Develop a structure for the business case toolkit and preservation support pages: Difference between revisions

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When, Why, What, How, Who
When, Why, What, How, Who


when to include:
*when to include:
Is this the right time to be writing a business case? Does it fulfil a need that the organisation has? Can link to maturity assessement tools and approaches (e.g. AIDA).
Is this the right time to be writing a business case? Does it fulfil a need that the organisation has? Can link to maturity assessement tools and approaches (e.g. AIDA).
long term vision/approach
long term vision/approach
short term componenets - staff, storage, etc
short term componenets - staff, storage, etc


who to include:
*who to include:
There are various parts to the 'who' question ...
There are various parts to the 'who' question ...
Who is writing the business case and for whom they are writing it. And who else in the organisation may need to be involved who isn't engaged at the moment (e.g. financial officers who may need to place preservation as a budget line within the organisation)
Who is writing the business case and for whom they are writing it. And who else in the organisation may need to be involved who isn't engaged at the moment (e.g. financial officers who may need to place preservation as a budget line within the organisation)
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- type of organisation - business objectives, documentation,scale & maturity
- type of organisation - business objectives, documentation,scale & maturity


what to include:
*what to include:
Once we know who we need to communicate with we then can start looking at what we've got ... We can describe the assets that we have.
Once we know who we need to communicate with we then can start looking at what we've got ... We can describe the assets that we have.
- characterisation
- characterisation
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content audit etc
content audit etc


why to include:
*why to include:
- benefits - state the benefits
- benefits - state the benefits
- risks
- risks
threats
threats


how:
*how:
For some recipients of the business case (the sponsors) they may wish to think of curation/preservation as a black box. Don't want the technical detail broken down by cost. Others may want more detail in this area.
For some recipients of the business case (the sponsors) they may wish to think of curation/preservation as a black box. Don't want the technical detail broken down by cost. Others may want more detail in this area.



Revision as of 15:18, 30 July 2013

Brain storm for the development of the business case for preservation

Neil Grindley reporting back his breakout group: Useful to think about a simple interrogatory approach ... When, Why, What, How, Who

  • when to include:

Is this the right time to be writing a business case? Does it fulfil a need that the organisation has? Can link to maturity assessement tools and approaches (e.g. AIDA). long term vision/approach short term componenets - staff, storage, etc

  • who to include:

There are various parts to the 'who' question ... Who is writing the business case and for whom they are writing it. And who else in the organisation may need to be involved who isn't engaged at the moment (e.g. financial officers who may need to place preservation as a budget line within the organisation) The who are the community/stakeholders for which the preservation will be done. Spell out that the material should be considered as digital assets, and assets have value and that value is realised over time by means of preservation/curation. Value must accrue to some stakeholders and this is a process of describing and identifying the supply and demand issues. Who is supplying the assets (and providing the curation service) and who is demanding value from the assets - the users, consumers. - type of organisation - business objectives, documentation,scale & maturity

  • what to include:

Once we know who we need to communicate with we then can start looking at what we've got ... We can describe the assets that we have. - characterisation - case studies content audit etc

  • why to include:

- benefits - state the benefits - risks threats

  • how:

For some recipients of the business case (the sponsors) they may wish to think of curation/preservation as a black box. Don't want the technical detail broken down by cost. Others may want more detail in this area.

costs audience/language granularity over time financial and non-financial


Maureen Pennock reporting back: Define what we thought should go in a business case then work back to what we might need to help people right. this breaks down into a series of tasks:

  • Exec Summary
  • Strategic vision (where do we want to be)
  • Understand the collection
  • Understand the context / landscape
  • Fit to organizational mission
  • What are the risks facing the collection / institution
  • Prioritisation of risks
  • List of benefits - Value, ROI
  • Costs of action and inaction
  • Resources needed, institutional readiness (Skills / resourcs / stakeholders)
  • Practical recommendations over a short period (and risks associated with them)

Discussion These are noticeably different approaches but they reinforce each other. The when/who/what/how questions are 'real english' and they work well to provide questions that are useful and also immediately understandable. But it won't steer you through a large wad of stuff. The headings are more 'cookie-cutter' giving the outline of everything that would be needed. These two approaches are not mutually incompatible.


Sections to work on - first cut: