Eveline Fallshaw
Eveline Fallshaw
Eveline Fallshaw
The Balanced Scorecard approach: maximising return on investment in flexible delivery Dr Eveline M Fallshaw
Introduction
As a strategy to increase participation in higher education many universities are developing a flexible learning infrastructure and institutional strategic plans focus on lifelong learning and offering students greater choice in the pace and place of their study. This requires that significant investments of time and money be made in IT infrastructure, staff development, and the production of courseware for online delivery. Such moves to create an e-learning environment require major change initiatives. However it is difficult to measure and monitor the extent to which these investments are actually delivering their intended outcomes or to assess the effectiveness of the strategies that have been adopted and often challenging to communicate them clearly to staff across the institution. This paper looks at how the return on investment of a university's flexible delivery strategy can be analysed and evaluated at the program level. It describes a Return on Investment Toolset which incorporates a Balanced Scorecard, and illustrates how this can be used as the basis on which to develop a series of indicators to help keep a focus on the strategy and estimate the return on investment taking account of both the financial and non-financial outcomes that the institution is seeking.
areas across all faculties and it must achieve a degree of involvement and engagement by staff in a manner unparalleled by past experience. It is critical that management is confident that, over time, it is achieving its intended aims and that the strategies it has put in place are delivering the expected outcomes for students, staff and for the university's bottom line. Considerable effort has therefore been put into developing tools and techniques, which assist in monitoring progress, and the Balanced Scorecard has proved a useful approach.
Balanced scorecards
Balanced scorecards are strategic management tools that help evaluate performance and encourage good planning. Traditional financial measures - if used alone - are often insufficient performance measures in higher education as success is more appropriately measured across a range of values, including, but not limited to finance. Quality is effectively defined as fitness for purpose. When we are addressing the purposes of a range of stakeholders we need to adopt a performance measurement technique that can reflect the needs of various groups. The balanced scorecard offers a simple method for articulating strategy to staff and students and then monitoring progress toward the university's goals. The scorecard can be used to define the university's long-term strategy in terms of specific, measurable goals simultaneously in different areas of management (financial returns, values of students and other clients, effectiveness of internal services and processes, and learning and growth within the organisation). It can also be effectively applied at the program level.
RoI Step 1: Identify the need or problem and define the objectives
Step 1 in determining the overall Return on Investment is where we have to state, in broad terms, who needs to learn what, and why they need to learn it. In the example used in this paper we are using an imaginary program about regional development. The University is going through a process to assess whether there will be return on its investment in developing this program for off shore delivery. We need to ensure we can describe the target intake to the program, the students learning needs and the purpose of the program.
1
This paper draws and expands on Bacsich et al (1999) The costs of networked learning, Sheffield Hallam University.
Example: RMIT is concerned to ensure that it makes a good impact in South East Asia. (SEA). Regional development is high on the national and the local agenda. RMIT has a thriving department of Regional Development but most of its work has been done in regional Victoria. The Chinese government has recently identified a severe shortage of regional development experts. It has therefore been decided to develop a Masters program in Regional Development for off-shore delivery to China and other countries in the region. Our target is 50 applications for admission from qualified applicants in SEA in the first year of offering (leading indicator).
RoI Step 2: Consider the strategic context and relationship to the Universitys strategic priorities
Now we have to describe how this proposal aligns with RMITs current priorities. These include courses with high student numbers, opportunities for re-purposing materials, good potential for commercialisation especially off shore, high likelihood of significant fee for service, significant global market share, strong global competitive positioning, clear alignment to RMITs mission, and a strong community service element. At the same time RMIT seeks to take account of student interests including ensuring that our graduates are highly employable, courses are in high demand, improving completion and retention rates and equity target performance, providing opportunities for work integrated learning, and internationalisation of the curriculum. Example: The aim of this proposal is to teach a Masters program in Regional Development oriented to students in South East Asia, and China in particular. The external strategic context is clear and this is also consistent with many aspects of RMIT strategy and current priorities. There is strong demand for the course from students already in related employment and it is planned to place significant emphasis on work-integrated learning as a component in the internationalisation and contextualisation of the course materials. Our aim is to have at least 10 repeat employers assist students to enrol on the course by second year of offering (lagging indicator); at least 100 enrolments from Singapore and China and Vietnam by 2001 (lagging indicator).
workshop in Shanghai and online work-based delivery has been selected. Much of the core materials in the existing Regional Development program which is delivered in regional Victoria can readily be re-used with some contextualisation. This will also develop staff skills in online delivery which will enable us to develop a new TAFE program for work based delivery and repurpose courses within our undergraduate degree for offering through the Global University Alliance in 2001. Our targets are at least 50% of departmental staff will have been trained in use of online tools by the end of semester 1 (leading indicator); 8 quality assured courses will be online and in use by offshore students on the Masters in Regional Development by the end of the year (lagging indicator); 4 courses will be being renewed for online by the end of Semester 1 (leading indicator).
