Assessment Tool Gauges Cost of Technology Decisions

Higher Digital, a provider of consulting, software, and data benchmarking tools for higher education, has created a new assessment tool focused on the organizational behaviors and conditions that lead to "technical debt." The Technical Debt Assessment is free, confidential, and takes only a few minutes to complete, according to the company.

Defined as "the deferred maintenance cost resulting from prior technology decisions," technical debt can lead to performance degradation of critical systems, increased expenses, difficulty in changing systems and processes, and other negative effects, Higher Digital explained in a news announcement. It can result from lack of proper maintenance, or even be created when software is "purchased without centralized coordination, customized beyond the limits of the vendor's software framework, and/or integrated with other systems without enterprise architecture planning."

The Technical Debt Assessment offers recommendations tailored to the institution for reducing technical debt — practices which "have shown to correlate with better outcomes ranging from improved data consistency, better system performance, greater progress on technology initiatives, and more consistent IT budget compliance," the company said.

"It's easy to see technical debt as a technology problem, but it's not. It's a business and organizational prioritization problem that requires a sober understanding of how much Technical debt exists and how to slow down or stop its growth," commented Wayne Bovier, CEO and co-founder of Higher Digital, in a statement. "Technical debt is a key performance indicator of digital health, and it has the potential to single-handedly cost an institution its future, but to understand how to combat technical debt, you first need to know where you stand. We created this assessment to help individuals evaluate their institution's technical debt and implement recommendations to reduce it."

For more information, visit the Higher Digital site.

About the Author

Rhea Kelly is editor in chief for Campus Technology, THE Journal, and Spaces4Learning. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • Silhouettes of business professionals stand against a blurred futuristic city skyline at night, with a glowing digital network data connection

    It's Time for Higher Ed to Get Serious About AI Strategy

    Without a coordinated strategy that involves multiple academic and administrative units across the entire campus, colleges risk wasting resources, duplicating efforts, and ultimately failing to deliver on the promise of deploying technology to improve learning and operations.

  • Educational path and career development growth with neon icons for study, idea, graduation, and success

    How to Embrace Lifelong Learning as a Non-negotiable for Career Growth

    In a world shaped by rapid technological change and shifting economic forces, staying curious and committed to learning is the most powerful way to stay prepared.

  • large group of college students sitting on an academic quad

    Student Readiness: Learning to Learn

    Melissa Loble, Instructure's chief academic officer, recommends a focus on 'readiness' as a broader concept as we try to understand how to build meaningful education experiences that can form a bridge from the university to the workplace. Here, we ask Loble what readiness is and how to offer students the ability to 'learn to learn'.

  • AI word on microchip and colorful light spread

    Microsoft Unveils Maia 200 Inference Chip to Cut AI Serving Costs

    Microsoft recently introduced Maia 200, a custom-built accelerator aimed at lowering the cost of running artificial intelligence workloads at cloud scale, as major providers look to curb soaring inference expenses and lessen dependence on Nvidia graphics processors.