The Right Spend
Trying to get the
biggest bang for your
IT bucks? Check with
your peers: Herein,
community college
technologists share
their top 6 secrets for
getting the most out
of what they buy.
When it comes to getting the most out IT, the
majority of two-year schools face very real
challenges. For starters, community college
budgets are generally smaller than those of
most four-year schools. Then, of course,
there's the issue of refresh: Because students
come and go every two years, there's the expectation that schools
will continually invest in the latest and greatest technologies. This
one-two punch creates a true conundrum for many of the nation's
feeder schools. No wonder both community college tech administrators
and their users feel frustrated at times.
But the challenge needn't be insurmountable. A number of community
colleges, including Santa Rosa Junior College (CA) and
Macomb Community College (MI), have managed solid, highly
cost-effective technology deployments simply by putting an eye to
getting the most out of every dollar they spend. We asked tech officials
at these schools and IT leaders at other community colleges
just how they get the biggest bang out of their IT bucks. Here are
their six top tips.
At Santa Rosa Junior College, Media Services Manager
Russ Bowden says vendor "shootouts" help the school compare and
contrast tech offerings. An added benefit: "Even if vendors do poorly,
they might sharpen their pencils nexttime and really blow us away."
1) Run a ‘Bake-Off'
"Shop Around" may be old advice, but it's sage. Administrators at
community colleges and other two-year schools need to avoid the
temptation to rush into "competitive edge" tech purchases. The
savviest community college tech execs advise: Thoroughly evaluate
a good number of technologies before you elect to spend precious
cash. Many technologists call these trials "bake-offs," since they
invite vendors to come in and present their wares for sampling.
At Santa Rosa Junior College, technologists are so focused on
the opportunity to compare and contrast market offerings, they prefer
to call their tech trials "shootouts," and they hold a few of them
each year. Russ Bowden, manager of media services, says the
specifics of each shootout are different, but the format is the same:
After a formal request for proposals process and grilling a handful
of vendors on certain aspects of functionality, an evaluation committee
comprised of technologists and faculty members gives each
product a formal grade.
Bowden says his department tabulates these grades and invites
the three highest scorers to bid for 30 or 40 machines at a time.
Invariably, the committee then selects the cheapest of the best,
and sticks with that particular model until a manufacturer discontinues
it. (If a model becomes outdated technologically, the committee
decides whether to replace it on a case-by-case basis.)
After each shootout, Bowden posts committee evaluations on the
Santa Rosa website for other
schools to use in their decision-making processes. Vendors also
can assess this information to see where they went wrong.
"We're all about openness and letting
people see what technology we've chosen
and why we've selected it," he says,
noting that the shootout data are available
free of charge. An additional benefit,
he adds: "Even if vendors do poorly,
they might sharpen their pencils next
time and really blow us away."
The technologists at Montgomery
County Community College (PA) host
similar events once or twice a purchasing
cycle. Celeste Schwartz, the
school's vice president of IT, says that
when she and her team invite vendors
onto campus to show off the functionality
of particular technologies, they also
require that the presentations address
four other areas the team has determined
to be of critical importance with
regard to IT expenditures:
- How well the product integrates with
enterprise systems (if applicable)
- Upfront implementation and development
costs
- The potential for end users to
become self-sufficient (in other
words, do training costs need to be
factored in?)
- The impact on process efficiencies
and customer service
"While it is often difficult to get
an apples-to-apples comparison, this
review does provide a basis for cost
analysis," she says. "We always try to
obtain a fair analysis of [potential user]
satisfaction as well as an inside view of
the institutional ramifications during
product deployment."
WHEN TECHNOLOGISTS
AT
NORTHAMPTON Community
College invested
in a web
conferencing
solution
for the school's
distance
education
programs,
they
quickly built a new online
tutoring
program
around the
technology
effectively killing
two birds with
one stone.
2) Collaborate With
Other Schools
Sometimes the best information about
technology purchases and the efficiency
of certain products can be gleaned from
the experiences of other institutions.
Perhaps the easiest way to do this is to
turn to national organizations that serve
as repositories for institutional knowledge
from a variety of schools across
the country (see "For More Information"). Another option is to
look for similar advice on the regional
level, from organizations that service a
smaller niche.