Example: Development costs for multimedia material would be a large fraction of the departmental content development budget and it is considered too risky to use the funds in this way for a new course. Also the level of expertise of staff is still relatively low and it is felt that considerable use of multimedia might delay the completion date for the project. External experts will be brought in from other areas of RMIT to do the course web design and train staff to teach online. Provided course enrolments are as predicted this start up cost can be absorbed. Experience shows that the course material goes out of date fairly quickly and the budget assumes 25% of the course material will be rewritten each year. The non-financial benefits of the course are seen as: a) Contributing to RMITs involvement with SEA b) Pushing forward the Universitys lifelong learning agenda c) Increasing fee for service revenues d) Maintaining the Universitys reputation for real word research since the departments research expertise can now be deployed in the service to the regions. e) Developing staff capability to provide students with high quality online learning The department hopes it will have 4 staff with DLS online courses cited as University exemplars by the end of the year; Student satisfaction with online learning should show 60% are very satisfied (leading indicator); Graduates satisfaction with the program should show 85% are very satisfied (lagging indicator).
Balanced Scorecard Cause and effect relationships Perspectives Staff learning and growth When teachers and academics understand how to determine the business case for which courses to deliver online, how to plan and facilitate learning experiences integrating flexible delivery, and how to use the DLS tools then .. this drives Innovations in internal Our ability to plan and deliver learning experiences which services/business processes develop the required generic capabilities in a national and at which we must excel to international context then improve student satisfaction this drives
Student satisfaction
Our students satisfaction with studying at RMIT and they will recommend RMIT to their friends. Employers will be satisfied with RMIT graduates and they will be readily employable then . this drives
Financial and economic RMITs ability to attract more students in a wider range of on return on investment results and off shore markets and therefore increases revenues from the other drivers
Targets have been established for each activity. This is how we will demonstrate our performance to date (lagging indicators) and by appropriate measures envision future success (leading indicators). We must provide evidence (data) on which to measure our progress and these indicators must allow us to measure both success and sustainability. The targets can be integrated into a Balanced Scorecard to assist departments to check progress in achieving their goals.
Students/employers
Conclusions
Research shows that many organizations encounter serious difficulties when implementing strategy. The experience at RMIT indicates that managing strategy is fundamentally different from managing operations. For managing operations the budget serves as a planning and control system. It defines the resources, which will be allocated to departments each year. During the year cost centre managers review operating performance against the budget, identify variances, and take corrective action where necessary. However, in RMIT as in most organization, the overall budget bears little resemblance to the Universitys flexible delivery strategy so it is all too easy for management attention to be directed at short-term operational details rather than long tern strategy. The strategy focused management system, which is being adopted at RMIT surrounding our flexible delivery strategy for teaching and learning provides a new framework for reporting. It makes explicit the hypotheses underpinning our strategy, and
allows us to be more analytical as we examine and test these hypotheses with the information from the balanced scorecard feedback system. This approach assists managers to develop new strategic insights and work as teams to interpret the data. In selecting our flexible delivery strategy as the area in which this approach was first developed related to how important this initiative was as a major change process in the University and how important it is seen to be to assess effectively the return on investment of time and money. This helped us to communicate the vision for change and to empower faculties and staff to devise new ways of doing their teaching to help the University accomplish its strategic objectives and bring delight to our students.
References
Bacsich, P. Ash, C. Boniwell, K. Kaplan, L. Mardell, J. and Caven-Atack, A. (1999) The Costs of Networked Learning - Final Report, Sheffield, Sheffield Hallam University. Kaplan, R.S and Norton, D.P (1996) The Balanced Scorecard, Harvard Business School Press, Boston. Kaplan, R.S and Norton, D.P (2000) Having trouble with your strategy? Then map it Harvard Business Review, September-October, pp167-176. Kaplan, R.S and Norton, D.P (2001) The Strategy Focused Organization, Harvard Business School Press, Boston. RMIT University (2001) Teaching and Learning Strategy, http://www.teaching.rmit.edu.au/