Sometimes, when most of the work is driven by
volunteers, there may be a less than business-like
attitude towards things like information technology.
Evidently, that's not the case at Scouts Canada.
"For every $1 invested in technology we want to see
$3 of return," says Tom Obright, the hard-driving
director of information
management. "We try to squeeze productivity out of every
cent."
Case in point: Scouts Canada has over the last 10
years embarked on a massive infrastructure upgrade aimed
at improving all its IT operations.
The challenge: How do you operate IT at a national
level when your organization is extremely decentralized?
Scouts Canada has 23 councils that operate mostly as
independent business units, reporting as required to the
national level.
The problem was that while strategic decisions were
made at the national level, each of the regions reported
its data inconsisently and in a variety of formats --
sometimes long after the information was needed.
If membership was down at sign-up in September, head
office would not know that until January -- far too late
to launch a campaign to attract new recruits.
"All the different databases used to record
membership data were becoming a nightmare to maintain,"
says Obright.
Now using CRM software from Siebel and business
intelligence tools from Data Beacon, Scouts management
is able to do real-time analysis, get reports on
membership data on a daily basis, and perhaps most
importantly of all, enable all users to look at all the
same data at the same time.
As simple as this objective sounds, it was far from a
trivial task. Only recently has the technology become
mature enough to enable Obright to deliver this kind of
functionality.
For example, Obright wanted the system to be
Web-based. Many of the earlier database platforms work
only a standalone, local configuration, and reporting on
a national basis was a pipe dream.
And that made it difficult to perform even the most
simple of tasks, such as preparing a list at the
national office so it could send invitations to an
event.
But now the needs are becoming more sophisticated.
Obright wants to build reports that would help him and
Scout leaders spot relationships and correlations
between membership and a community's language and
diversity. He would also like to be able to take this
data and compare it with outside sources of information,
for example, identifying schools from which kids are
under-represented in local scout troops.
In other words, Obright is hopes to offer to Scouts
Canada and its 23,000 end-users (including adminstrators
and scouts leaders) all the "what-iffing and playing
with the data" that business users have come to expect.
If it sounds like Obright knows the business, it's
not hard to understand why. He's been associated with
Scounts Canada for 35 years, including 15 years as a
scout leader and 20 years on staff. He took on the IT
role in 1993.
The challenge: Obright has an IT staff of three
supporting 8,000 scout groups from Nanaimo, B.C., to St.
John's.
"I'm basically being asked to deliver enterprise
computing on a PC budget," he says. It's a good thing he
comes prepared.