Andy Sunderland, Project Manager, PMO

“Emory’s sense of mission, purpose, and commitment to the community resonates with me.” – Andy Sunderland

Andy Sunderland is a new project manager in the Project Management Office. He comes to Emory after a four-year stint as a senior project manager at Cotiviti, a financial service management company in the healthcare industry. He also worked as legislative fellow and intern over a year at the Georgia State Capitol in the Governor’s Office for Children and Families and the Georgia Senate Budget and Evaluation Office.

Born in Los Angeles, CA, but raised in Marietta, GA, Andy earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Kennesaw State University. He is currently pursuing his MBA at Georgia State University.

Andy spends much of his free time with his wife and two-year-old daughter. He loves reading about philosophy and current events. Andy also dabbles in the art of brewing beer at home.

“Emory’s sense of mission, purpose, and commitment to the community resonates with me,” says Andy about his new job. “This unique environment blends both professional and personal aspirations very well, which makes it an exciting place to be.”

You can reach him at andrew [dot] michael [dot] sunderland [at] emory [dot] edu.

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LITS recent headlines and upcoming events

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Recent LITS headlines:

Upcoming LITS events:

(go HERE for more information for each event)

  • March 13 – Event: InfoForum, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm, Jones Room, Woodruff Library
  • March 14 – Event: LEAF Coffee Hour / Pi Day Celebration,  10:30 am – 11:30 am, Jones Room, Woodruff Library
  • March 20 – Event: “Recording Queer ATL: Archives of The American Music Show,” 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm, TLS & Woodruff Commons, Rose Library
  • March 21 – Event: IT Briefing, 10:15 am – noon, 4th Floor Auditorium, NDB
  • March 27 – Event:“All Our Children: A staged reading of Stephen Unwin’s play,” 4:00 pm – 7:15 pm, Jones Room, Woodruff Library
  • April 4Workshop: ZOOM Workshop for the Library, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm, Jones Room, Woodruff Library
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Emory Libraries new approach to web development

As the Library Technology and Digital Strategies Team puts the finishing touches on their rollout of Emory Libraries’ new web site, lead web developer Kristian Serrano delivered a presentation at the InfoForum on how the team is taking new approaches to web development. The following are excerpts from his presentation.

Employing the Principles of Atomic Design

Atomic Design is a concept where developers begin with small building blocks and work upward. This is in dramatic contrast to the top-down approach used in the past, where developers would consider an entire page at the beginning and work downward to discover the elements needed to build the page. In Atomic Design, developers build big things by focusing on building its smaller elements.

By arranging smaller things, such as a search bar, into larger components, such as a web page template, developers are able to more easily make changes to simple elements and have those changes replicate seamlessly throughout the design. This is accomplished by way of a pattern library.

What’s a Pattern Library?

A pattern library is a browsable library of web design components, pre-defined for use as a starting point for front-end development (the development of user interfaces). The great thing about using a programming library in this way is that it allows for rapid development and visual consistency in branding.

Employing a templating engine

LITS developers use Cascade as their content management system (CMS), however the system contains limitations that can be overcome through the use of an external templating engine pattern library. These limitations include render time, slowness of site-wide updates, and platform constraints.

The pattern library is used for development by generating the template files employed by the templating engine. Designed by Lauren Hamel, Emory Libraries’ templating engine allows for fast and flexible updates throughout a website without having to republish the entire site every time a change is made. Basically, the job of development occurs outside of the constraints of the CMS. In this way, the team has far more design flexibility and can employ more modern-looking design while still using Cascade.

If you are interested in reading the principles of Atomic Design, go to the book written by Brad Frost at: http://atomicdesign.bradfrost.com. Brad Frost is also the keynote speaker at this year’s Designing for Digital conference: http://designingfordigital.com/2019-keynotes/.

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Carpool matching at Emory

Carpool matching starts this week. If you are interested, sign up now. The following information comes from Emory’s Transportation Office:

Interested in saving $500+ dollars every year?  Sign-up to look for a carpool match: http://bit.ly/LYC2019.

  • Carpool with just one Emory employee and parking is $28/month for the carpool permit (save over $500 every year).
  • Carpool with two or more Emory employees and parking is FREE (save close to $700 every year).
  • Receive a free 20-swipe parking pass to use on days you may need to drive separately.

Interested but not sure how to find a carpool match?

