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IBIT News

IBIT Annual Report 2017-2018

Annual Report 2019Dear colleagues,

It is my pleasure to present the 2017-18 annual report of the Institute for Business and Information Technology (IBIT), Temple University.

The IBIT partnership with nationally recognized member firms and the  IT advisory board is quickly becoming the standard for industry-academic engagement. Please read the report to learn more.

Sincerely,

Munir Mandviwalla
Executive Director

New Foundry generates digital innovation in collaboration with industry

DIF Ribbon CuttingTemple University has a new way to engage students, faculty, and industry in generating digital innovation: the Digital Innovation Foundry (DIF). An Institute for Business and Information Technology project, DIF has launched with $1.27 million in funding thanks to generous corporate and individual donors.

Those collaborating through the Digital Innovation Foundry will assess, integrate, and prototype digital technologies. Industry can engage Temple students and faculty to address challenges they are facing with fresh thinking and a digital-first perspective. (For one project already underway, DIF is helping a company find ways to use software to motivate employees’ professional development). Students will have the opportunity to work first-hand with businesses that are navigating digital transformation, and faculty can conduct design research in an environment that benefits students and industry.

When you work on a project at a company, you need to have all experience levels and different disciplines involved. Similarly, you can’t have something like DIF without real collaboration. Students in all disciplines will benefit,” said IT Advisory Board member Sondra Barbour, who endowed the Persson-Barbour scholarship.

Barbour is a Temple alumna and former Executive Vice President, Information Systems & Global Solutions at Lockheed Martin, and serves on the boards of 3M and Perspecta.

That is a real selling point for industry to work with DIF. You have, in essence, the entire breadth of the university to pull from. This is also a way to ensure we’re sending our graduates out into the corporate world with an experience of collaborating across disciplines.”

Capgemini Digital Innovation Lab

A March 18 ribbon-cutting for DIF’s Capgemini Digital Innovation Lab officially opened a tech co-working space on campus. Students, faculty, and external partners can gather at the Lab to collaborate on projects, and assess demonstrations of new innovations.

The mission of the Foundry is closely aligned with Capgemini Invent’s focus on digital innovation and transformation so we are pleased to invest in the new Capgemini Digital Innovation Lab at Temple University. We are confident that the Foundry will further generate digital innovation at Temple and in the region,” said Jonathan Brassington, the head of Capgemini Invent, an IBIT Member.

Niraj Patel, an IT Advisory Board member and the donor behind DIF’s Niraj and Cara Patel Endowed Scholarship Fund, appreciates DIF’s alignment with current industry goals.

Technology will transform every industry. It is exciting to support an initiative that will engage all of Temple’s disciplines to produce digital innovation,” said Patel, who is Managing Director at DMI.

Over a year in the making, DIF offers a chance for industry professionals to step back from day-to-day business demands and envision future innovation. DIF intentionally differs from the business incubator model to allow teams of students, professors, and industry professionals to collaborate on long-term digital innovation projects that focus on the technology first — while still working with a blended mindset of academic research and creative thinking.

Having been on the corporate side for 30-plus years primarily as a Chief Information Officer, I’m well aware that the pressure to constantly make sure there’s a return on investment is very large,” said Bruce Fadem, IT Advisory Board Chair and sponsor of DIF’s Bruce and Betsy Fadem Endowed Scholarship Fund. “So for corporations to be able to take advantage of a facility that already exists, this is a great opportunity.”

As the chair of the Advisory Board, Bruce led the effort to create the Foundry.

All of DIF’s generously funded endowed scholarships will ensure that top-performing students receive necessary financial support.

I believe the scholarship will help attract stronger students and give those students who deserve an education at Temple an opportunity,” said Barbour.

Andrea Anania Stewart’s donation created DIF’s Stewart Family Endowed Scholarship Fund, and she said she is looking forward to seeing what DIF yields.

The Digital Innovation Foundry has a practical, well-thought-out plan to engage students, industry, and faculty, which I am pleased to support,” said Stewart, who is also on the IT Advisory Board.

IBIT’s Advisory Board and Members — including Alexion, AmerisourceBergen, Emtec, NBCUniversal, Pfizer, QVC, and Scholastic — played an important role in bringing this unique capability to Temple.

When it comes to DIF’s future success, Barbour said for her, it’s not necessarily about one splashy breakthrough:

For me, it’s the learning and it’s the figuring out how you take a technology, turn it on its side, create different things, look at the use cases, and really broaden students’ exposure to the realm of possibility.”

Learn more at https://ibit.temple.edu/programs/digital-innovation-foundry/

New Mentoring Pilot Takes off

The Spring 2019 IBIT pilot matched students with top executives. One of the great advantages Temple students have long enjoyed is the opportunity to work directly with top industry executives under the IBIT mentorship program. In the 2018-2019 academic year, the mentorship model shifted a bit from project-based pairings to one-on-one assignments designed to give students even more access to guidance, perspective and feedback from seasoned senior executives.

“Our mission with IBIT is to integrate professional perspectives with academic expertise to create best practice forums and facilitate excellence in IT,” says Sondra Barbour, IT Advisory Board member. “This newly designed mentoring program directly supports that mission. By pairing students with industry experts, we’re providing the opportunity to increase knowledge and connections between students, industry and faculty.”

