University of Missouri Shared Services Initiative Phase II November 1, 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Presented by Chani Beeman
Advertisements

Leading Change * * Kotter, John. Leading Change. Boston: Harvard Business School Press.
Strategic Management & Planning
Twelve Cs for Team Building
HR Manager – HR Business Partners Role Description
STRATEGIC PLAN Community Unit School District 300 7/29/
Senior Fiscal Officer Meeting Thursday, November 17, 2011.
A Commitment to Excellence: SUNY Cortland Update on Strategic Planning.
1 The Nebraska Leadership Initiative Overview of Rationale and Research A Collaboration between NCSA, NDE, and ESUs.
Facilities Management 2013 Manager Enrichment Program U.Va.’s Strategic Planning Initiatives Colette Sheehy Vice President for Management and Budget December.
Social Media Requires Change Management Urgency! Guidance & governance Vision Communication Empowerment & enablement Campaign wins + competence development.
System Office Performance Management
Program Management Overview (An Introduction)
Change is a Process Organizational Stages Individual Stages (ADKAR) Business Need Concept and Design Implementation Post-Implementation Awareness Desire.
Leadership in the Baldrige Criteria
Challenge Questions How good is our strategic leadership?
Procurement Transformation State of North Carolina
Lecture 3 Strategic Planning for IT Projects (Chapter 7)
Center for Enterprise Dissemination Services
Company LOGO Leading, Connecting, Transforming UNC… …Through Its People Human Capital Management.
Best Practices: Overcoming Implementation Challenges and Barriers Nancy Borkowski, DBA, CPA, FACHE, FHMA Clinical Associate Professor Florida International.
1 SIX SIGMA "Delivering Tomorrow's Performance Today" AIR CDRE ABDUL WAHAB.
Integrated PPM Governance Leveraging Org Change Management for PPM Process Implementations Presented by: Allan Mills.
21 st Century Maricopa Review of Process Human Resources Projects Steering Team Meeting May 12, 2010.
Enterprise IT Decision Making
Creating Value Learning resources for managers to deliver efficiencies whilst improving effectiveness Iain Springate, Project Manager & Researcher.
Deloitte Consulting SCOOPS Session September 2003.
Strategic Planning Board Update February 27, 2012 Draft - For Discussion Purposes Only.
Achieving Campus Diversity: The University of Central Florida Model
Sustainability… Start Now for a Vibrant Future Sustainability Workshop for Persistently Dangerous Schools Grantees Philadelphia, PA Tuesday, September.
SAR as Formative Assessment By Rev. Bro. Dr. Bancha Saenghiran February 9, 2008.
Project Management & Business Support May 9, 2014 Update ECSC Meeting.
Creating Value Learning resources for managers to deliver efficiencies whilst improving effectiveness Iain Springate, Project Manager & Researcher.
© 2014 World Vision International Excellent processes promote excellent ministry impact Isn’t it good enough to have good processes? Why strive for Excellent.
This series of five presentations has the following goals: Presentation III A Discussion with School Boards: Raising the Graduation Rate, High School Improvement,
Mission and Mission Fulfillment Tom Miller University of Alaska Anchorage.
1 WARFIGHTER SUPPORT STEWARDSHIP EXCELLENCE WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT WARFIGHTER-FOCUSED, GLOBALLY RESPONSIVE, FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE SUPPLY CHAIN LEADERSHIP.
State of California Executive Leadership Competency Model January 12, 2011 Presentation for the California Citizens Redistricting Commission.
Convocation Week 2008 Strategic & Academic Action Planning Update.
DRAFT – For Discussion Only HHSC IT Governance Executive Briefing Materials DRAFT April 2013.
8 8 Dessler Human Resource Management, 8th Edition Chapter Eight Managing Organizational Renewal © Prentice Hall, 2000.
Imran Ghaznavi Course Code: MGT557 COMSATS Strategic Human Resource Management.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 0 Chapter 8 Implementing Strategy.
Leadership Programme Asia Pacific 2012 Module 2 Leading Successful Change.
Copyright 2003 – Cedar Enterprise Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved. Business Process Redesign & Innovation University of Maryland, University College.
Queen’s Management & Leadership Framework
Department of Public Welfare – Business Review Board Project/System Name Date.
Working in Partnership
The Implementation of BPR Pertemuan 9 Matakuliah: M0734-Business Process Reenginering Tahun: 2010.
About District Accreditation Mrs. Sanchez & Mrs. Bethell Rickards Middle School
Surviving Change Individual motivation for Technicians HEaTED North West 2015.
Chapter ©2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or.
Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail PRASENTED BY MD.ABDUR RAZZAK.
Info-Tech Research Group1 Info-Tech Research Group, Inc. Is a global leader in providing IT research and advice. Info-Tech’s products and services combine.
Serving IT up with ITIL By Thane Price. IT is the laboratory’s pit crew  Goal : Make technology transparent while accomplishing valuable internal customer.
External Review Exit Report Campbell County Schools November 15-18, 2015.
Mgt Project Portfolio Management and the PMO Module 8 - Fundamentals of the Program Management Office Dr. Alan C. Maltz Howe School of Technology.
RDQ 5 District Coaching Capacity Discussion Leader: George Sugai, University of Connecticut.
Clinical Practice evaluations and Performance Review
IT Governance at the SCO
V6.2 Draft uWaterloo IT Community Together, we Enable
Equity, Opportunity, Results
Overview – Guide to Developing Safety Improvement Plan
One ODOT: Positioned for the Future
Research Program Strategic Plan
Overview – Guide to Developing Safety Improvement Plan
Professional Certificate in Strategic Change Management
How does the Branding fit into ECC Excels???
Capacity Building for HMIS Leads
Achieving an Operational Office of Water Enterprise Architecture: FY Roadmap November 23, 2005 Achieving an Operational Office of Water Enterprise.
Presentation transcript:

