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Meet the Property Initiative Team

To respond to thoughtful, cost-saving suggestions from the campus community, the Office of Operational Excellence has assembled an initiative team to improve and formalize the process by which University-owned furniture and office supplies can be repurposed and utilized by other areas on campus.

Leadership & Team Members +

The Repurposed Property Initiative Team will be comprised of the following:

Project Manager – Karie Conklin, OIT

Chanda Price, Purchasing

Mary Tays, Budgets and Finance

Larry Helpert, Facilities Planning and Management

News +

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FAQ

How will the new specialty printer exclusive contracts help SMU save money?

After reviewing data that showed an opportunity for savings up to $700,000 annually in specialty printing, the Purchasing department conducted a competitive solicitation process for vendors to provide specialty print services to the University using an exclusive provider contract model.

Thirty-one (31) vendors were invited to participate with nineteen (19) responses received.  An evaluation committee representing academic and administrative areas reviewed the responses and selected eight (8) vendors to provide pricing on a market basket of common print jobs across campus.  Three (3) vendors were chosen and their submitted pricing indicates that SMU should save a minimum 30% on off-campus printing by employing the exclusive provider contracting model, though projections indicate that the savings could be as high as 50% of last year’s spending.

Effective September 1, 2016, the Specialty Printing exclusive providers are now mandatory sources for the main Dallas campus, SMU-in-Plano and SMU-in-Taos.  Examples of custom printing services subject to the exclusive contracts include:

 Perfect bound books

 Booklets

 Brochures

 Newsletters

 Annual reports

• Flyers, postcards, self-mailers

 Folded carton packaging & presentation boxes

• Forms

• Invitations

• Announcement cards and envelopes

Magazines

 Presentation & pocket folders

The Specialty Printing services exclusive providers are divided into two categories. 

1) Full-service printers offer complete pre-press capabilities, color correction, photo manipulation, customer file library and archiving, graphic design, direct mail services, on-line interfaces for inventory management and warehousing, wide format printing and other specialty printing services. SMU’s exclusive full-service printers are ColorDynamics  and Quad Williamson.

2) Print-ready printer offers low cost print solutions and works from ‘print ready’ PDF files with limited pre-press capabilities and file manipulation, and no design capabilities. SMU’s exclusive print-ready printer is Ennis Graphics.

Contact and ordering information for each of the providers can be found here: Specialty Printing Providers. Additional price quotes are not required when using these vendors. Although as a best practice, the Purchasing Department recommends requesting pricing from all three vendors during this initial start up to determine which vendor offers the best solution for a specific project. All exceptions to using these exclusive providers must be approved by Purchasing.

In addition to these new partners, the Purchasing Department encourages the use of SMU Copy Central for smaller and less complex projects.  SMU Copy Central offers an on-campus solution, online ordering capabilities, and quick turn-around.  Visit the website and bookmark the page

SMU Mail Central is also available to assist you with your direct and bulk mailing projects. Visit the website and bookmark the page to learn more about the services offered.

Specialty print projects originating from all SMU departments must follow these procedures, including those paid for by restricted funds. For additional information, please contact Cathy Heckman at checkman@smu.edu or 214-768-2174.

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Classroom Tech Revolution

OIT ramps up interactive teaching tools

“Tech solutions must increasingly create more flexible, collaborative, dynamic learning environments where both faculty and students can easily share and interact with academic content.”

In the past, whenever professors had a problem with AV equipment in the classroom, they had to call the Help Desk and wait for a dispatched technician to arrive. But soon, OIT will be able to resolve requests for assistance remotely with the push of a few buttons, thanks to new remote control technology being installed in classrooms throughout campus. It’s just one example of changes being made through the new OIT Shared Services structure.

Last summer, several departments in OIT collaborated to upgrade technology in more than 60 classrooms on the main campus and at SMU-in-Plano, and also began testing innovative new tools and services to improve interaction and engagement between faculty and students.