At Coffeyville Community College (KS), Dean of Technology Bill Strecker
has taken this approach, regularly turning
to a group of eight community colleges
in Kansas for input and insight on
IT. The group meets quarterly to share
best practices about experiences with
particular technologies. Occasionally,
when certain schools are interested in
purchasing the same kind of hardware,
Strecker says member institutions band
together for greater purchasing power
and a lower price.
"We don't have any real margin for
error," he says, adding that his budget
for technology purchases is about
$250,000 per year. "When you know
you have only that one opportunity to do
it correctly, relying on other schools for
help in decision-making and even purchasing
can be a big help."
Other schools stretch their IT dollars
by collaborating with fellow institutions
in different ways. At Genesee Community
College (NY), for example, officials
use a few different surveys to gauge student
and faculty opinions on technology
purchases already made each year. One of
the surveys catalogs opinions from students
throughout the State University of
New York system. Another survey, widely
used in the community college sphere,
is the Community College Survey of
Student Engagement,
which culls opinions on specific types of
technology in use, from students at more
than 75 two-year schools across the US.
Larene Hoelcle, vice president of
human resources and planning at Genesee,
says survey results enable her to
catalog user feedback in categories such
as ease of use, efficiency, and overall
value to the learning experience. When
it's time to make purchasing decisions,
Hoelcle and Stuart Steiner, the college's
president, review students' reactions to
previous tech purchases, to make sure
they're spending the school's IT budget on technologies that fulfill user requests
for improvement.
"By using these surveys, we can see
what is working at other schools in New
York State and peer institutions across
the country," Hoelcle says. "Because we
have only 6,500 students, the broader
perspective [those surveys provide]
always helps us make the toughest
choices about technology investments."
3) Standardize
Another good way to get the most out of
every dollar is to standardize on one
technology across the school. This
approach enables schools to buy hardware
(and certain software licenses) in
bulk, which usually creates an economy
of scale and lowers per-unit pricing
across the board. It also cuts down on
administrative expenditures, since buying
one type of equipment simplifies
every step of the purchase from product
research to data entry, implementation,
and maintenance.
Such is the strategy at Cape Cod
Community College (MA). There,
technology officials refresh one-fifth of
their 1,000 computers once every five
years (each year, a five-year refresh
comes up for one-fifth of the machines),
and they purchase all of their computers
from Dell to receive a
discount. According to Dan Gallagher,
executive director of IT, this discount is
fairly significant: Normally, the price
per desktop would be upwards of $1,300
apiece, but by buying in bulk, the school
pays $1,000 per machine-numbers that
really add up as the 200 computers
refreshed at each go-round generate a
$60,000 savings. Over time, the savings
on the machines can ring in at over a
quarter of a million dollars.
Gallagher says the standardization
effort has impacted the school's bottom
line in other areas, too. For starters,
because the school has so many of the
same machines and a strong relationship
with Dell, it has created enhanced bargaining
power with other vendors-an
advantage that is hard to quantify. Cape
Cod also has saved big bucks on support
and training: Because Gallagher and
other IT directors haven't had to train
staff on multiple systems, support costs
have dropped exponentially.
"Standardization reduces complexity
and by reducing complexity, you gain
efficiency," he says. Gallagher adds that
the initiative hasn't been without controversy,
noting that standardizing on PCs
hasn't exactly made Mac supporters on
campus happy. "But no program is going
to please all users all of the time," he
maintains.
Macomb Community College CIO Mike Zimmerman has
instituted a rigorous master-plan-based matrix of requirements to be
applied before the purchasing committee signs off on IT purchases.
"It helps us make sure we're spending money in the right areas.
And if we have a product that is strong in all the things that don't
really matter, it appropriately stays at the bottom of our list."
4) Avoid Job Creep
Another way to get the most out of every
dollar spent on technology is to make
sure that each and every tech purchasing
project is in line with a series of objectives
and goals that were established
before the project even began. At many
two-year schools, because budgets are so
small, technologists insist that pressing
needs have forced them to abandon bestcase
scenario planning in favor of a more
reactive ("knee-jerk") approach. Still, for
savvy technology administrators at many
four-year institutions, proactive project
management has become second-nature.
