Virtual town hall on Transform IT EUA scheduled for June 30

A virtual town hall meeting to discuss the progress of Transform IT’s Enterprise University Applications (EUA) program is scheduled for Wednesday, June 30, from 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. UO faculty, staff, and students are invited to attend. Registration is required.

At the town hall, CIO Jessie Minton and Associate CIO for Applications and Middleware Melody Riley will share the evolution of their vision for the program since Riley’s arrival at the UO in September, including recommendations for governance and an updated timeline for implementation.

You’re welcome to submit questions in advance to Haylea Berry at hberry@uoregon.edu or ask questions during the Zoom meeting.

Next Steps for Enterprise Applications

At a virtual town hall meeting in July, CIO Jessie Minton presented an overview of the EUA project team’s recommendations for rationalizing the university’s purchasing, development, hosting, management, support, and use of software applications and services, along with her own recommendations for further analysis and implementation.

Below is an overview.

The following documents are also available on this website:

Some Key Findings

  • Over 1,170 applications are currently in use at the UO.
  • The aggregate annual cost of that software is $8.9 million, excluding staffing.
  • Custom development work occurs in 31 departments.
  • There is a lack of process to review potential software purchases for duplication with existing services, compatibility with campus architecture, or security.

Summary of EUA Project Team Recommendations

  • Where possible, enterprise applications should be hosted, supported, managed and purchased in an enterprise manner — i.e., centrally by Information Services.
  • Work underway to develop governance and consultation processes for application purchasing through Information Services should be completed.
  • Separate projects should be initiated to assess viability and consolidate applications by category where possible, starting with clear opportunities, including completing consolidation projects already underway and shifting usage to existing enterprise solutions where available.
  • The application catalog started by this project should be developed into a dynamic resource with ongoing maintenance.

Moving Forward on Clear Opportunities

The following areas were identified as clear opportunities based on priority, ease of implementation, or existence of relevant projects or services.

Information Services will now begin assessing the availability of IT staff and campus stakeholders to participate in a series of projects as detailed below to further analyze and implement changes in these areas.

Implementation efforts may involve the reorganization of IT staff who support applications in some categories.

Purchased Software

Pursue opportunities to consolidate applications through existing projects and services, and initiate a limited selection of new projects to meet unmet campus needs, including:

  • Continuing the CRM program and migrating all possible functions to the recently purchased Slate platform in a phased process after the initial Slate implementation for undergraduate and graduate admissions.
  • Continuing the Communications and Collaborative Technologies (CCT) Program, consolidating around enterprise solutions where possible:
    • Videoconferencing (Zoom and Teams)
    • Office productivity (Office 365 and Dropbox)
    • Telecom applications (TBD)
  • Working with campus partners to migrate all room and event scheduling to EMS, the existing enterprise application.
  • Acquiring enterprise password management application approved by Information Security Office.
  • Developing a model for trainings and tutorials about software, building on HR’s current effort to replace Skillport eLearning.

Custom Software Development

Initiate a project to explore consolidation of custom software development at the UO, addressing:

  • Supportability;
  • Consistency of tools and technologies used;
  • University prioritization, agility, and availability of alternatives;
  • Application security;
  • Establishment of best practices for development, intake, business analysis, quality assurance, and testing;
  • Understanding and scaling to demand.

Application Catalog and Consultation

Initiate a project to formalize a dynamic application catalog, including:

  • Identifying, developing, or acquiring tools and methods for creating a public application catalog that will be seeded with data from the EUA project.
  • Integrating information from development staff, purchasing systems, network discovery tools, and license servers/usage APIs.
  • Creating a related model for consultation services about applications to avoid future security risks and duplication of purchases.

Looking Ahead

The following application categories are also important to address in the coming years, but will require more partnership:

  • Databases, data, and analytics, including our Oracle databases
  • Project management
  • Time and attendance
  • Facilities, building automation, and work management
  • Web content management
  • Printing management
  • Enterprise applications currently managed by a single unit other than IS

Melody Riley, who will join the university on Sept. 21 as associate CIO for applications and middleware, will lead this effort going forward.

The completion of this important assessment brings this Transform IT project to a close.

The future projects outlined here won’t fall under the Transform IT umbrella, though they will certainly continue to transform technology at the University of Oregon.

If you have any questions, please email transformit@uoregon.edu.

CIO releases recommendations for EUA follow-up

Last week, we posted the final recommendations report of the Enterprise University Applications (EUA) Project. Today, we’re sharing CIO Jessie Minton’s recommendations for further analysis and implementation of those changes on a category-by-category basis.

Minton will discuss both the EUA Project team’s final report and her recommendations at the Transform IT virtual town hall meeting tomorrow (Wednesday, July 15), at 10:30am-12pm. As a reminder, registration is required.

EUA final report released; virtual town hall scheduled for July 15

The final recommendations report of the Enterprise University Applications (EUA) Project is now available.

The EUA Project team recently completed an assessment of software applications in use at the university. The report outlines the team’s recommended approaches to changing the purchase, development, management and support of applications to save resources and improve services. An executive summary is also available.

