Are near and in sight the same thing?

At the CLAC conference this past week, a speaker shared a Jack Welch quote: “If the rate of change on the outside exceeds the rate of change on the inside, the end is near.” When I went searching for the citation, however, I could only locate this version from the 2000 GE Annual Report: “We’ve long believed that when the rate of change inside an
institution becomes slower than the rate of change outside, the end is in sight.”

I like the second version much better for several reasons – first, it is stated as a shared belief, rather than the preceding more commandment-like statement. It implies that this is an assumption held among a group of people and suggests that they are taking action to keep from ever facing the end. Some will immediately react here with the continued dismissal of anything that can be labelled as technological determinism. But let’s look first at something similar that was said much earlier.

In 1816, Thomas Jefferson wrote: “Laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths disclosed, and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also, and keep pace with the times.”

Who among us would argue that change – social, political, technological, economic, climate etc. is not everywhere? And what about the rate of change, whether in a specific realm or in the interactions among them – do we believe that we are in the midst of exponential increases or are we continuing to bet on the soothing world of daily routines and traditional practices? Yes, we all heard the pronouncements of “the new normal.” But in the vast majority of cases, the changed circumstances were merely defined as a different plateau – a structural readjustment that could be done once and then life, and our institutions, would proceed along an altered, but more similar than divergent, path.

The other reason I prefer the second version of Welch’s words is that “in sight” is so much more specific, so much more declarative, than “near.” Think about it. If you are told a bear is in sight, might not your actions be a bit different if the warning was that it was near?

Assuming that the end is near, not yet in sight, lets institutions and individuals postpone taking consequential action. Jack Welch conveyed a quite different approach in that annual report, implying that GE was actively working to maintain a rate of internal change that was equal to or surpassing what was happening externally. Fifty years after Jefferson asserted that institutions must change with the times, Thomas Edison opened a lab that would become the beginning of General Electric. Today, GE, the 13th largest firm in the United States and the only one remaining from the original group listed on the Dow Jones Index of 1896, is branded as The Digital Industrial Company | Imagination at Work.

I expect that some higher education institutions, and some individuals, can continue to be successful by operating as if the bear is near. But I believe that many more schools and people would be better served by acknowledging that the bear is in sight – approaching ever closer as external changes continue to multiply while internal changes are thought to be more politically difficult and culturally upsetting than assuming that bears don’t really exist.

photo credits: Glenn Woods via reportit http://wwlp.com/2015/07/04/bear-sighted-in-south-deerfield/;  http://wildsafebcelkvalley.com/2015/07/30/grizzly-bear-sighting-reported-by-whispering-winds-mobile-home-park-in-sparwood/   https://www.flickr.com/photos/bradschafer/

Innovation, Unbundling and Intellectual Wellness

I’m probably being a bit grumpy about innovation. But I feel that the word is everywhere these days and especially in higher education. A quick glance across the media (old, new & social) landscape finds admonitions to innovate, claims of innovating, hand-wringing about a lack of innovation, and so on and so on. Am I nuts, is higher education actually innovating, or is this just the meme-du-jour?

In the for-profit world, being innovative can create a new market niche to exploit, can keep a firm viable in a changing environment, and can create fame and even fortune for the innovators. A plethora of articles, webinars and books keep appearing each month to convince you or teach you, or shame you into swearing an allegiance to innovation. One book I ran across provides a scorecard to assess how innovative your firm actually is. But the underlying premise is that true innovation doesn’t really happen if you are content with the business model that you have. So, what does that say about innovation in higher education these days?

Writers tackling innovation in higher education often point to unsustainable (another word for failing) business models as the impetus. The models are failing because of dramatic changes in the demographics of students, in funding (especially for public higher education),  in income distribution across the population, in advances in technology, in increased compliance requirements, in a growing disconnect between the cost of goods and the price people are willing to pay. If you think that all or even the majority of those factors are going to remain as is or continue on their new trajectories for the foreseeable future, would you still express confidence in your current business model? Seriously?

So we have an answer as to why innovation in higher education is being discussed so much. But how many cases of true innovation are really happening? We can find claims for innovation in practices to increase retention, in new pedagogies that seek to replace or at least re-imagine the lecture, in yet another redo of general education, in some off-to-the-side experimentation with online courses, etc. But all of these efforts, as interesting and newsworthy as they may be, are just tweaks to a failing business model. They may make for catchy marketing copy aimed at trying to sustain enrollments or increase donations, but at the end of the day, they don’t actually change the business model at all.