  • Emory has thousands of employees but we know it’s not easy to find a good match, so we’re here to help!
  • We’ve launched a new platform called Commute Emory to assist with ride-matching.

To get started, please complete the short form herehttp://bit.ly/LYC2019.

If you can questions, contact Jessica Wang at jess [dot] wang [at] emory [dot] edu.

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Michael Luther, Head of Assessment and User Experience, Research, Engagement, and Scholarly Communications

“Emory has dedicated a lot of resources to assessment and user experience. I think there is a lot of potential here.” – Michael Luther

Michael Luther is the head of the newly created assessment and user experience team. He comes to Emory after spending six years as the assessment librarian at Kennesaw State University. He also spent a year as a reference librarian at the Atlanta University Center. Michael also worked as a para-professional in the rare books library at Cornell University.

Born in Concord, NC, Michael earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology from Georgia State University and his master of library and information science degree from Syracuse University.

Michael (whose middle name is Emory!) loves to read and hike. He’s also a guitar player.

“Emory has dedicated a lot of resources to assessment and user experience,” says Michael. “I think there is a lot of potential here.”

You can reach him at michael [dot] emory [dot] luther [at] emory [dot] edu.

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LITS recent headlines and upcoming events

Headlines & Events graphic banner


Recent LITS headlines:

Upcoming LITS events:

(go HERE for more information for each event)

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Ellis discusses “Culture and Cloud” at the February InfoForum

Photo of John Ellis

John Ellis, Deputy CIO, Enterprise Applications, Services, & Infrastructure

“I’ve been thinking about our cloud transformation,” says LITS Deputy CIO John Ellis, presenting to a large audience of Emory Library employees during this week’s InfoForum, “and I wanted to have a discussion with you.”

Change is coming

The planned transition of Emory from locally-based storage and infrastructure to a cloud-based approach is a significant change in the way the organization operates.

The catch is that organizations like Emory are resistant to change. Ellis pointed out that according to Gartner Research, 46% of survey respondents say that culture is the biggest barrier to making this digital transformation.

However, it appears this change is inevitable. Industry trends researched by Gartner state that by 2022, cloud services will be essential for 90% of business innovation. By 2025, 80% of enterprises will have shut down their traditional data centers.

As a result of this change, organizations must alter their model for responsibility. By contracting with Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon becomes responsible for infrastructure, storage, networking. The organization (Emory) now must focus the entirety of its responsibility on the data itself, especially regarding data security.

States Ellis, “It will take different types of skill sets to manage this data. The skill sets we used to need to maintain our infrastructure are mostly going away.”

New approaches to leadership and employee contributions

The challenge then becomes for leaders to govern differently and individuals to contribute differently.

According to Ellis, leaders must quit trying to suppress under-the-radar IT efforts and instead let the business needs lead the effort. In this way, leaders should have a mindset of partnering and supporting these efforts.

Individual contributors should work harder to eliminate silos and unique practices and instead adopt more common practices, more automation, and team structures that are more agile.

How do we get there? How do we encourage change?

Typically, a project of this magnitude would need to be undertaken after a lengthy planning process. Ellis espouses that it is more important to simply start the process in small increments, always be agile, and take a posture of action over analysis.

“These are iterative hacks to our culture that we can make one small piece at a time.” Ellis encourages his people to take risks and to not let perfection get in the way of progress. In other words, don’t waste time over-analyzing things. Just move forward.

Ellis’ hope is that by preaching this mantra to his managers, this different way of thinking about work will trickle into the teams doing the work.

Amazon leadership principles

Ellis believes Emory should borrow some of the principles that Amazon uses for its own business practices. The two elements that most interest him are Bias for Action and Disagree and Commit.

Bias for Action states that speed matters in business and that decisions and actions that are easily reversible do not need extensive study. Amazon places value on calculated risk taking. Ellis believes that we slow our speed by getting leadership involved in two-way decisions. “Just make the decision and move on,” says Ellis. If the decision doesn’t work out, go in the other direction.

Disagree and Commit suggests that leaders are obligated to respectfully challenge decisions when they disagree with them. Leaders should have conviction, tenacity, and never compromise for the sake of social cohesion. With that understanding, however, once the decision is made, leaders must commit wholly. They must not undermine the effort behind the scenes.

“It takes time to makes these changes but they are not rocket science. Successful organizations all over are adopting these practices. We just have to start,” says Ellis. “If we stop doing some [of our old practices] and start doing some of these new things, I think it will come to us.”

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