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Policy Administration for the Digital Age

Posted By Jennifer Gallagher, Utah Valley University, Monday, December 17, 2018

Using Technology and Automation to Augment Your Policy Process

When I was an editing student in college, an older professor asked me to proofread a nonfiction book he had authored and get it ready for publication. He emailed me his files and a letter from his publisher that outlined their style guide, and mentioned that the publisher had rejected the files in their current state because of “formatting incompatibilities.” I didn’t know just what they meant until I attempted to format the document myself and noticed a host of bizarre issues: certain passages were locked, fonts and margins were inconsistent from page to page, and some paragraphs had collapsed entirely upon themselves into a single jumbled line of incomprehensible text. The most frustrating part was the more I attempted to fix the formatting through the normal Word interface, the more issues and problems it would introduce.  

So how does this apply to what we do in policy and the vastly unique roles of our individual policy offices? Little did I know (but would quickly learn), that underneath the text we see on a digital screen is an extensive web of coded language that instructs the program how to respond to a user’s inputted action (keystroke, voice, touch, etc.). This code can act in unwanted ways when a user inadvertently introduces invisible instructions to the program (usually through formatting marks, bookmarks, styles, etc.). In the case of my professor, he had unknowingly used some formatting options that had left invisible, residual coded marks after the original text was deleted in earlier drafts. By exposing these marks through advanced formatting options in Word and then eliminating them through the outline view, I was able to fix the coding issues. This was the moment I learned that Word is so much more than a word processor; that it, and other Microsoft Office products (Excel, Publisher, OneNote, OneDrive, etc.), contain a pre-coded network of untapped potential for application, productivity, and automation solutions that most casual users never know is even there. And with a little instruction, these and other programs that we already use can be customized and applied in individualized ways to solve the unique demands of our offices.

For example, my position in my university’s Policy Office involves editing policy drafts and completing research for policy writers. These writers, while incredibly intelligent subject-matter experts in their field, come with varying levels of technological proficiency. When I first started, I would email out our university’s template files for policy drafts, summaries, comments, etc. to writers, and what I would get back would sometimes be barely recognizable as our own template. A lot of my time was spent fixing accidental formatting errors caused by inexperienced users, multiple authors/drafts, or general human error: fixing fonts, sizes, and margins; moving stray lines and logos back where they belong; and just generally enforcing our university’s style guide (e.g., fixing section numbers, alphabetizing). All manual, repetitive, and tedious—but necessary—tasks.

Through a little Googling and dabbling in some of the advanced capabilities and developer options of Word (VBA), I was able to create a template that does not allow a writer to do anything I don’t want them to and automates the stuff I don’t want to do. The design is locked down. The styles, locked. The numbering and alphabetizing is all automated and customized to our style guide. They cannot misnumber a section; my template won’t let them. They cannot move, alter, erase, or change anything other than the sections they need to. And that was just template version 1. Using that template, I am currently creating a custom UserForm app (all through Microsoft Word using its existing features as intended) that will automate all the templates that we use in our office. Upon completion, a writer will be able to simply fill in the UserForm fields and submit, and the template will be generated and auto-populate with their answers.

The above is just one example out of the countless customizable solutions that anyone can create with just a little advanced insight and know-how. By understanding and harnessing the full capabilities of these programs, advanced users easily automate repetitive tasks, eliminate user error, increase efficiency and productivity, seamlessly enforce institutional standards and styles, and create better, cleaner documents and spreadsheets that enhance their policy and research processes.

The purpose of this post then is to gauge interest for a reoccurring segment on the Policy Matters blog (alongside its other fabulous editorial content) that that will educate interested ACUPA members on different ways they can optimize their own policy process by creating simple solutions customized to the unique needs of their office. This segment would consist of short, beginner-friendly tricks and tips for utilizing the popular office programs that we already own and use to their full potential, tailored to a policy administration environment.

Now, I’d like to hear from you. Do you think this information might be helpful or applicable in you and your office’s functions and roles? What unique administrative challenges do you face that you would like to find solutions for (anything, seriously!). Is there anything else in particular you would like this segment to cover?

