Stichting Studielink Opens Management Information for Colleges and Universities through Qlikview Portal
Customer Company Size
Large Corporate
Region
- Europe
Product
- QlikView Business Discovery
- QlikView management information portal
- TIG web-based portal
Tech Stack
- QlikView
- SaaS
- CSV files
- MS Excel
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Productivity Improvements
- Cost Savings
Technology Category
- Platform as a Service (PaaS) - Data Management Platforms
Applicable Industries
- Education
Use Cases
- Predictive Quality Analytics
- Supply Chain Visibility
Services
- Cloud Planning, Design & Implementation Services
- Data Science Services
About The Customer
Stichting Studielink is a joint venture between colleges and universities, the Dutch Ministry of Education, Cultural Affairs and Science, the HBO-Raad (Netherlands Association of Universities of Applied Sciences), VSNU (Association of Universities in the Netherlands) and DUO (Education Executive Agency), intended to promote collaboration and renewal in higher education in terms of administration and information. The changes in the form and content of education, in students’ approaches to their studies and in regulations from the government all demand ongoing innovation within higher education. Studielink encourages this innovation through collaboration and standardization, all the while preserving the autonomy of the individual institutions. An example of promoting collaboration through innovation is the standardization of the registration process for higher education students, involving some 650,000 registrations annually.
The Challenge
Stichting Studielink, a joint venture between colleges and universities, the Dutch Ministry of Education, Cultural Affairs and Science, the HBO-Raad (Netherlands Association of Universities of Applied Sciences), VSNU (Association of Universities in the Netherlands) and DUO (Education Executive Agency), was faced with the challenge of introducing a management information platform for the sector-wide registration process for colleges and universities. The changes in the form and content of education, in students’ approaches to their studies and in regulations from the government all demanded ongoing innovation within higher education. Studielink encourages this innovation through collaboration and standardization, all the while preserving the autonomy of the individual institutions. An example of promoting collaboration through innovation is the standardization of the registration process for higher education students, involving some 650,000 registrations annually.
The Solution
Stichting Studielink chose QlikView Business Discovery for the implementation of a dashboard, analysis and reporting solution for management information. The QlikView application is offered as SaaS in a portal, and is used by around 350 employees of colleges, universities, the HBO-Raad, VSNU and DUO. The QlikView management information portal comprises a variety of dashboard and analytical screens and is intended for Board of Directors members, policy assistants, analysts and IT departments from all HBO (higher professional education) and WO (academic higher education) institutions, the VSNU and HBO-Raad. Alongside the extensive knowledge that QlikView provides, TIG has also made a state-of-the-art web-based portal available for distribution of the apps. The application is offered as SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) to all organizations with an interest in this guiding information and who use it for Business Discovery.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
IoT platform Enables Safety Solutions for U.S. School Districts
Designed to alert drivers when schoolchildren are present, especially in low-visibility conditions, school-zone flasher signals are typically updated manually at each school. The switching is based on the school calendar and manually changed when an unexpected early dismissal occurs, as in the case of a weather-event altering the normal schedule. The process to reprogram the flashers requires a significant effort by school district personnel to implement due to the large number of warning flashers installed across an entire school district.
Case Study
Revolutionizing Medical Training in India: GSL Smart Lab and the LAP Mentor
The GSL SMART Lab, a collective effort of the GSL College of Medicine and the GSL College of Nursing and Health Science, was facing a challenge in providing superior training to healthcare professionals. As clinical medicine was becoming more focused on patient safety and quality of care, the need for medical simulation to bridge the educational gap between the classroom and the clinical environment was becoming increasingly apparent. Dr. Sandeep Ganni, the director of the GSL SMART Lab, envisioned a world-class surgical and medical training center where physicians and healthcare professionals could learn skills through simulation training. He was looking for different simulators for different specialties to provide both basic and advanced simulation training. For laparoscopic surgery, he was interested in a high fidelity simulator that could provide basic surgical and suturing skills training for international accreditation as well as specific hands-on training in complex laparoscopic procedures for practicing physicians in India.
Case Study
Implementing Robotic Surgery Training Simulator for Enhanced Surgical Proficiency
Fundacio Puigvert, a leading European medical center specializing in Urology, Nephrology, and Andrology, faced a significant challenge in training its surgical residents. The institution recognized the need for a more standardized and comprehensive training curriculum, particularly in the area of robotic surgery. The challenge was underscored by two independent studies showing that less than 5% of residents in Italian and German residency programs could perform major or complex procedures by the end of their residency. The institution sought to establish a virtual reality simulation lab that would include endourological, laparoscopic, and robotic platforms. However, they needed a simulator that could replicate both the hardware and software of the robotic Da Vinci console used in the operating room, without being connected to the actual physical console. They also required a system that could provide both basic and advanced simulation training, and a metrics system to assess the proficiency of the trainees before they performed surgical procedures in the operating theater.
Case Study
Edinburgh Napier University streamlines long-distance learning with Cisco WebEX
• Geographically dispersed campus made in-person meetings costly and inconvenient.• Distance-learning programs in Malaysia, India, and China required dependable, user-friendly online tools to maximize interaction in collaborative workspaces.• Virtual learning environment required a separate sign-in process, resulting in a significant administrative burden for IT staff and limited adoption of collaboration technology.
Case Study
8x increased productivity with VKS
Before VKS, a teacher would spend a lot of time showing a group of 22 students how to build a set of stairs within a semester of 120 hours. Along with not leaving the teacher much time to provide one-on-one support for each student to properly learn carpentry, it also left a considerable amount of room for error. Key information would be misinterpreted or lost as the class was taught in the typical show-and-tell way.
Case Study
Scalable IoT Empowering GreenFlex's Sustainable Growth
GreenFlex, a company that supports sustainable development, decarbonization, and energy efficiency, faced several challenges in its quest to expand its business. The company needed to deploy a robust and sustainable IoT technology to support its growth. It was crucial for them to monitor and control devices at customer sites in a safe and reliable manner. They also needed to integrate devices across a range of communication protocols and gather and act on data to meet efficiency targets. GreenFlex had previously built IoT capabilities into its digital platform, GreenFlexIQ, to monitor and manage customer sites remotely. However, they soon realized that they needed a new platform to support their ambitions. They needed a platform that could scale to connect more devices for production management and make it easier for the operations team to manage devices in the field.