Tag: Kivuto

Kivuto Announces Availability of Newest Release of Minitab Statistical Software with Cloud Capabilities

UNF - Information Technology Services - KivutoKivuto, a provider of digital solutions for the education industry, announces the availability of Minitab Statistical Software: Cloud App/Windows Desktop from OnTheHub.  

 The launch of the newest version of Minitab Statistical Software now allows users to make better, faster, and easier data driven decisions anywhere with the power of the cloud. Users can securely access the most powerful statistical software in the market from anywhere – whether working from home or the office – to analyze data and share insights with lightning speed thanks to new cloud capabilities. More than 4,000 colleges and universities worldwide use Minitab software to make teaching and learning statistics easy.

OnTheHub is Kivuto’s open online marketplace for academic discounts on software, eBooks, and other digital resources. A top source of student savings, OnTheHub allows students, faculty, and other academic stakeholders to acquire software at a fraction of retail price and saves schools the cost of licensing that software themselves.

Jeffrey T. Slovin, chief executive officer of Minitab, said. “For nearly 50 years, Minitab has been committed to its roots in the academic community by providing best-in-class statistical software. As this market continues to evolve, Minitab is uniquely positioned to meet the needs of academic institutions. Now, with Minitab available on the cloud, administrators, professors and students alike can access Minitab anywhere, anytime and from any device to support all instructional models.”

“Minitab is the market leader in data analysis and data transformation solutions and is the gold standard solution offered by educational institutions worldwide,” said Mark McKenzie, CEO at Kivuto. “We have been offering Minitab to academic institutions through OnTheHub over 20 years and know the latest version will be well-received by the academic community.

For more information on Minitab Statistical Software for the academic community, visit https://onthehub.com/minitab/.

About Minitab 

For nearly 50 years, Minitab has helped organizations drive cost containment, enhance quality, boost customer satisfaction and increase effectiveness through its proprietary solutions. Thousands of businesses and institutions worldwide use Minitab Statistical Software, Minitab Connect, Salford Predictive Modeler, Minitab Workspace, Minitab Engage, and Quality Trainer to uncover flaws and opportunities in their processes and address them. Minitab Solutions Analytics is Minitab’s proprietary integrated approach to providing software and services that enable organizations to make better decisions that drive business excellence.

About Kivuto 

Kivuto has been transforming the way schools distribute digital resources to students and faculty for more than 20 years. Today, Kivuto streamlines the management and delivery of academic software, eTextbooks, cloud licenses, and all other types of digital resources for educational institutions. For more information, visit https://kivuto.com/.  

Kivuto and Pearson Partner to Offer Open Access to Digital Learning Resources

Kivuto - Manage Users, Software & Licenses On One PlatformKivuto, a leading provider of academic digital resources, has partnered with Pearson, Canada’s leading educational publisher, to open access to digital resources during the current COVID-19 pandemic. At a time when educational institutions, public spaces, and collaborative environments are closing to help combat the spread of COVID-19, individuals will have complimentary access to these important digital learning resources to continue their online learning.

“For several years, Kivuto and Pearson have partnered to enhance the digital learning experience by offering access to curriculum-based K-12 textbooks covering such topics as literacy, math and science via Kivuto’s Texidium platform and eReader,” said Jeff Blacklock, president and COO at Kivuto. “We are now extending these learning resources to teachers, students, and school boards so they can continue to immerse themselves into a truly digital learning environment.”

Starting today, via Kivuto’s Texidium platform, access to more than 70 of the most widely used curriculum-based K-12 textbooks will be available as an open resource for families to access. These resources can be downloaded to a central location where you can manage and learn through an enriched eReader experience.

Open access to these resources will be available until May 30, 2020, and can be accessed at www.pearsoncanada.ca/athome.

Survey: 84% of Education Entities Concerned About Compliance In Distributing Digital Resources

Kivuto, a provider of academic digital resources, recently released the results of its innaugural academic IT survey, exploring the complex challenges being faced today by IT departments within higher educational institutions.

Kivuto, in partnership with University Business, surveyed technology leaders from universities and colleges to get a better understanding of the challenges and complexities of managing and distributing academic digital resources.