Mentors have traditionally been members of either the IT Advisory Board or executives of IBIT member firms, and this year was no different: The roster of leaders included George Llado, CIO of Alexion; Chris Cera, the CEO of Arcweb; and Dinesh Desai, the Chairman and CEO of Emtec, Inc.

The pilot program’s three mentees, nominated by faculty and chosen by the Institute, were all MIS majors. Rising senior Michelle Purnama and rising juniors Sophia Spadotto and David Shin were assigned to their mentor based on background and mentor expertise.

“It was a special and unique opportunity,” Purnama says. She was paired with Alexion’s Llado, which she says was ideal given her upcoming internship with the company. Not only did her conversations with Llado and tour of the Alexion office help her prepare for the internship, she says, she found the CIO accessible and easy to talk to. “That made it comfortable for me to ask him questions and ask for advice.”

The mentors, too, enjoyed the experience. “The mentorship program has been a great way to build relationships with young professionals while simultaneously helping them create new building blocks for their careers,” Arcweb’s Cera says. “I plan to continue being a part of the mentorship program moving forward.”

In fact, not only will the new model of IBIT mentorship continue on through upcoming semesters, but the next goal for the program is expanding to include a dozen mentors with anywhere from one to three students each.

Nineteenth Annual IT Awards

The Nineteenth Annual IT Awards were held on Thursday, April 4, 2019 and featured the IT leader Award for Angela Heise, President of the Civil Group, Leidos, Inc, the IT Innovator Award for John Collier, Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Wawa, Inc, and the IT Award for Distinguished Alumni for Himesh Bhise, Chief Executive Officer of Synacor.

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The event also featured awards for students, faculty, and staff:

STUDENT LEADERSHIP AWARD
Cara Evans
IBIT ALEXION SCHOLARSHIP
Andrew Smuszkiewicz
RESEARCHER OF THE YEAR AWARD
Paul Pavlou
IBIT AMERISOURCEBERGEN SCHOLARSHIP
David Saddic
FACULTY LEADERSHIP AWARD
Jeremy Shafer
IBIT EMTEC SCHOLARSHIP
Craig Bach
TEACHER OF THE YEAR AWARD
JaeHwuen Jung
IBIT NBCUNIVERSAL SCHOLARSHIP
Tyler Pobirsky
ADJUNCT OF THE YEAR AWARD
Patrick J. Wasson
IBIT PFIZER SCHOLARSHIP
Vittoria Fani Ciotti
ADMINISTRATIVE LEADERSHIP AWARD
Amanda Barber
IBIT QVC SCHOLARSHIP
Rana Ismaeil
JAMES AND ANDREA STEWART SCHOLARSHIP
Carly Krzywicki
IBIT SCHOLASTIC SCHOLARSHIP
Colleen McFall
RON AND RONDA RIDDELL SCHOLARSHIP
Shannon Horgan
IT ADVISORY BOARD SCHOLARSHIP
Luke Swiatek
YUSUF G. MANDVIWALLA SCHOLARSHIP
Patrick Jurgelewicz
ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Outstanding Officer: Justin Kish
Outstanding Member: Sean Boyer
IT LEADERS SCHOLARSHIP
Ashlin Cheriyan
Mitchell Chudnovsky
Tigue Devine
Jacob Granieri
Ji Sung (Ashley) Han
Aiden Hartey
IT LEADERS SCHOLARSHIP
Nikithar Kumari
Michael Manieri
Jason Mays
Emily Mellon
Quynh Nguyen
Natalie Rojas
  

MIS Professional and Academic Achievement Awards:

SENIOR
Andrea Behler, Cara Evans

JUNIOR
Michelle Purnama, Pham Xuan Bach Hoang

SOPHOMORE
Sophia Alvarez, Madison Collins

FRESHMAN
Kevin Dang, Sean Boyer


Click here for high-resolution downloadable pictures

Students, Executives Connect Through Company Visits

Top-performing Temple University MIS Students got to see the inner workings of two global companies in November. Pharmaceutical distributor AmerisourceBergen in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, and educational publisher Scholastic Inc. in New York City, were the inaugural hosts of the Institute for Business and Information Technology’s (IBIT) Company Visits initiative.

Dale Danilewitz, CIO
Dale Danilewitz, CIO, AmerisourceBergen, addresses Temple Students during site visit

These visits bring together business leaders and students at the sites of IBIT members. For a few hours, students tour offices, learn about projects a company is working on, and talk with employees about their careers.

It was amazing to sit at the same table with high-level executives and hear them speak about their experience. Overall, the site visit allowed me to expand my knowledge about the [healthcare] industry as well as my network said MIS student Anastasia Postolati.

Learning how Scholastic Inc. uses technology in publishing showed how diverse a MIS grad’s career options truly are, said Madison Collins.

The November hosts worked closely with IBIT to design their visits, which are also recruiting opportunities. Only students with excellent academic and professional development experience are invited to participate in Company Visits.

It was an absolute delight and inspiring to host the students. They filled me with hope and optimism for the future as prospective leaders of our communities, our businesses and our domestic economy,” said Dale Danilewitz, AmerisourceBergen CIO. Danilewitz, who sits on IBIT’s IT Advisory Board, also said that the students were inquisitive and informative and displayed an air of confidence and sincere appreciation for the opportunity to meet our company leaders while engaging in productive and thought-provoking conversation. They are welcome back any time.

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