So what would a new business model for higher education look like?  John Hagel offers a way to think about creating new models along three dimensions: payment – what do we ask people to pay for and how do they assess the value that they receive; data – delivering value to the customer through data; and participation – connecting customers to each other in ways that create value. His approach led me to suggest two possibilities. One focuses on unbundling, while the other involves the value of personal data. Yes, I am speaking in the “corporatization of higher education” language, but we are talking about business models, after all.

Unbundling in higher education is usually focused on how digital technology makes it possible for students to take advantage of “stackable” degrees or credentials letting them take a course from here and there and there and assemble them – articulation on steroids. Or maybe a third party or blockchain acts as certifier. I’m more interested in unbundling all of the associated services that a campus provides – advising, career services, counseling, recreational sports, enrollment, fund-raising, technology, etc. Think about everything but the academics like we think about adopting software-as-a-service.

What would higher education’s business model look like if those services were no longer part of the campus payroll, but were operating costs, perhaps even available to the institution on a pay as you need plan. Maybe students could elect to “subscribe” to the services that they wanted or needed, rather than shell out a larger tuition that includes all of that and more. Perhaps I might want more counseling support and not any rec sports? These services could scale far better than any individual institution, holding out the possibility of higher value for less cost, especially when you consider the financial and productivity impact of employee turnover in our current we-do-it-all business model.

On to suggestion number 2. Hagel had a sentence that was an aha! moment for me:

“However, as data generation and capture becomes cheaper and more pervasive, new business models will likely emerge in which more of the value delivered to the customer resides in the data rather than in a product or service.”

Much like the health industry, the education landscape is about to be transformed through the infamous big data and predictive analytics. The advertised payoff focuses on the backend of the learning experience – how will this enable the institution to modify the inputs of curriculum, content and pedagogy to enable the student to learn more effectively. I’m not arguing that the student wouldn’t benefit from this adaptive learning environment, but what if the goal was actually to provide that student with the data? When you sign up for a degree, you are not only expecting to learn content and how to think critically and communicate, you are generating the data, your own learning DNA, that will define your path to lifelong learning. That DNA is highly prescriptive and will continue to grow in richness over time.

You now understand that your best computational work occurs when it is presented in a gamification format, while your ability to analyze a large amount of text is enhanced when it is broken into chunks that give you time to reflect on each part. Or perhaps you now know that you need to debate an idea before you fully grasp all of its nuance. In a 21st century world, all of us will be able to access the information and the people we seek in the format that best suits our needs. And those needs will include how we best learn, developed through our own experience of higher education, and available to each of us as a personalized algorithmic prescription for lifelong intellectual wellness. Higher education becomes the platform that equips students to engage and contribute and engage in our digital, networked world.

What other truly innovative business models for higher education might be possible if we think of payment, data, and participation ?

 

 

The “Next New Thing” is NOT Innovation

Conversations in higher education these days are all about innovation. Whether it is the growing concerns over student debt and access, tightening competition for “the best” students or finding a path in the face of declining resources, the most common solution seems to be innovation.  From the number of mentions in various higher ed publications, speeches and conference presentations, one might conclude that the vast ocean of colleges and universities in this country was churning with significant change.

And indeed, many schools are redoing the curriculum, altering teaching methods, tweaking the academic calendar and integrating some “next new thing” into a  2-5 years degree framework. Not to make light of these efforts, which often involve endless meetings, position papers, and continual invocations of the quality mantra, but too much of this innovation quest focuses on the what the institution wants and not on the results it could create.

Chris Messina’s brilliantly clever piece on AirPods situates Apple not as a tech company, but instead as a firm with a long-game focus, introducing and continually reinforcing our acceptance of technology apparatuses as fashion accessories, moving us toward the ultimate goal of a more personal, intimate connection between humans and computing. He includes a quote from Steve Jobs,“You’ve got to start with the customer experience and work backwards to the technology” that seems to be the antithesis of what is happening in higher education. In other words, if higher education is truly interested in innovation – and that is an empirical question in itself – why not start with the student experience and work backwards to the inputs? More importanly, if the larger goal is life-long learning in close relationship with a particular college, much like Apple is the cathedral for an ongoing most personal computer relationship, why isn’t every “next new thing” specifically designed to create a result of getting each student to active engagement as a life-long learner?  (The life-long learning goal, and its associated “next new thing,” is generally expressed as something you start doing AFTER you finish your degree.)

