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Higher Education Administration in the 21 st Century – The Cornell Model. Cornell University Library Academic Assembly November 1, 2007 Stephen T. Golding Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration. Today’s Agenda. Challenges Facing Higher Education
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Higher Education Administrationin the 21st Century – The Cornell Model Cornell University Library Academic Assembly November 1, 2007 Stephen T. Golding Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration
Today’s Agenda • Challenges Facing Higher Education • Higher Education Business Model • 21st Century Higher Education Business Model • Cornell University Finance and Administration (CUFA) Business Model • Examples of CUFA Implementation Strategies • Question
Challenges Facing Higher Education Administration • Escalating market pressures • Increasing unfunded mandates • Declining public support • Intensifying legislative oversight • Accelerating pace of change • Global competition
Challenges Facing Higher Education Administration • We are asked to cut overhead costs without increasing business risk • We are asked to reduce central administrative costs while increasing services • We have been on a decade long quest to increase employee productivity • We must recruit a new generation of administrative leadership in a time of increasing market pressures
Higher Education Business Model • Private sector refocusing on core business • Outsourced, off-shored, downsized to increase stockholder value • Universities have stakeholders not stockholders • Tripartite mission – teaching, research and service • Great research universities are like cities with all their complexities and challenges • Great universities expand as knowledge, technologies and the needs of their communities change
21st Century Business Model Characteristics • Administrations that are nimble, flexible, adaptive • Deliver highest quality services, at the most efficient cost, in the timeliest manner, • Universities have adapted historically – investment management practices, financial services, technology
21st Century Business Model • Articulate a clear vision, mission and values • Clearly defined roles and responsibilities • Communicate a coherent institutional stewardship philosophy • Promote an environment of innovation and creativity • Values people and rewards them • Promotes personal development • Values a culture that have measurable goals and objectives – outcome oriented • Promotes intra-campus cooperation and teamwork • Rewards execution
Cornell’s Role • Cornell has a unique stature in American higher education • Private university with public mission • Land grant mission • Institutional DNA very different
How is Cornell University Finance and Administration Implementing this model?
CUFA Mission • Provide means for colleges/departments to acquire and manage financial, facilities, and information resources they need • Provide appealing, safe, healthy, and sustainable physical environment that supports teaching and research mission • Provide highest quality service at efficient cost, in timely manner, and maximize long-term value of university investments to ensure stakeholders achieve goals/objectives of the institution • Provide high quality of work life for all our employees regardless of position or function, including opportunities for individual development • Promote CUFA values aligned with the broader community to ensure common purpose and agreement for university mission.
CUFA Vision CUFA will be a standard bearer in acquisition, and management of financial, facilities and information resources. We will accomplish this by: • Partnering with our customers to deliver highest quality services in timely manner • Identify appropriate measurements to evaluate our services, soliciting feedback to ensure we are meeting needs, and • Help university set standard of stewardship that meets scrutiny of public and private constituency groups.
CUFA Values • Collegiality – Further goals of colleges, schools, centers and university, develop/maintain positive interrelationships through collaboration and trust • Integrity – Strive to do right thing for greater good of our clients and Cornell • Initiative – Develop new strategies, continuously assess services we provide • Excellence – Establish goals/objectives to achieve excellence. We are accountable for our actions and impact they have on the community • Civility – We are frank, open, sincere and respectful • Stewardship – Responsibly manage and protect resources entrusted to our care
CUFA’s Fiscal Year 2008 Leadership Priorities • Integrate value of Sustainability into all major operations • Position Cornell as leader in managing the increasing expectations of Safety, Health, and Environmental Risk Management • Establish key partnerships and metrics to improve and demonstrate Cornell’s role as “standard bearer” and conscientious citizen • Create modern electronic information environment • Improve participation/engagement opportunities • Design comprehensive approach to developing talent and filling succession pipeline in critical university roles • Complete and align current Comprehensive Planning Initiatives.
Design comprehensive approach to developing talent and filling succession pipeline in critical university roles
Why Succession Management is a Priority for Cornell and Higher Education • Cornell issues and challenges • External competition • Location • Compensation - regional vs. national markets • Most prepared leaders retiring w/in 10 years • Aging Workforce • “Time to fill” with qualified talent • Cost to recruit and hire • A Cornell Priority: fast-tracked leadership & management development
Tools and Methods to Fast-Track Growth • Data to identify need/challenge • University-wide leadership and management curriculum • Identifying Attributes • Training • Project practicum • On-The-Job opportunities and experiences • Role rotations, internships, short-term job swaps, task force manager/chair, project manager, interim leadership role • Coaching • Learning Management, Performance Management and Project Management Systems
Integrate value of Sustainability into all major operations
Advancing Sustainability Action Plan • To be the leader of Sustainability in Higher Education… …a university’s operations must support the core mission of education, research and outreach, while promoting a sustainable economy, society, and environment.
Criteria for Leadership in Sustainability • Economic Criteria • Economic Stewardship • Regional Economic Development • Social • Employee Well-Being • Quality of Life in Communities • Business Ethics • Environmental • Environmental Impact Minimization • Natural Resource Protection
Sustainability Elements Endowment Investments Land Use Regional Economic Development Operations Champions Climate Commitment & Energy • Green Building Oversight Committee • Transportation Impact Mitigation Strategies • Green Purchasing Task Force • Presidents Climate Commitment Implementation Committee • Comprehensive Master Plan • Campus Life Green Team Learning Laboratory & Model Campus Built Environment Food & Water Transportation Waste & Pollution Materials
"...the challenges facing our world are great. The time to address and ameliorate them is short. The opportunity for action is now. And the agent of positive change – perhaps more than ever before in our history – can be Cornell." President Skorton 19 October 2007 www.sustainablecampus.cornell.edu
Complete and align current Comprehensive Planning Initiatives
Considered for demolition: 2.8 million sq. ft.
academic/administrationadministrationhousingathleticsmixed use centers
Position Cornell as leader in managing the increasing expectations of Safety, Health, and Environmental Risk Management
Emergency Management Leadership... • Committee Structure… Campus Oversight System Reengineered • Organization Structure… Creation of the Risk Management & Public Safety organization Planning ... • Unit Planning... Core emergency management and business recovery system upgrades are being deployed across campus • Central Planning... Incident management and escalation procedures have been reviewed and refined. Pandemic Planning is underway. • Procedures... Are being updated to address new processes, procedures and technologies • Policies... Are being reviewed and updated to address new procedures and technologies; aligning all emergency management policies under RMPS
Emergency Management Emergency Communications Infrastructure... • Text, Voice, & E-mail Mass Notification... AlertNow installed. Test 11-7 • Wireless...GETS & WPS implemented • Sirens...Procured...installation in December 2007 • High frequency radio systems... Procured; installation timed with County • Backup Email... Being deployed by the end of October • Emergency Dispatch... Backup facility installed at CCC Training ... • Cornell Emergency Management Team... Members NIMS trained and certified • Tabletops... Scheduled with senior leaders and CEMC • Joint First Responders Emergency Training...Being implemented
Emergency Management IT Disaster Preparedness... • NYC Backup... • Geneva Site... Snow Emergencies ... • Supervisor/Manager Communication (early November)... focusing on supervisor/employee responsibilities, staffing plans, and expectations • All Employee Communication (mid November)...focusing on staff preparedness, communications, road advisories, and road closings