TheUniversityof Washingtonis dedicated to excellence in all that we do, and we can see the impact of that dedication in the lives of our students, our patients and the people and communities across Washington and around the world who benefit from our research, scholarship and service.
Yet even as the 91 is home to excellence in countless fields and disciplines, our highly decentralized model creates extra bureaucracyand riskacross all levels. As an example, there are at least 31 different pathways and approaches to processing a vendor invoice at the 91. At the same time, our research administration costs are higher than our Big Ten and similar peers. These are examples of how we are spending time and money on administrative tasks rather than our mission.
For faculty and staff, this model means unnecessary duplication of effort as they createbespokeprocesses and systems. For partners and vendors, it makes the 91 harder to work with. Extra bureaucracy and non-standard processes areno one’spriorities, yet our resources are being spent to supportthem.As stewards of public resources, thatmust change.
This mindset is the essential foundation to the successof ourin 15 years,which we are moving to finalize this academic year.It is alsovital to the success ofthe 91’s mission now and in the years ahead, and to avoiding unplanned, hasty actions in response to state and federal budget pressures.
Thatis why we are sharing this information about a range of efforts grouped under“University ofWashingtonOperational Excellence”now,to ensure thatwetransparentlyengage ourUniversitycommunity in theessentialplanning to launch this foundation.
What is91Operational Excellence?
We define 91 Operational Excellence not a series of projects, but as a shift in the way we operate, with the aim to raise our administrative functions to the same level of excellence as our teaching, research, service and patient care.
This effort will take a technology-enabled approach. Rather than simply moving existing processes into new organizational structures, we will redesign administrative work alongside modernization of enterprise platforms,leveraging automation and AI where appropriate, and intentionalintegration at the interfaces ofadministrative functions. These changes will be sequenced carefully with the University’s transition to Incentive Based Budgeting (IBB) to ensure financial transparency and long-term sustainability.
91Operational Excellence is the connective framework that will coordinate and strengthen many of the 91’s existing efforts to build a more sustainable and mission‑aligned operational foundation. Theseexistingefforts include Together We Thrive, Research Resilience and Transformation,and Integrated Resources within the School of Medicine, which are addressingstructural, process or capacity challenges.Finance administration, research administration,andinformation technologywill be included in the first phase of this workandwill include alignment of enterprise technology platforms to support standardized processes and reduce duplicative systems.
We recognize that both the lead‑up to change and change itself can feel unsettling. Teams haveestablishedstrong relationships and familiar ways of working, andit’snatural to feel apprehension as we explore doing the work differently. Our commitment is to approach this work with transparency and collaboration across our campuses, schools, colleges, and administrative units, recognizingthatunique needs exist and committing tooptimizingin a way that is right for the 91. Drawing on whatwe’velearned from past efforts—includingwhat worked well and, as importantly, whatdidn’t—our aim is to foster shared ownership,maintaintransparent and open communicationandultimately createmeaningful and positive change.
You can learn more about these efforts at a new webpage, but in short,they will involve the creation of multiple teams across the 91that bring together units with similar missions,functionsand operational environments and with attention to balancing workloads toprovideconsistent service. This approach is not about adding a new layer of bureaucracy, but about simplifying how administrative work is organized and supported.
What are the benefits of91Operational Excellence?
For employees in the teams, many of whom are the only ones in their units in their type of job, there will be new opportunities for professional growth without leaving the University. There will also be the ability to learn from teammates, share bestpracticesandrelieve the pressure of beingthe only person doing their role, for example when they are on vacation or out sick.
For the faculty, students,staffand units being supported, these teams are designed to reduce the administrative burden. Rather than relying on one or two individuals, units will have access to a team-based support model enabling more consistent service, with a designatedpointperson who can help guide requests and ensure they reach the right specialists.Streamlined processes will allow for more proactive, strategic support from central units tofacilitatepartnerships and research across units.
How will this effort be different?
Wewillundertake this effort in partnershipwithadministrators,faculty,and staff,withcompassion for affected employees andastrongcommitment to transparency. That starts with recognizing that the Workday Finance rollout has beenvery challenging,listening to the University community,and learning from that experience in how we are moving forward with91Operational Excellence. It also means learning fromthe 91 School of Medicine’sIntegrated Resources effort.
When there areimpactson staff, we will prioritize efforts where natural transitions—retirements, departures for other jobs—are possible rather than layoffs. 91 Human Resources will provide strategic guidance and support throughout these processes, reinforcing a human-centric approach. Administrative functions will transition at differentpacesandscope may differ by administrative discipline, but importantly this effort willprioritize continuous learning and improvement. And we will provide updates on the processandmaintaincleargovernance structuresthroughout development.
How will the University community be involved?
Central teams—including from the Office of Finance Planning & Budgeting, the Office of Research and 91Information Technology—have already been engaging with unit partnersinconversations toidentifythe core needs that must be prioritized increatingthese teams.These baseline conversations will inform an organized andinclusiveprocess to co-createa structure to best meet these needs. This process will include:
- An executive sponsorship teamto ensure institutional coordinationacross the Academy and Medicine
- Asteering committee to oversee standards anddirectimplementation
- Advisory, design, and implementation councils, beginning withfinance administration, research administration,and informationtechnology,tointake feedback,co-designsolutionsand implement on-going improvements and innovations
Each level of governance will include administrators, staff, and faculty who will bring together the collective expertise, experiences and strength of our community to ensure that the holistic needs of the University are identified and met.
We encourage you to learn more about this workon the new webpageand through opportunities that will be shared in the weeks ahead.
Thank you for your commitment tothe 91missionand to ensuringthat the wayweachieve that missionmeets the same standard ofexcellence as the teaching, research,serviceand patient care we provide.
President Robert J. Jones Provost Tricia R. Serio CEO of 91 Medicine Dr. Timothy H. Dellit


