 For IT to be a game changer, we must find a way to make more funds available for innovation, for increased communication, for efficiencies. If IT is going to be a game changer in higher education, we have got to focus on the I and IT information just as much or more than the T. If we dedicated just as much effort as we put into high performance networking, into academic analytics, and understanding learning outcomes, we really will advance the ball with education. For IT to be a real game changer, we need to incorporate collaboration in what we do. I think that whether it's working on business processes and collaborating with people in operational units, whether it's working with faculty and students and building collaborations for really innovating in teaching and learning, or working with librarians or others on campus in developing new kinds of facilities that take advantage of the opportunities afforded by new technologies, collaboration is key. We must get out of the data centers and get into the chair's offices, get into the provost's offices and dean's offices and find out what they need. Two, we have to get out of our habits. We're very comfortable doing the things that we like to do because it's very easy to continue doing what we like to do. We have to get out of the things that we're comfortable with. Third, let's find out what the students are up to and rather than not letting them play, let's get the students access to all the things that they want to do and facilitate their doing what they want to do rather than saying, no, we're going to put a wall up between the official IT departments and the students. And fourth, not only should we collaborate within our own IT departments, we have to collaborate outside of our IT departments, collaborate with other schools and with people in industry and with anybody else who wants to work with us. For IT to be a game changer, we need to move to India. All the big change in higher education and IT are going to come in the emerging economy such as India. We'll see that India will do things like they did with communications. Jumping over the landlines and going right to mobile phones, emerging economies like India will go directly off the campus based models to distributed mobile learning. So if we want to be where the excitement is, let's move to India. If IT is going to be a game changer, we must deal with mobility and the international marketplace. If IT is going to be a game changer, one has to understand the game and the context in which it's played. It's really fundamentally not about IT. It's about the nature of higher education broadly.