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Efficiency in higher education. Richard L. Petrick State of Louisiana Higher Education Governance Commission September 28, 2011. I. The “New Normal”. “Today’s seemingly bleak budget environment … is “the new normal.” Navigating the ‘New Normal ,” The Lumina Foundation.
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Efficiency in higher education Richard L. Petrick State of Louisiana Higher Education Governance Commission September 28, 2011
I. The “New Normal” “Today’s seemingly bleak budget environment … is “the new normal.” Navigating the ‘New Normal,” The Lumina Foundation
Dealing with the “New Normal” • Ration or curtail services • Muddle through to mediocrity, slowly hemorrhage • Become more strategic & productive
Dealing with the “New Normal” • Ration or curtail services • Muddle through to mediocrity, slowly hemorrhage • Become more strategic & productive
Budget-cutting is not that hard… • Any campus or state can cut its budget • Many have had to do so in the recent past • Decisions too often tend to be: • Short term • Tactical • Reactive • Singletons These actions do not fundamentally bend the cost curve
II. Become More Strategic Definition of ‘Strategic’ “Important or essential in relation to a plan of action”
Seven critical ingredients • Leadership • Create vision, set goal • Sustain commitment • Communicate often • Management • Who’s in charge? • What’s the charge? • Discharge the charge • Communicate often • Data • Uniform accounting systems • Technical devices • National benchmarks • Communicate often
Seven critical ingredients • Leadership • Create vision • Sustain commitment • Communicate often • Management • Who’s in charge? • What’s the charge? • Discharge the charge • Communicate often • Data • Uniform accounting systems • Technical devices • National benchmarks • Communicate often
Seven critical ingredients • Models • Inspire action • Provide guidance • Sustain morale • Tolerance for ambiguity and failure • Some experiments will fail • Incentives • Campuses must retain benefits of their actions • Honorifics and public praise doesn’t hurt • Deep collaboration • Campus • Institution • System • State • All public bodies
III. Tools “imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.”
Use the C.A.S.E. method • Copy And Steal Everything • Sources • Other states and campuses • Foundations – especially Lumina • Regional associations (MHEC and WICHE) • National organizations (NACUBO, many others) • Private sector partnerships
One example from Ohio • New Governor’s charge to reform public procurement • Public sector procurement and fiscal staff learn from private sector experts • Six to nine month review process • “Procurement Reform Working Group”
Chart of Prioritization According to Benefits and Ease of implementation
Chart of Prioritization According to Benefits and Ease of implementation
Lumina productivity initiative • Multi-year, multi-state, multi-million initiative to help higher education thrive in the ‘New Normal’ • “Four Steps to Finishing First” • Performance Funding: Targeted incentives for colleges and universities to graduate more students with quality degrees and credentials. • Student Incentives: Strategic use of tuition and financial aid to incentivize course and program completion • New Models: Lower-cost, high-quality approaches substituted for traditional academic delivery whenever possible to increase capacity for serving students • Business Efficiencies: Business practices that produce savings to graduate more students
Lumina productivity initiative • Implementation Strategy • Grants to promote the Four Steps in state policy. • Strategy Labs • Organize site visits to share best practices for the Four Steps, • Offer one-on-one conversations at many higher ed venues, • Provide limited special technical assistance funds • National Productivity Conference – annual gathering • The Knowledge Collaborative website – keeps the conversation going among practitioners.
Other examples and resources • Maryland: Effectiveness and Efficiency Committee • Ohio: Efficiency Advisory Committee • Ohio: Prescription Drug Collaborative • Texas: Advisory Committee on Higher Education Cost Efficiencies • Kuali Foundation • MHEC: Property Insurance, Energy, IT Procurement
IV. Financing Change “How do I pay for something I can’t afford?”
Need to spend money to make money • Projects are often financially lumpy • Financing options: • Stair-step savings • Performance contracts • Forced reallocations, with payback • Social impact bonds (?)
V. People “You win with people.” Former OSU football coach woody hayes
Managing staff expectations and morale • Change is difficult • States and campuses need transparent, comprehensive, and compassionate policies to help staff thrive through change, e.g., • Who is retained? • Who is retained and retrained? • How does attrition affect staffing needs and changes? • Provide sustained outplacement support? • Provide severance pay?
Links • State of Ohio Procurement Reform Report: • http://procure.ohio.gov/pdf/AdvantageOhio.pdf • Lumina Productivity Initiative: • http://www.luminafoundation.org/goal_2025/outcomes/productivity.html • The Knowledge Collaborative: • http://www.thekc.org/ • Strategy Labs: • http://www.collegeproductivity.org/ • University of Maryland Effectiveness and Efficiency Initiative: • http://www.usmd.edu/usm/workgroups/EEWorkGroup/eeproject/index • State of Ohio Prescription Drug Program: • http://www.rxoc.org/newsroom.htm • The Kuali Foundation: • http://kuali.org/