Rachel Mulry, head of OIT’s Customer Service Dept., said the classroom upgrades included such things as document cameras, widescreen projectors, and replacement of quite a few standard components like screens, speakers, lecterns and equipment control panels. The new hardware should mean fewer issues in the classroom, and the streamlined programming and standard control panels should mean quicker equipment startup for faculty and faster adjustments as they move from room to room.

Equipment now connected to central campus console for faster diagnostics, fixes, metrics

One of the newest technologies added to all 60-plus classrooms was remote control integration, which programs equipment to report to a central console in the OIT office. “That console gives us a wide range of abilities, allowing us to be proactive and more quickly resolve issues in the field,” she said. “We can use the console to check the maintenance needs of the devices and schedule replacements or fixes before issues arise. We can resolve requests for assistance remotely and will soon be able to send commands from the Help Desk to resolve a professor’s AV issue without having to wait for a dispatched technician to arrive. We can use it to implement energy saving measures, such as powering off equipment overnight. And we can start gathering metrics on which technology components are being used, and how frequently. The new system will also help us identify older equipment and software that needs to be phased out.”

Four game-changing teaching tools

Jason Warner, director of Academic Technology Services, said that as OIT has become the steward of SMU’s classroom technology services, the department is focused on demonstrating innovations and adopting modern technology tools and capabilities that challenge and inspire users to move past the status quo.

“We’re working to transform teaching and learning spaces, both of which are spaces where change can be expected to be disruptive,” he said. “To that end, we’ve partnered directly with SMU faculty and academic units to pilot and implement four new ‘prototype’ instructional technology tools and services.”  Those include:

  • Epson Interactive Projector: When Michael Robertson, new Academic Technology Services director for Dedman College, began talking to faculty about their needs, many of them requested Smart Boards, which are interactive, touch-controlled white boards. But because that technology is now somewhat older and relatively costly, Robertson worked with OIT Director of Audiovisual Support Shawn Remek to identify a more modern, future-forward solution that could also be integrated with current classroom systems: the Epson Interactive Projector. It not only turns a standard whiteboard into an interactive whiteboard, but interactions can be recorded and shared with students. Robertson and Remek have installed it in a Dedman classroom and are training faculty on its use, and OIT is evaluating whether to install it in additional classrooms on campus.
  • Nearpod: This cloud-based, interactive presentation and assessment tool is being tested at the Cox School of Business by Cox’s Academic Technology Services Director Jeff Liew. Nearpod allows instructors to create interactive presentations – involving quizzes, polls, videos, images, drawing boards, web content and traditional slides – and directly deliver them to students’ laptops and mobile devices.  This way, instructors can use students’ own devices for engagement and presentation playback, rather than compete against them as distractions.
  • AMX Enzo presentation system: Faculty and students have been asking for a way to easily and wirelessly connect multiple devices to systems of display in the classroom. While Apple TVs are capably serving Apple-platform users in some campus classrooms, the Enzo offers a wireless “screen mirroring” experience from any computer or mobile device. Enzo is being tested in Dedman College as a more flexible option to Apple TV, making it easy for users to instantly share screen information with others in the room.
  • Poll Everywhere: While audience response systems using “clickers” have characterized real-time feedback service in the past, the costs and required hardware have become inefficient and outdated. Poll Everywhere offers an excellent cloud-based service that allows students to respond to questions using their own smartphones, tablets and laptops. Dedman faculty have been trying out Poll Everywhere in both large lectures and small discussion groups and say students have been engaged and excited by the peer interaction.

All of these changes have been made possible by the new Shared Services structure. In terms of customer service, Mulry said, “We now have a larger team, and embedded AV technicians across most buildings on campus. As a result, we’ve been able to respond to AV issues in the classrooms very quickly, track problems, and work more closely with our vendors to get things done. We can also explore more innovative possibilities now, working with the Academic Tech Service directors and faculty in each school, and are excited about the chance to really push the envelope on the AV needs and designs of the classrooms.”