One of the best books on change leadership (IMHO) is Robert Quinn’s Building the Bridge as You Walk on It. He stresses that deep change comes when our question is no longer “What do I want?” but “What result do I want to create?”  If, as Messina argues, Apple is using design and engineering (he references Steve’s comment about technology and the liberal arts) to enable us to build the bridge while we move from our current state toward a future when our computing experience is deeply personal, then how might a college truly innovate, how might it create deep change, by enabling students to build the bridge to life-long learning starting with Day 1?  Not wanting to preempt any suggestions, but I think it would require a more radical approach than any of the current “next new things.”

 

 

 

Looking Forward & Back

Time passes very quickly. One day you’re graduating from college and before you know it, your kids are in college. And a lot of things happened in between. Today, August 30, 2016 I saw this tweet:

In case you weren’t aware you were watching IT history: The data center has left the building. #cio #cloud #VMWorld twitter.com/holgermu/statu…

And @PGelsinger predicts that 2016 where Service Provider DCs pass Enterprise DCs. #VMWorld pic.twitter.com/3RNJzNDLvX

I recalled arguing for the demise of the enterprise data center in October, 2010. Seems like it was yesterday. Wondering what I said almost 6 years ago, I finally located the slide deck. Then I found an mp3 of the conference session. Didn’t want to try and marry the two, so I’m including both here. Listening and manually moving through the slides makes my original point, even more valid today — Owning Your Own Data Center Is So Last Century.

Owning Your Own Data Center

An attic for everyone

Data and information are swamping us.  So what – that’s old news, you say. But if you’re on the data service providing end at a college or university, you are only too aware of the insatiable storage demands of your clientele. The cause is simple – the handy, obvious physical restraints of the past are gone. Remember file cabinets stuffed from front to back and books piled on the floor when the shelves were filled? With the exception of true hoarders, we determined what to keep and what to discard on a rolling basis over time.

The digital world entices us with freedom from physical constraints. Much like Groundhog Day, our digital lives unfold in an endless pattern of create, acquire and save that occurs without deterrents. The cost of choosing what to keep and what to trash is much too high – it requires what is now most rare – our focused attention. So we never actually delete.  We might curate, but that only brings some things into focus; the others remain waiting in the background. Editing happens with revision histories, not wadded papers discarded in the bin. Emails marked as read continue scrolling downward into a deepening well of messages. Meanwhile your local data center struggles to satisfy the insatiable demand for storage.

Amazon announced Glacier today offering 1 GB for 1 penny per month. Lease as much as you need for a very low price. The catch – it is named appropriately. It is archive storage. If you want to retrieve something, plan on it taking hours rather than minutes.  But this seems to be a reasonable decision point that all of us could make as we confront our data – put it into the attic or leave it out in the room.

MTV Algebra and Lifetime History

In the eighties, publishers and media companies talked incessantly about synergy among their various products. Disney was (and remains) a master – movies begat toys and amusement rides while amusement rides begat movies, costumes, more toys and books.  Creating content was expensive and profits were much better when that content could be re-purposed in as many ways for as many potential audiences as possible. But throughout that period and until lately, such efforts focused on the trade and consumer markets. Now the New York Times alerts us to developments in the latest hot market for media companies – the K-12 classroom.

The textbook is becoming the Techbook according to the Discovery Channel.  Yes, the cable regular (and News Corp) is moving beyond streaming video to creating a variety of highly interactive texts designed to engage students and expand market share. Reporters Brooks Barnes and Amy Chozick tell us that given the declining revenues of media companies, “Education is emerging as an answer, largely because executives see a way to capitalize on the changes that technology is bringing to classrooms — turnabout as fair play, given the way that the Web has upended major media’s own business models.”

Every year at this time, many college and university campuses come to life after a fairly dormant summer. Hundreds, and in some places thousands, of new first years or frosh begin their journey toward a baccalaureate degree. Increasingly those students will arrive having experienced years of a digitally-enhanced (or at least infused) educational experience that will no longer be evident once they matriculate to higher learning. The disconnect between cable channel versions of a high school textbook and one that has been authored by a faculty member for a university seminar is going to loom very large indeed.