Join our live panel webinar of customers from the higher education space! Discover essential data backup strategies and key solutions for seamless campus operations.
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(bell ringing)
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- I'm very excited to introduce our guests.
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To get started today, I'll just do a quick form
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of introduction.
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My name is Jen Baker and I am fortunate to be the RVP
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of the state, local and education national team at OWN.
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I'm very excited to kick things off.
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We have a lot of incredible customers
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within the higher education space.
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I really wanted to create an opportunity
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to bring some of our top customers together
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and talk about their experience in working with OWN.
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I wanna get started by introducing
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our three incredible panelists.
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I'll go ahead and start with Kevin.
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We have Kevin Vaughn, who is our associate vice chancellor
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for advancement operations.
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And he is with the University of Arkansas
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for medical sciences.
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Their little acronym is UAMS.
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Then we have Caitlin Santalucia.
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She is the director of administrative systems consulting.
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She is with Harvard University,
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the information technology team, also known as Hewitt.
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And her colleague Matt Donat, CRM consulting services owner.
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He's also with Harvard University Information Technology team,
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the Hewitt crew.
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So very, very excited.
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Thank you all so much for joining today at Harvard.
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We have Salesforce in use at,
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I think every school at this point,
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it has exploded across our campus.
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And this initiative that I'm talking about
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really aimed to understand what role central IT could
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or should be playing in the space.
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We didn't have a formal central service at that time.
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And the question was really now that this explosion
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has happened and we have so many instances of Salesforce,
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should we?
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What would that even look like?
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So we went out, we interviewed people,
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we did some analysis and we really tried to understand
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what people are looking for from central IT.
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And it would be varied across the university.
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Some schools have very robust Salesforce teams.
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They have multiple orgs.
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They don't really need our help so much,
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but there's still value there.
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But it looks very different for them
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versus a smaller school or smaller department
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who really need a lot more guidance,
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who can't just go hire a Salesforce administrator.
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And so out of those conversations,
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out of that analysis really came the idea
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for this central consulting service for CRM technology.
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- We've been using ONAF for about a year.
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We made the decision to go ahead and purchase ONAF early
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to get it in place to support the implementation.
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And we, I'll be happy to talk about this soon,
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but we didn't really know how much it would be a benefit
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leading up to go live, but it's finished from industry.
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- New to Salesforce, right?
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Like doesn't Salesforce offer something like this?
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And then they would chuckle and say,
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"Yes, but you're gonna need more than that."
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So that's really how ONAF came into being for us.
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It wasn't just about, is this the best vendor in this space,
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but it was about, is it gonna work for our service?
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Is it gonna work for our community?
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And is it user-friendly?
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So I'll say as a new person into Salesforce,
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I was able to learn ONAF in like two hours.
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The demos, the sessions were extremely helpful,
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but it's also just really intuitive.
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It's not hard to pick up.
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- I come at this from the perspective of a architect,
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developer, I appreciate the fact that what's being backed up
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is not just data, but also metadata.
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It's not a replacement for something like source control,
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but it's a useful layer for less technical administrators
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to be able to see what's changed, maybe revert a change.
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- It's important to choose a partner
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with a proven reputation that's able to deliver
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on their promises, which unfortunately,
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can be a challenge sometimes.
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So on that note, I'll just, I'd like to say
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that ONAF has been a phenomenal partner to UAMS.
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One of the things that I'll point out in particular
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is the onboarding process that we went through.
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And Caitlin, you alluded to this earlier,
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we worked with Alex and Cliff, who were incredible.
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They spent so much time with us.
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They were patient.
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They really operated at our speed.
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We could tell they weren't anxious to escape
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the engagement or kick a step.
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They just took the time to answer our questions,
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and we're very gracious about that.
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It's that time that they spend with us is unlike
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any other company I've dealt with
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in the Salesforce ecosystem.
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It is three notches above any of the other experiences
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we've had.
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And giving us the ability to plug in the orgs
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that we support as part of the service
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and the ones we already own,
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it helps us have more visibility
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in what types of data are being stored,
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helping folks identify a backup schedule,
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how to secure their data.
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So I think for us, ONAF has helped facilitate
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the conversation and ensure that our service
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can deliver on some of these things.
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- How do I staff?
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What does the team look like from a skillset perspective?
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And the question is what type of experience,
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'cause everyone kind of has had a different experience
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before they got into this role.
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Would you encourage them to look for
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to the point Salesforce is easy,
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but don't let it fool you, Matt.
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Like what kind of individual,
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what would be a good sample set of someone's skillset
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that they're looking if they want to bring on
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a full-time employee to manage the Salesforce ecosystem
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for them?
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- It's okay if someone's not a Salesforce developer,
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Salesforce admin yet,
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because those are skills you can learn,
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and there are a lot of resources
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for getting those skills.
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Being a strong business analyst, a listener,
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being able to understand business requirements
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and really think through,
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at least here at Harvard, Central IT,
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we really want to make sure our community
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is leveraging tools already in place
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in addition to their CRM, right?
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So how does it all connect?
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So I'm always looking for people
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that can put the puzzles together,
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really listen to what they're getting from the business,
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then come back and really think about
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what we already have on offer.
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And how that will all play well together
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to serve their needs.
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So I don't always totally focus on the technical skills
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when I'm looking to build up a team.
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(dramatic music)
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You