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1 e-Learning: markets and pricing Understanding them? Paul Bacsich “Financial considerations for e-learning projects”, Birmingham, March 2004
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2 Contents Myself Some costs-related reminders Assessing the size of the market Business plan The commodity value of e-learning Funding Councils’ funding of e-learning
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3 Myself 1 Currently two main part-time roles Director, Matic Media Ltd Director of Special Projects, UK eUniversities Worldwide Limited: research and competitor research on virtual universities and MLEs And some other bits and pieces: External Examiner for several distance learning programmes Treasurer, Association for Learning Technology Member of JISC Committee on Networking
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4 Myself 2 – formerly Jobs: Professor of Telematics and Head of Dept of Networks and Multimedia, Sheffield Hallam U - several DL courses Many years at Open University finishing up as Assistant Director, Knowledge Media Institute Roles: Several “costs of e-learning”, evaluation and policy studies for EU, JISC, HEFCE, LSC, DfES Many years work on “virtual university” analyses, especially critical success factors E-University studies for HEFCE since 2000 Ran several big projects in e-learning including the SHU Virtual Campus
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5 Some costs- related reminders
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6 Problems of different perceptions There is slowly increasing agreement on the methodologies of costing e-learning So why is there a dilemma where Education see “No Significant Difference” whereas Training sees “Return on Investment”? The challenge is to find a uniform evaluation/planning methodology, including costs, which copes with a world without borders Borders are not only geographic
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7 Hidden Costs – the bane of financial planning Increased telephone call and printing bills for students due to Internet usage Entertainment expenses “necessarily” incurred by staff at conferences but not reimbursed Administrator time answering student queries Support costs of a new Learning Environment Costs of content - “created in one’s spare time” Costs of institutional collaboration Costs of conformance to standards
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8 The other stakeholders
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9 Course Lifecycle Model Planning and Development Production and Delivery Maintenance and Evaluation Three-phase model of course development
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10 Assessing the size of the market
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11 Hard data “Hard data on student demand for distance learning in overseas countries is difficult, if not impossible, to locate” (Fielden, 2000, for HEFCE) Commission your own research, do not share Do not be a slave to market research. A lesson of the dot.coms: products can create markets “Brand” is elusive, time-lagged and subject- dependent What would you do if you found 1,000 students? Do not assume your (country’s) pedagogy will transfer
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12 Competitor research Whatever the size of the market, it will usually be contested - there are few unoccupied niches Attractive subjects, eg MBAs, are over-contested Focus on student preferences, views, including value proposition to them Make sure you compare like with like - what is an MSc? Try to track non-sales (dept store analogy) global pricing is rare; global syllabi also
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13 Business Plan
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14 Can use HEFCE’s planning model
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15 The commodity value of e- learning
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16 What does e-learning content cost? average £12000 per study hour, but very large standard deviation 10% of this for simple material could one aim for < £1000 per study hour? This is still around £8000 per CATS point.
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17 Rule of thirds 1: Study of “engaging” multimedia: expensive 2: Study of existing or slightly modified (learning) resources: mid-price 3: Working on assignments (maybe in collaboration): cheap
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18 How to reduce the price Forget research Go for templates Economies of scale: long runs of similar material Professionalism Outsource to specialists (outside HE/FE) Outsource development - and support - to cheaper countries close to UK culture (provincial Canada, Australia, New Zealand)
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19 Funding Councils’ funding of e-learning
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20 Funding councils - issues Different home nations I shall focus on England Different post-16 regimes (HE and FE) Different policies at different times
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21 Funding councils - HEFCE Funding (for operational courses) is now by formula, mode-neutral (but not subject-neutral – discuss…) Not quite true… Access premiums Studies on differential effects, in particular “The costs of alternative modes of delivery” (JM Consulting, August 2003) One suspects a slow drift away from mode- neutrality, perhaps preceded by complex premiums Lots of HEFCE funding for development and special initiatives in e-learning (TLTP, CETLs, etc), and the ongoing IT aspects (JISC, JANET)
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22 Funding councils - LSC Funding (for operational courses) is by complex formula, but NOT mode-neutral Several studies to think about simplifying this Some LSC funding for development and special initiatives in e-learning (not as much as for HE – if one excludes Ufi?), and the ongoing IT aspects (JISC, JANET) Issues What about Foundation Degrees, HE in FE, etc?
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23 Funding councils - DfES DfES e-Learning Strategy The overarching strategy under which HE and FE (and ACLs now) will operate Beginnings of integration of schools, via the borderlands (6 th form colleges) – UKERNA, etc Studies on long-term embedding and sustainability of e-learning One suspects this means “no special money”
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24 Further reading (on costs) http://www.shu.ac.uk/cnl/ Thank you for listening Paul Bacsich pbacsich@ukeu.com paul@matic-media.co.uk
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