the future of technology and higher education vince kellen, ph.d. senior vice provost analytics and...
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The Future of Technology and Higher Education
Vince Kellen, Ph.D.Senior Vice ProvostAnalytics and TechnologiesUniversity of Kentucky
[email protected], 2014
This is a living document subject to substantial revision!
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ChangeThe only thing that seems stable is the overused truism that change is permanent.
What is also not in dispute is that the rate of change has accelerated and is continuing to increase.
Information technology is the primary accelerant in the recent increased rate of change.
The effects of the increase in the rate of change are being felt in all aspects of life: personal, careers, social structures, governments, climate.
The increase in the rate of change is without precedent in human history. We are all pioneers.
What is creating this dynamism? Rising information intensity and flow
• Massive growth in density, quantity and diversity• Dramatic improvements in breadth, ease and speed of access• Global collaboration
Faster innovation, mimicry• Business process replication• IT process replication (e.g., cloud, ITIL, enterprise architecture, PMO)• Speed to market of new offerings
IT is affecting industry competitiveness• Lower barriers to entry, increased market turbulence, major competitors
changing positions– From “Scale without mass: business process replication and industry dynamics.” E. Brynjolfsson, A. McAfee, M. Sorell, F. Zhu. Harvard
Business School Technology & Operations Mgt. Unit Research Paper No. 07-016 (2007).
• Individual and organizational human systems are responding to this pressure
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Is IT a tool or a capability?
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Inputs Process Output
Copper, tin Metallurgy Bronze
Bronze Sword-making Superior sword
Superior sword, person Training Sword master
Inputs Process Output
Hardware, programming languagesIT component engineering
Standard component
Standard component Enterprise architecture Differentiating tools
Differentiating toolsOrganizational development
Differentiated activity
Swords
Information technology
Speaking of change, now let’s talk about the cloud…
First some IT facts of life
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Server
Server Hugger
Server HuggerTrainee
What is this about cloud?
The new outsourcing• Cloud represents a new way of integrating technologies (and business
processes) so that the institution relies on external vendors for basic services
• Cloud is very real, very big and will transform IT• All major vendors are committing >$1 billion each in cloud technology
What makes cloud computing unique?• Widely used, well understood and generic components• Quick provisioning and de-provisioning• Flexible contracting and procurement
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Cloud vernacular Software as a service (SaaS)
• Software hosted elsewhere. Higher education has been steadily adopting SaaS• Examples: Hobson’s CRM, Digital Measures, ServiceNow IT support
Infrastructure as a service (IaaS)• Infrastructure hosted elsewhere. Higher education has NOT yet adopted this technology.
General purpose server computing can be hosted with a vendor or consortium• Amazon’s elastic computing and storage solutions are examples of ‘generic’ cloud• Large vendors are bringing custom, enterprise cloud solutions forward now
Platform as a service (PaaS)• This includes tools to create applications in the cloud• Examples include Microsoft Azure, Force.com
High performance computing (HPC) as a service is coming too• National labs have long since been an ‘outsourced’ provider of HPC• Expect more HPC university consortiums, offerings be large vendors• Cost of electricity, generic workloads make HPC as a service attractive
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Cloud futures Chicago Mercantile
Exchange announced the establishment of a spot market for cloud selling and buying• Future pricing?• Options on future
contracts?• Derivatives?• Bubble?
The big three (Microsoft, Google and Amazon) are undergoing a price war right now
Legal issues are being solved with some difficulty
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http://www.forbes.com/sites/reuvencohen/2013/10/02/compute-derivatives-the-next-big-thing-in-commodities/
So, what does this mean for data centers?
First, let’s look at an institution’s data center of the present…
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Now let’s look at an institution’s data center of the future…
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What does this future look like to our server hugger?
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Sizing capacity
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Jan July DecOctApr
0%
100%
Util
izatio
n
Instead of sizing on-premise computing at 100% of potential usage, size at some amount lower and ‘burst’ out to cloud providers for ‘overflow.’ This can save costs
??
All forms of cloud will be useful Software as a service will continue to be important
• Enforce real-time data integration for quick user account provisioning and same-day data analysis
• Review contracts for legal gotchas and security holes
Infrastructure and platform as a service will become the center of attention• Select multiple vendors to encourage both diversity of supply and competition• Match workload characteristics to vendor strengths
Key challenges for the immediate future• Strong ‘cloud orchestration’ tools to help IT manage on/off premise computing
with multiple vendors• Easily managed, real-time data integration across multiple cloud providers• Flexible contracting and pricing models, especially in the area of software
licensing
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Big data and analytics
Big data refers to analysis on very large data sets• Biomedical data, web text mining, student interaction data• Any large and/or fast-moving data set that becomes cumbersome to
manage using traditional approaches
Top vendors are all competing intensively with new products• Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM, niche players
What is new?• Ability to dramatically speed up data preparation and data query time• Ability to drill down to details very easily, no performance degradation• Ability to develop new applications with real-time analytics at the core
– e.g., student retention/success alerts & reminders, course recommendations based on likelihood of success
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Teaching, learning and research Teaching learning and research are very similar
• How is knowledge shared and created?
The future of student learning?• Individual cognition
– How brains learn is being unraveled. IT can begin to automatically personalize in real-time, the presentation of material to fit within the tight time constraints of working memory and cognition
– Smart learning objects that adapt to student cognitive abilities and behavior may be arriving
• Social cognition– Learning is not solitary! When done in a community it is done better and more deeply– Group collaboration tools, social media, user-generated content are all ways to engage
students in the material through peers 24x7
IT tools• Move beyond learning management systems to an ecosystem of approaches and tools• The academy uses many different forms of teaching approaches ranging from the one-to-many
didactic to many-to-many facilitative, and is likely to continue to do so• Learning can occur at the same time (synchronously) or via interactions over time (asynchronously).
