270 likes | 290 Views
PEPC 2003 Birds of a Feather Session UoB Portal Project. Starting Line Strategies. David R Supple University of Birmingham. Birds of a Feather Session Overview. Look at some of the work UoB focused on as prerequisites to its Portal strategy
E N D
PEPC 2003 Birds of a Feather SessionUoB Portal Project Starting Line Strategies David R Supple University of Birmingham University of Birmingham
Birds of a Feather Session Overview • Look at some of the work UoB focused on as prerequisites to its Portal strategy • Look at some of UoB’s key internal and external drivers • Examine some common technology drivers • Examine common University content structures • Look at some of the benefits of Portal delivery • How we justified the project • Data integration • Process engineering • How we costed the project – tech and HR • Examine our planning and implementation structures and timetable University of Birmingham
Birmingham’s Path of Prerequisites • Web Strategy • Content Strategy • Portal Strategy University of Birmingham
Key Strategic Prerequisites to Avoid Failure • 20-30% of portals fail predominantly due to “empty portal” syndrome: source Gartner 2003 • Emptiness also extends to relevance: irrelevant content may as well not exist • Relevance requires engagement of all aspects of University life • If you have no relevant web relationships, why will you have relevant portal relationships? University of Birmingham
UoB Web Strategy: Gaining the high ground. Strategies to take control • Birmingham’s External Strategic Web Review c1999: • Developing the product • Developing the service • “Selling the solution” • Developing an edge to edge strategy for web • Taking leadership • Balancing user focus with provider driven technology • Developing best of breed “Ally” sites • Developing a community • Leveraging legal and commercial issues to tackle difficult “sales” University of Birmingham
Levelling the ground: Content Strategy • Stop playing “catch-up” • Develop strategies that tame the big picture: Birmingham’s Web Enabled Campus Vision • Understand common needs in content generation areas • Lack of time • Lack of funding • Ease of technology rather than content focus • Develop your strategies around content value • Prioritize and protect your key content assets • Integrate content focused training into all your technical training. University of Birmingham
Rebuilding the ground: Portal Strategy • Taking the content further – developing more relationships with content creators and consumers • A focus on business process review, making the business an e-business from the ground up • Data simplification not just integration • Technologies to remove data noise through personalised environments • Integrated e-learning environment to deliver MLE University of Birmingham
MLE – JISC Definition University of Birmingham
Key External Drivers for Portal • Increased competition within HEI sector • Increase in University enterprise activity • Changes in student profiles – time and geographical access • Increased focus on accessibility • Portals to be offered by many if not most HEI’s • Enterprise vendorware will provide web front ends • Portal interoperability drivers – interaction with key external agencies through Portal University of Birmingham
Key Internal Drivers for Portal • Increasing academic time and workload burden • Research • Teaching and Learning • Marketing • Quality Assurance • Commercial context • Administrative efficiency gains University of Birmingham
Technology Drivers for Portal Development University of Birmingham
Portal Information Structure Development University of Birmingham
Portal Module Architecture University of Birmingham
CMS as a Strategic Content Driver University of Birmingham
Many Benefits of Portal • Teaching and Learning and Administration: • A single location to register for courses, view and choose modules • A single location to access course material round the clock • Consolidated financial relationship • Added value online information to help tutors • Improved access to interact with student data • Facility to integrate custom school data requirements into portal • Building community and relationships with studentsand other users • Currently 40 planned portal services for students and staff including WebCT as the VLE University of Birmingham
Portal: Content Management key to Personalised Delivery • Provision of personalised content streams is a cornerstone of Portal technology – build relevance to users • But not at the expense of increasing: • Costs per digital asset • Administrative burden • Academic Burden • Data barricades • You must tackle the demons of managing: • Content ownership • Content Classification University of Birmingham
Justifying the change: engagement, savings and promises University of Birmingham
Indirect Justifications: non financial • Service, Service, Service: Customer Expectations • Ability to re-task data • Ability to develop data relationships with 3rd parties: • HEFCE? • HESA? • Research Councils? • Regional Agencies? • UCAS? • Service, Service, Service: Customer Expectations University of Birmingham
IRR Calculations: Justifying the solution • UoB Lifecycle costing approach • Focus on 3 key administrative services • Module registration savings • Student record management savings • Student Timetabling • and content publication: • 500+ content authors • 300+ web servers • Reduction in software • Capitalisation of multi-use assets • IRR of 11+% as a Student and Staff Portal / CMS enabled environment University of Birmingham
Data Integration Strategy: Reducing Data TCO • Sure the technology can integrate, but… • Wouldn’t it make sense if we changed the business processes first rather than rely upon the technology to bridge them? • Data Range principle to harness central and added value data • Simplify the data, make your portal interoperable University of Birmingham
How? Process Re-engineering • Strategy of re-processing portal systems • New service delivery, new administrative cost saving processes • Working with key areas – e.g. Academic Office and Process Champions • Tools and skill set provided by Process Re-engineering Specialist • Modular approach to match modular Portal nature • Data unification principle to draw school specific data into portal University of Birmingham
Process Champion Work Methodology University of Birmingham
UoB Portal Project Interaction • Data set mapping with central and distributed data – ‘Data Range’ • Portal service planning through project board and school / dept. interaction. • Process review mechanisms to simplify administrative workflow developed with users • “Town hall” meetings to engage and inform users • Focus groups of end users for functionality and interfaces: • Students • Staff • Alumni etc. • Interactive Portal and e-Strategy planning website University of Birmingham
Iterative CommunicationsFocus+ Ongoing interaction with School Managers and Web Coordinators based around core Focus Group findings University of Birmingham
UoB InteractionProject Planning Mechanism , Head of School Academic Representation University of Birmingham
Proposedphased roll out over 2 year cycleBudget’s commencefor Phase 1August 2003 University of Birmingham
Questions University of Birmingham