A virtual town hall meeting to discuss the EUA recommendations is scheduled for Wednesday, July 15, at 10:30am-12pm. UO faculty, staff, and students are invited to attend. Registration is required.

At the town hall, CIO Jessie Minton will also share her recommendations for further analysis and implementation of those changes on a category-by-category basis, which may involve the reorganization of IT staff who support applications in some categories.

You’re welcome to submit questions in advance to Kristin Smith at klsmith@uoregon.edu or ask questions during the Zoom meeting.

If time permits, Minton will also field questions about the ongoing USS implementation project.

EUA project team submits final report to CIO

The Enterprise University Applications (EUA) Project team submitted its final report to CIO Jessie Minton on June 15.

The report reflects the team’s recommendations for categories of applications in use at the university that have the potential for efficiency gains and cost savings related to purchasing, hosting, management, and support.

The team will discuss the report with Minton at its final weekly meeting on June 18. In the coming weeks, the report will be posted on this website.

EUA project team compiling recommendations for applications

Over the past few weeks, the Enterprise University Applications (EUA) Project team has gathered data to create a catalog of applications in use at the university. Team members have also been evaluating the range of software used at the university. In groups of two or three, they have been reviewing applications on a category-by-category basis, in categories such as finance and business processing, project management, and forms and surveys.

As of May 20, the subteams had identified application categories with the potential for efficiency gains and cost savings related to purchasing, hosting, management, and support. Project Manager Tony Saxman is compiling those recommendations into a draft report for the full team to review.

The team then plans to choose four or five projects to recommend as the initial priorities for further focused analysis and implementation.

Team members are also working to develop recommendations about the delivery of custom application development as a service and associated potential organizational changes.

Transform IT resuming momentum

Jessie Minton, Vice Provost for Information Services and Chief Information Officer, sent the following message to UO IT staff on April 15, 2020:

Good afternoon colleagues,

It’s been an unprecedented beginning to spring term. Due to the extraordinary work from all of you, we are teaching remotely and supporting our campus with technology in a way never seen before. I’ve watched all of you work together as a truly cohesive IT unit with common priorities, which was exactly what allowed us to thrive in the face of this challenge. I am profoundly grateful and incredibly proud.

I’ve been talking with you all over the past few years about how important it is for us to come together, better utilize our collective talents, and steward our resources. The COVID-19 outbreak has brought this need into focus in a way that is sharper than ever. Now that we have launched the term successfully, we need to resume focus on proceeding with Transform IT. In fact, some of the work done to send the campus remote has expedited this need. The VDI environment and the Enterprise Device Management (EDM) pieces in particular have accelerated well beyond the initially planned schedule.

With this in mind, I wanted to share how we’re moving forward.

User Support Services (USS)

We will now renew focus on executing the organizational structure for User Support Services, including understanding how to assemble the EDM support team. We will be working closely with administration and human resources to determine how we can continue to move forward in the current environment.

Enterprise University Applications (EUA)

The final project in the Transform IT program — Enterprise University Applications — is also underway, and we’re now resuming work on the assessment phase.

Today, as you may know, many UO units offer similar applications and software solutions, resulting in an inefficient use of resources, a fragmentation of software spending, and duplication of tools, processes, and services. Without an increase in the university’s technology funding, we must reallocate our spending so we can effectively enhance IT infrastructure to ensure academic excellence — one of UO’s institutional priorities. EUA will create a framework for rationalizing the university’s purchasing, development, hosting, management, support, and use of software applications and services.

The EUA project will approach UO’s applications with goals similar to those of the USS Recommendations project, which looked at tech support functions.

The EUA project team includes representatives of IT groups throughout the university. The team is charged with producing three main deliverables this spring:

  1. A categorized catalog of all purchased and custom-built software at the university;
  2. A suite of recommendations on a category-by-category basis for possible changes to the purchase, hosting, management, and support of that software;
  3. Recommendations for the delivery of custom application development as a service and associated organizational changes.

The software catalog will provide visibility into the software solutions already available for use at the university, which units support those solutions, and how those solutions are funded. The project team will then assess where we may be able to:

  • Reduce the number of similar software solutions used;
  • Change the way an application category is managed or supported, including considering whether to centralize;
  • Reduce costs through volume discounts or enterprise licenses.

This summer, I will review the project’s recommendations with the Transform IT Steering Committee. After that, we will begin making plans for further focused analysis and implementation of the approved changes on a category-by-category basis, including stakeholder engagement. Implementation may involve the reorganization of IT staff who support applications in some categories.

The EUA project also aims to establish a definition for “enterprise application,” and provide recommendations for policy and procedures for reviewing and adopting future enterprise applications.

With so many unknowns around COVID-19, we’re going to be flexible in how we proceed with this. However, the current situation makes it more important for us to pursue these efficiencies, not less.

We will provide updates on the EUA project on the Transform IT website.

If you have any questions, please contact me or EUA project manager Tony Saxman at saxman@uoregon.edu. For questions about USS, please contact Gary Sullivan, director of USS, at garys@uoregon.edu.

Best regards,

Jessie