One two-year school that routinely
plans in a strategic manner is Macomb
Community College, where Mike Zimmerman,
CIO and executive director for
communications and information technology,
sees to it that every technology
expenditure ties back to a master plan.
Zimmerman hails from the automotive
industry, where the intelligent use of metrics
is a common practice. In that vein, he
has implemented a rigorous matrix of
requirements for members of Macomb's
purchasing committee to apply before
they sign off on IT purchases.
Required metric examination on this
matrix includes looking at categories
such as ease of use, scalability, and cost.
During product evaluation, members of
the purchasing committee rank each
requirement on a scale of one to five (five
being most important). Later, as committee
members evaluate similar products,
they rate each product on a scale of one to
three (three is best) for the degree to
which it fulfills each requirement. In the
end, rating and requirement numbers are
multiplied and added together, and the
tool with the highest score wins.
"The process helps us make sure we're
spending money in the right areas," Zimmerman
explains. "This way, if we have
a product that is strong in all the things
that don't really matter, it appropriately
stays at the bottom of our list."
FOR SANTA BARBARA
CITY
COLLEGE, purchasing
a new
technology rather
than
expanding an
existing
one
saved money. Whereas
additional staff would have
to be
found, hired, and
trained
to support
the
expansion,
the new
purchase
eliminated those
needs.
5) Calculate
Management Costs
Before investing in a particular technology,
it's important to consider unseen
operational costs: Crunch some numbers
and determine exactly how much
the technology is going to cost to operate
over time, say the pundits. With
some products, this process can be as
simple as calculating monthly service or
maintenance fees and amortizing them
over the course of a year. With other
products, the equation can be more
complex, and may require IT directors
to factor in the cost of hiring full-time
employees.
Such was the case last year at Santa
Barbara City College (CA), where in
September 2007, administrators were in
the market for new document management
software. At first, Paul Bishop, VP
for information technology, looked into
expanding the college's Novell implementation to include
an individual folder for every student.
When he did the math though, Bishop
realized this approach would require
him to hire at least one additional systems
administrator at a salary of somewhere
around $75,000 per year.
This salary, coupled with the price of
the technology itself, forced Bishop to
seek out more cost-effective alternatives:
One of them was a customizable
content management software solution
from Xythos. Bishop
says the solution was so easy to
install and manage that he was able to
have one of his existing systems administrators
handle it for only an additional
five hours each month. By juggling job
responsibilities among other staffers, he
has been able to integrate the new system
without bringing on another SA-
and even without paying overtime to
existing staff.
"We often have money available for
buying technology in any given year,
but to make an ongoing commitment to
find, hire, and train additional staff is a
little harder to do," he explains. "This
way, we were able to add a new technology
without having to add more personnel.
The value in that is irrefutable."
6) Improvise
Perhaps the best way for two-year colleges
to stretch IT expenditures is for
innovative technologists to get creative
about the ways in which they implement
particular tools on campus. In some
cases, this might mean purchasing an
older technology and tweaking it to
serve new and exciting purposes. In
other instances, it can mean using one
technology to take the place of many
and meet a variety of needs across a
number of different disciplines.
Technologists at Northampton Community
College (PA) learned this
first-hand after signing up for web conferencing
technology from Elluminate. The school
originally purchased the vendor's Elluminate
Live! product to provide a synchronous
video component to existing
distance education programs. But
according to Kelvin Bentley, director of
distance learning, the school quickly
built a new online tutoring program
around the technology, as well.
Bentley points out that if Northampton
had purchased a separate product to
power the online tutoring, it could have
spent two or three times as much.
Instead, he says, the school basically
used the Elluminate product to "kill two
birds with one stone." All told, after
spending $21,000 for an unlimited seat
license of the product in November
2006, college officials recently reupped
by forking over $27,500 for use of
the technology until September 2009.
"We bought [the product] hoping we
could find a way to get the most out of
the money we spent," says Bentley.
"Today, considering that we're using
one technology for two distinctly different
purposes, I'd say we've managed to
accomplish our goal pretty well."
::WEBEXTRAS ::
IT funding roundtable: Four
intrepid campus tech leaders share
how they balance dollars and
demand.
Learn how some community
college administrators are utilizing
technology to serve and retain their commuting students.
Matt Villano, senior contributing editor of this publication, is based in Healdsburg, CA.