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What will it take to lead your institution confidently into the New Digital Age? The ability to make a business case.
6/11/2007
In recent days, CT has had multiple discussions with Internet2 guru Ken Klingenstein (director, Internet2 Middleware and Security): notably, in our C-Level View newsletter (April 25) and in our June Visionary column. Always forthright and fascinating, Klingenstein makes no bones about the many issues IT pros will grapple with as US campuses move into an increasingly connected, globalized, digital environment. One of his recent statements, however, touched on the critical career skills they will need.Another new challenge is the need to make a business case. When we started out years ago, we didn’t need business plans. We need them now…. For example, in the federated identity space that we’re working in, campuses want to understand what the benefits are, on a cost basis. We’ve gotten traction in federated identity largely by exhibiting the reduction in help desk calls and the reduction in user support costs in general—the things that translate in an economic fashion. Even if that’s not why we’re doing it, we need to be able to explain the economic benefits of what we’re doing, in order to gain support.What does this mean to you, the campus IT professional? It means that in order to move your institution (and your career) forward, you will need to acquire a business skill you probably never thought you would need, and you’ll need to acquire it quickly, and then master it.
Katherine Grayson is Editor-in-Chief of Campus Technology.
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