IT tools exist for both approaches. Social media approaches for researchers and students• The plethora of mobile devices means students and faculty should access learning information
anytime, anywhere
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Teaching/learning technology ecosystem
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Procurement ecosystem
What should this mean for university operations? IT should be directed to:
• Measurably, over time, lower the cost of IT relative to revenue• Enable improved outcomes for both learning and research• Accelerate the development of business insight for both cost savings & growth
IT should be a scalable infrastructure to help the institution find reallocations and new revenue while maintaining quality
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Revenue $
Direct labor $
Administrative processes and IT/process infrastructure $
Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 …
Let’s review the CIO role in this…
What do we have so far?• Dynamism (internally and externally) is growing• Business process (and those within higher ed) are replicating quickly• IT processes are replicating within the vendor community and
between organizations• The impediments to successful use are likely to be increasingly
human, not technical• The investments in this whole ball of wax continues to grow, possibly
requiring more complex financial acumen to manage
The role of the CIO is shifting • Away from mainly technical infrastructure configuration management• To the dynamics of information costs (technical) and uses (human)
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The role of organizational capital
Investments in computers + people are synergistic
Organizational capital:
• Degree of self-managed teams• Employee involvement in groups• Diversity of job responsibilities • Who determines pace of work• Who determines method of work• Degree of team building• Workers promoted for teamwork• Off-the-job training• Degree of screening new employees
for education
From “Intangible Assets: Computers and Organizational Capital,” E. Brynjolfsson, L. Hitt, S. Yang. Center for eBusiness @ MIT, MIT Sloan School of Management. Paper 138. (2002).
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A lot stands between bits and appropriate action
The purpose of IT is to improve agent action (individuals & organizations) • Both efficiency and
appropriateness of action
When millions are invested and the payoff [is, is not] not achieved, who should take [credit, responsibility]?• Can the CIO credibly say
“They made me do it?”
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Organizational defensiveness
Infrastructure, ERP
Visualization, usability
Action
Governance, teamwork
Individual motivation
Peop
lew
are
Har
d/so
ftw
are
Information immunity
“You don’t understand. On the 22nd floor, we work in a fact-free environment.”
While computing excels in turning data into information, getting information shared with fidelity across human beings is difficult• Different disciplines create different mental models. Information
mutates or is rejected, depending on the mental models one has• Double-loop learning is not so common• Individual information processing orientation matters
– Are you predominantly a Data->theory or theory->data person?
• Power relationships, threats to position, conflict, group-think can filter out information
Is this why investments in organizational capital are synergistic with investments in IT?
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Technical
Human
Stable Dynamic
Focus of work
MarketScope
CIO Past
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Technical
Human
Stable Dynamic
Focus of work
MarketScope
CIO Present
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Technical
Human
Stable Dynamic
Focus of work
MarketScope
CIO Future?
Five CIO Archetypes
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Infrastructure expert
While cloud and outsourcing will continue to be popular, many institutions will find it beneficial to manage their own infrastructures for cost or control reasons
The CIO will need to be an expert at running infrastructure at scale, and typically for entities outside the central IT unit
The CIO will also need skills in construction projects, and local and wide area network designs
Questions• Is this a likely scenario?• Is it compelling?• Is it valuable to an institution?
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Supply chain expert
With the rise of the Iaas, Paas, Saas, consumer technology and all forms of cloud computing, the role of the CIO is changing
Instead of running infrastructure, the CIO will be an expert in procurement, contracts, privacy, law and pricing
The CIO will need to have excellent vendor management skills and will need to be analyze the industry and make good architectural and strategic recommendations to executive stakeholders
Questions• Is this a likely scenario?• Is it compelling?• Is it valuable to an institution?
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Information and knowledge management expert
With the rise of big data, the CIO will become an expert in all facets of information production and use throughout the organization
The CIO will get involved in many organizational design decisions related to proper use of information throughout the enterprise
The CIO will have a special focus on metrics, dashboard, analysis, statistics, institutional research and related areas
Questions• Is this a likely scenario?• Is it compelling?• Is it valuable to an institution?
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Business process expert
With the need to save money, the CIO will need to be a business process expert that can advise the institution on how to consolidate and operate technology-intense business services
The CIO will need to be an expert on change management, automation, organizational design, culture change, total quality management and efficiency
The CIO will need to design large-scale consolidation programs that gain the acceptance of the academy
Questions• Is this a likely scenario?• Is it compelling?• Is it valuable to an institution?
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Value creator With the calls for better use of IT within universities, the CIO needs
to be an expert in how to create value using IT
The CIO will need to be an expert in one or more of the following: teaching and learning, research computation, economic development, IT as a profit-center, and consulting services
The CIO will likely be attached to a strong president who brings a substantial technology-intensive vision
Questions• Is this a likely scenario?• Is it compelling?• Is it valuable to an institution?
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CIO in the executive pantheon
Where will the CIO report?• To the president?• To the provost?• To the EVP/CFO?• To multiple executives?
CIO, title and governance• Will the CIO be on the president’s tighter cabinet?• Will the CIO be on the president’s larger council?• Will the CIO report to another IT-type position?• Will the CIO title be eliminated?• Is the CIO title getting diluted?
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Prediction
Managing the IT supply chain will not get easier.
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Questions?
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