available to them, because the reports are more relevant and easier to read.
Others echo these sentiments as well. At the University of Wisconsin, which
recently implemented BI software from Informatica, David Hart, special assistant
to the associate VP, says that all 13 schools in the state system have experienced
similar benefits in usefulness and adoption from users gaining a better understanding
of their data. For Hart, perhaps the biggest boon from BI has been the knowledge
that deans and other users who previously didn’t get useful information
in a variety of areas now see precisely the bits of data they need, empowering
them with appropriate facts, and inspiring them to act
decisively.
“If a dean has the right information to make a decision in a timely
fashion, what’s the ROI on that?” Hart asks. “In the end,
we’ve probably made the most money on those types of situations. I don’t
know about you, but that’s what I call success.”
Defining BI
IN A NUTSHELL. Business Intelligence (BI) software enables users to obtain enterprise-wide information more easily. These products are considered a step up from typical decision support tools because they more tightly integrate querying, reporting, OnLine Analytical Processing (OLAP), data mining, and data warehousing functions. They frequently are used in conjunction with Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems such as Oracle/PeopleSoft, SAP, or SCT Banner.
There are a variety of products that claim BI capabilities, but the bottom line is that they should enable users to obtain all of the information they desire from their organization’s databases, provided those users are allowed access to certain information. All of the information is presented in sensible easy-to-read formats, most frequently over the Internet or via e-mail. The result, of course, is a more comprehensive and targeted search of available data, and the incorporation of that information into reports to assist in decision-making of all kinds.
BI software is available in a variety of flavors—or cubes—designed to cull data from just about every area of university operations including Finance, Administrative Systems, Payroll, Grant Management, Admissions, Human Resources, Student Services, and more.