I work in the field of information and communication technology (ICT). When I joined the ICT industry it was called the information technology (IT) industry. Communication was added during the early 2000’s to recognize the important aspect of the communications infrastructure and related systems.
Having worked in ICT departments for banking services, national railways services, higher institution of education and currently a secretariat for a network of 46 African universities – I understand that the functions of the ICT departments in varying industries remain similar.
When I moved to Uganda to take up the position of Program Manager responsible for supporting ICT Services at the RUFORUM Secretariat I was struck by the differences in the implementation of the strategy for the ICT Department of a university and the ICT Department for a secretariat of a network of universities.
Prior to joining the RUFORUM Secretariat I worked for 10 years at Africa University – initially as a Systems Engineer and was later promoted to Director of the ICT Department.
The table below highlights the differences I have noted while leading the implementation of the two strategies - the Africa University ICT Strategy and the RUFORUM Secretariat ICT Strategy:
Africa University ICT Department
|
RUFORUM Secretariat ICT Department
|
|
Strategy
Focus
|
To strengthen the university and align the ICT
strategy to support teaching, learning, collaboration and research
|
To strengthen the Secretariat and inspire member
universities to harness ICT
|
Department
Size
|
Had a team of 20 technical staff
|
Has 2 technical staff
|
Technical Skills
|
A diverse set of technical skills was available among the technical
staff
Limited need to outsource technical roles
|
Narrow set of technical skills
Have to outsource technical roles
|
Hosted Services
|
All mission critical systems were hosted on campus – because there
was capacity to maintain the systems
|
The majority of the mission critical systems are hosted on the cloud
– to ensure uptime and reduce maintenance burdens
|
The users of the ICT services
– accessing the systems and network
|
A narrower set of users – these were students and staff.
|
Potentially a wider set of users located in various countries
globally – these are secretariat staff, students on RUFORUM scholarships,
grantees, governance bodies, faculty staff from member universities and other
stakeholders
|
Decisions on new projects
|
Guided by a Senate Committee: the computerization committee
|
Guided by RUFORUM Secretariat Management supported by consultants
|
The ICT infrastructure and
equipment
|
Larger local area network, about 1,000 concurrent users of network
services
|
A smaller local area network, about 50 devices on the local area
network
|
Funding
|
The budget is part of the university-wide budget. Students pay a
technology fees. The department offers training services to the community for
a fee.
|
The budget is supported through projects funding. Need to
continuously mobilize resources
|
Conclusions
The fundamental functions of ICT
departments do not change. Their roles are to support the business processes of a
particular industry. As a Manager of an ICT Department one needs to develop a
strategy that fits the business of that organization. In my case I had to step
out of my comfort zone and operate across different technical areas, work with
external service level providers, write proposals to mobilize resources and generally multi-task.
I have benefited from the experience that RUFORUM has given me – I have been
part of “sowing the seeds” by participating in developing web-based information
management systems that are being used by network stakeholders across Africa to
extract, share and deposit information.
2 comments:
It is interesting how every one can see that technology is taking over support of businesses in many ways and life at large and yet little is invested to teach the Uganda child how to work with the new technology.
Have enjoy ed this pieces.
Agnes
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