Leaders Identify Major Trends Shaping IT at Stanford

IT leaders gathered around tables at a workshop.
Campus IT leaders gathered to identify trends shaping IT at Stanford and sketch out a desired future state.

In a unique cross-campus planning event, over 40 Stanford IT leaders — including members of the Campus IT Plan Working Group and others nominated by the CIO Council —  gathered last month for a strategic planning workshop. There, they identified the most important forces and trends likely to shape IT at Stanford over the next three years, and sketch out a desired future state.

The CIO Council built on that work when they met Nov. 14 to begin drafting campus-wide IT strategic goals and CIO Council initiatives, which will be finalized in April in conjunction with the 2019 Campus IT Plan.

As a member of the IT community at Stanford, you are encouraged to consider these trends when planning IT efforts within your organization. With a common understanding and view of the trends and forces shaping IT at Stanford, we can better align our efforts to serve our community of faculty, staff, students, and alumni.

Join the conversation

What other trends and forces are shaping IT at Stanford that are not included here? Share your thoughts on the #campus-it-plan channel in the IT at Stanford Slack workspace.

Download a PDF version of this infographic.

Infographic showing the forces and trends impacting IT at Stanford in 2019 and Beyond. Described below.

 

Forces and trends impacting IT at Stanford in 2019 and beyond

Data explosion

More data than ever before, residing in different locations; makes it challenging to manage and analyze.

Continued security risks and threats

Regulatory pressures are increasing.

Outsourcing of core IT competencies

Cloud computing, cloud data, web hosting.

High expectations from students and faculty

They’re used to sophisticated tools and expect that at Stanford

Proliferation of tools and democratization of IT

If IT doesn't provide it, I'll get it myself

Growing interest in AI and machine learning

Initial efforts in these areas are expanding

Challenges with attracting and retaining skilled IT staff

Competing with higher salaries in Silicon Valley

Communication is changing

Telecommuting and remote work are changing the ways people communicate with one another

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