INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: Investing for the Future
As a service-driven organization, University Information Technology (UIT) provides
                     over 100 essential services to faculty, staff and students. These range from critical
                     niche services like Classroom Technologies to large-scale systems such as Networking,
                     PeopleSoft and Microsoft productivity tools that serve the entire university community.
Resource management in UIT is both adaptive and responsive. UIT annually reallocates
                     space, funding and human capital as circumstances and demands change, shifting resources
                     to sunrise services for emergent needs, support growth and sustain services in key
                     areas, and suspend or sunset services with reduced demand. By staying focused on university
                     goals, customer needs and legal/policy requirements, UIT ensures efficient use of
                     resources to maintain a nimble service environment and infrastructure. You can see
                     this principle at work in the Strategic Planning Process described on page 11 and
                     in the Alignment of Priorities to the goals of the university, the UH System and the
                     State of Texas Department of Information Resources on pages 12-13.
 
Rather than seeing Information Technology as an expense, it is better to view it as
                     an investment in an essential, strategic asset, and as a means to advance the university’s
                     goals for student success, research and community engagement. Consider the Peer Benchmarks
                     tables to see how UH compares to state and national peers in IT investment. Yes, prudent
                     budget management and cost control are important, and are practiced throughout UIT.
                     But IT’s greatest value is in fostering innovation to make processes less costly and
                     laborious, freeing humans to do the things humans do best — for the university, for
                     each other and, most of all, for the students. As an investment, Information Technology
                     is indispensable.