Faculty input helped guide new pilot programs

Warner’s Academic Technology Services team implemented an annual Faculty Technology Needs Assessment survey to better, and more objectively, measure the tech needs of faculty across campus. “Based on survey results, the Academic Technology Services director in each school identified opportunities for pilot initiatives,” said Warner. “They worked with Rachel’s AV integration and classroom response teams to acquire, install and integrate the first four pilot systems, and more ideas are being explored.”

The focus of all the changes is simple: to help meet faculty and student needs. Our goal is to continually improve both teaching experiences and student successes by providing innovative classroom technology solutions and opportunities and by helping academic stakeholders manage the rapidity of technology change and what those changes mean within SMU classrooms,” said Warner. “Tech solutions must continue to serve traditional lecture-based instruction, but at the same time must increasingly create more flexible, collaborative, dynamic learning environments where both faculty and students can easily share and interact with academic content. Tools like interactive projectors, cloud-based audience response systems and wireless mirroring devices allow professors and students to engage in ways never previously possible at SMU. I’m looking forward to more innovations, such as easier data visualization tools and virtual/augmented reality interactions, as we continue to work to provide better spaces and opportunities for intellectual exchange.”

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Watch a Recap of the Facilities Information Session

SMU’s Office of Facilities Planning and Management (a.k.a “Facilities”) supports the University’s mission through the planning, management, operation, and maintenance of efficient, functional, state-of-the-art, safe, environmentally sustainable, and inviting environments that foster educational instruction, learning, research, and service to the community.

On September 21, 2016, a Facilities Information Session was conducted by SMU’s Office of Facilities Planning and Management.

Download the Presentation

Download a Video of the Session

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Operational Excellence August-September News and Highlights

Faculty and staff received a survey the week of September 26 asking for candid and confidential feedback regarding their awareness of and satisfaction with the three Shared Service areas – Finance, Facilities and OIT – and how the new workflows in those areas impact all SMU employees. The results will be used to identify priority areas for improvement. The survey will be open until 6pm CST on Tuesday, October 4.

Numerous stories over the past two months have focused on savings and improvements resulting from OE2C.  Twelve 12 SMU doctoral students received the first University Ph.D. fellowships created from funds that were saved through OE2C in 2015, and examples of their research were highlighted. Eight additional Ph.D. students will also be supported by the funds.

The Payroll, Accounts Payable and Grant and Contract Accounting areas of the Finance Department are now offering more personalized service and new electronic solutions. These include electronic authorization payment forms, more frequent processing of direct deposits, and designating grant/contract accountants for each school and area.

Key performance measurements have been identified to track progress in administrative cost savings in numerous areas, including the OIT Help Desk and Support area, Facilities, Finance, Contracts, Graduate Application Processing and Purchasing.  Leaders in each area were interviewed about the measurements – why they chose those particular metrics to evaluate progress, what findings most interested them, and what their main areas of focus will be as they move forward. Extensive charts and graphs were provided with detailed information about savings and progress in each area. 

In addition, faculty and staff were notified that they can now opt out of receiving promotional brochures, flyers, invitations and other printed mail from campus departments, although they would continue to receive mail considered mandatory for all employees.

To learn about developments in Operational Excellence as they are announced, be sure to subscribe to the OpEx Blog.

Featured News

OE2C Savings Fund New University Fellowships

Time Savers and Improved Customer Service

Assessing Our Metrics: New Data Shows Progress Towards Operational Excellence’s Mission

Metrics – OIT Help Desk and Support

Metrics – Facilities

Metrics – Finance

Metrics – Contracts

Metrics – Graduate Application Processing

Metrics – Purchasing

Ability to Opt Out of Campus Mailings

Announcing the Shared Services User Satisfaction Survey

Save the Date: Roundtable Discussion with the IT Leaders