University of Missouri Shared Services Initiative Phase II November 1, 2010

Update on Phase I Comprehensive benchmarking study led by Accenture using Hackett methodology Over 250 staff engaged system wide over the last 6 months to benchmark administrative activities in HR, Finance, IT and Procurement Goal was to identify opportunities for adoption of shared services principles

A customer-focused organizational model that consolidates operations in order to reduce inefficiencies and duplicative costs, and increase customer service. It can take many forms on a continuum anywhere from consolidating transactions within a division or campus all the way to a separate standalone entity that can serve the needs of the entire system — possibly even other colleges and universities throughout the state. Reminder – what is shared services? 3

What we learned 4 Many processes are operating at a lean per unit cost Cost of functions, however, are often high due to: Policy expectations and a larger number of transactions Manual processing retained in spite of technology implemented IT capabilities (e.g. self service) not fully used to automate processes Transactions staffed fractionally – lots of generalists classified as clerical throughout the organization Technology implemented with higher priorities than “delighting the end user” Difficult to cut costs without cutting services

Where do we go from here? By implementing shared services philosophies and principles we can achieve: Improved customer relationships through consistent high-quality service Reduced operating costs Increased productivity Increased leveraging of investment in technology Enhanced opportunity for process reengineering

Guiding Principles To guide process improvement and efficiency efforts for the University of Missouri System the following shared services principles will guide our efforts: Delighting the ultimate customer or end user is the top priority Extensively use service level agreements, metrics, etc. to foster accountability and emphasize roles and responsibilities and measure cost containment and savings realized Standardization and consistency in processes used to drive out cost, improve service, and reduce rework Over-communicate to customers, stakeholders, functional staff, technical staff, etc. 6

Guiding Principles Cont’d Ensure that all new administrative projects are rooted in these guiding principles Involve people in these projects with creativity, vision and openness to innovation Recognition of technical diversity; priority is to standardize where possible but recognize the need for flexibility when necessary as it supports the academic enterprise Ensure that a change management process occurs throughout the organization such that the full benefits of innovation are realized (e.g. do not retain the steps of an old process in addition to the new one) 7

Guiding Principles Cont’d Aggregate transactions at a division, campus or system level as it makes sense to do so taking into context: Standardized policies exist Cost/benefit analysis suggests it is a good fit Level of automation achieved in the transaction Quality of service provided Degree to which knowledge of the activity around which the transaction is generated is necessary Not a one-size-fits-all and should be determined function by function

What does this mean for this project? Ensure stakeholder feedback is sufficient (e.g. focus groups, participation in design process, purposeful change management process, etc.) Consistent use of process mapping across all projects Question everything – decision points from process mapping must be analyzed for policies, timelines, design assumptions, etc. to maximize technology and the new process Standardize and aggregate transactions (requires efforts to change cultures throughout the organization) Mods, bolt-ons, etc. should be considered when necessary to provide stakeholders with best experience Need to establish metrics to measure and demonstrate success of implementation

8 Steps to Successful Change 1 1.Increase urgency – inspire people to act 2.Build the guiding team – right people with right emotional commitment 3.Establish the vision – simple and creative 4.Communicate for buy in – involve as many as possible, simplify, and be responsive 5.Empower action – remove obstacles, enable constructive feedback 6.Create short-term wins – bite-sized chunks 7.Don’t let up – foster and promote determination and persistence 8.Make Change Stick – reinforce the value of success! 1 The Heart of Change, John Kotter, 1995