 We need to feel comfortable that we have as much right to talk about the future of higher education as any other members of the university and college community. And that will be a challenge for us because we often have said, well, we let the policy issues, we let the direction issues play themselves out among those who know best. And then we come in and help them understand how IT can help reach those objectives. I think we must help set the objectives. Data analytics in and of itself is a neutral topic, but when it's applied in an inhumane way, I would argue, without heart, without soul, without putting context around what data analytics may be telling us, it's not only worthless, but in fact it can be harmful. I think data analytics will be inevitable, but what we do with data analytics is incredibly important for the future of the academy. And if we're not there helping to shape and educating people about the appropriate use of data analytics, then again I think we've fallen short of an opportunity and in fact a responsibility. Because demand is so intense, so far reaching, our initial impulse is to leap in and help, but our supply lines risk being stretched too thin. There are not enough of us to go around and we're going to have to be more clever, more thoughtful, more insightful about where to put our resources. Collaboration, it's in every discipline. It's at all levels from elementary to the deepest and furthest reaching experiments. And we are not well positioned, I would argue, as a field based on our historical areas of focus to respond to that breadth and depth of demand. Because of the centrality of IT to all things in our colleges and universities, we are in a very risky business if we fail, if we fall short, if there are system problems of one sort or another, whether they're breaches, whether they are power failures, whether there is a colossal meltdown of software, whatever the case might be. We all know about horror stories. Our institutions can't function the way they must in the 21st century in order to again lay bare the questions that have been hidden by the answers.