Tags:  How-to  Jennifer Gallagher  Policy Tech  Productivity 

Permalink | Comments (14)
 

Comments on this post...

Brenda van Gelder, Virginia Tech says...
Posted Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Excellent article, Jennifer. We use Sharepoint to vet our policies amongst mutliple stakeholders, and I am still struggling to figure out the complex coding that exists within those documents. In the past, I used Google docs, and I learned that I could force reviewers to make edits as 'suggestions' so that I could actually see what they changed; the default was 'edit' mode, in which their changes would be immediately accepted and I had no way to see what their input had been! So I agree that understanding the functions of these various platforms is extremely useful and important.
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Jessica Teets CCEP, Purdue University says...
Posted Tuesday, December 18, 2018
I'd love to hear more tips on locking down Word templates!
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Karl Voigt, Northeastern Illinois University says...
Posted Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Thank you for taking time to write about this. We also contend with similar template issues and have decided to withhold use of the template until the content has worked its way through the University's initial review process. That said, I would certainly be interested in learning more about building a template as you outline in your post.
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Tim Willette, University of California-Riverside says...
Posted Tuesday, December 18, 2018
"The purpose of this post then is to gauge interest for a reoccurring segment on the Policy Matters blog (alongside its other fabulous editorial content) that that will educate interested ACUPA members on different ways they can optimize their own policy process by creating simple solutions customized to the unique needs of their office."
Jennifer, your post is timely and helpful. For my part, I have a keen and an on-going interest in what my colleagues are doing in developing and implementing solutions that meet their own unique set of administrative challenges.
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Rachel Burlage, University of North Texas System says...
Posted Tuesday, December 18, 2018
I had no idea I could lock things down the way you have in Word! Your description of receiving back documents that are barely recognizable as your template is very familiar. I'm going to see what sort of Lynda classes we have for advanced Word options right now. I'd love to see more content like this. Thank you very much!
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Robert Schur, Colorado State University says...
Posted Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Very interesting post, thank you Jennifer! We are currently debating whether to purchase a vended solution for the policy office that would include the routing, review and comment process; it would lock things down in the way you've done as a homegrown solution. I would love to hear more on the question of what third-party solutions ACUPA members are using and what they like or don't like about them.
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Bonnie Leigh Reifsteck, University of New Mexico says...
Posted Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Thank you, Jennifer! I would be very interested in hearing more of your tips on a regular basis, especially within Word.
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Teresa Raetz, Georgia Gwinnett College says...
Posted Wednesday, December 19, 2018
I'm interested in knowing more.
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Barbara Lechtanski, University of Washington says...
Posted Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Thank you, Jennifer. We are in the process of creating templates and criteria. This post is extremely helpful. We encounter drafts coming at us in all forms and are working on making efficient templates for our users in order to cut down work on both sides. Looking forward to future posts!
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Jill Taylor, University of Colorado says...
Posted Thursday, December 20, 2018
I would be very interested in an ongoing process to share tips and tricks with WORD. Specifically, a focus on the "coding" back-end part of word, how to create userforms, etc. Thank You Jennifer for this interesting article.
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Ryan Landry, Louisiana State University says...
Posted Monday, January 7, 2019
What an excellent post! An enthusiastic "YES" to more sharing of info and ideas! We are smack dab in the middle of this right now and facing all the same issues. Thanks so much for this article!
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Deborah Bartlett, Washington State University says...
Posted Wednesday, January 23, 2019
Thank you, Jennifer! We often run into issues during the process of converting our Word source documents into WordPress for publication in our online administrative manuals. I'd love to see more of your tips and tricks for managing the behind the scenes features of Word. Perhaps you'd be interested in doing a webinar or session at one of the conferences?
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Leslie Erwin, Owens Community College says...
Posted Thursday, January 24, 2019
Yes! Any ideas, tips, tricks, etc. to help out this office of one would be much appreciated!
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Traci Ellington, Arkansas State University says...
Posted Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Very interested in the ideas and yes! i'd love to hear more.
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