The survey findings highlight a number of key challenges. Procedures that vary by department or by product, unintegrated systems, and limited visibility into product adoption and end-user satisfaction rates all add to the burden faced by academic IT management. This burden will continue to grow as more and more software moves to the cloud.

Among the key findings of the survey:

• 86% of respondents said the lack of integration between systems and workflows is the biggest challenge to managing and distributing digital resources.
• 67% of respondents were concerned by their lack of visibility into the rate of digital resource adoption and use at their institutions.
• 84% of respondents are concerned about compliance when it comes to distributing digital resources.

Ryan Peatt, chief product officer at Kivuto, said: “Shadow IT, decentralized licensing and distribution models, in-house systems, and manual workarounds have compounded the challenges that IT departments face when managing digital resources.

“Quite simply, they don’t know what they don’t know. It is not uncommon for an academic institution to have varying models for purchasing and distribution, nor is it uncommon for these processes to live on different campuses or even within different departments, making it impossible to have visibility across all channels in one central place.”

Consolidate, Centralize and Save: Strategic Licensing Approaches for Academic Success

By Ryan Peatt, chief product officer, Kivuto.

Ryan Peatt

Academic institutions face many challenges due to how the ever-changing nature of technology affects the management and distribution of licenses. No longer can schools afford to leverage traditional models to ensure their students, faculty, and staff are equipped with the right technology to succeed. Innovative and scalable new IT solutions must be developed to create the backbone for academic success and greater user experiences. This includes such things as exploring sustainable licensing criteria, centralized funding models, and risk reduction initiatives.

Sustainable Licensing Criteria

Faculty at higher educational institutions need the freedom to choose the tools they use to teach. But when resource procurement is decentralized, there is no visibility into what tools are being ordered, in what quantity, from which vendors, and at what price. This makes it impossible for institutions to optimize their budgets and ensure compliance with all laws, terms, and conditions.

It is crucial for institutions to develop enforceable and sustainable licensing criteria that include clear guidelines around what products their faculty can license, in what quantities, and from which vendors. Organizations can accomplish this by giving faculty more visibility into what resources are available and what terms and conditions they come with; or by establishing a request-and-approval process for faculty wanting to adopt resources their school has not already licensed.

The University of Utah did both, setting up a secure, centralized repository containing all assets available to faculty. Educators have self-serve access to all resources the school has already licensed, and requests for new assets can be submitted directly through the repository and are visible to other users who may need the same resources. By ensuring faculty are aware of what’s available and what’s been requested, and by requiring them to get approval for new resources, the university has established a more efficient and less risky way for educators to select their teaching tools.

Central Funding Models

In an ideal world, all software would be procured and funded centrally at the enterprise level, ensuring that compliance requirements are met, and that the lowest prices are secured. Unfortunately, central funding models can be too rigid for many institutions as they often require that a certain level of demand for a product before any licenses are ordered. This can result in frustrating waits for faculty and students who need resources that aren’t in high demand. Alternatively, these models may result in institutions over-ordering certain products and losing money on unused licenses. So institutions often allow individual departments, or even individual faculty, to handle the procurement of their own resources.

To counter this, Queen’s University explored the option of implementing a cost-recovery plan. Under their model, software would be procured centrally at very high volumes to get the best pricing available. The school could then ‘sell’ licenses to individual end users for far below the equivalent retail price or other volume-license/academic pricing. These chargebacks, combined with the savings the school sees by purchasing in bulk, would save Queen’s a significant amount compared to the cost of ordering licenses on an as-needed basis.

Risk Reduction

Software licensing is complex, and with complexity comes risk. Institutions are responsible for ensuring compliance with all terms and conditions attached to every piece of software they license, from campus-wide essentials to niche products used by a single faculty member. This is already an uphill battle. As vendors transition their products to the cloud, move to time-based delivery models and inflexible clickwrap agreements (which are often updated without notice), software management and distribution will become even more complicated – and riskier.

IT teams need visibility into what software is being purchased, installed, and used at their institutions. They must ensure that the number of licenses installed does not exceed the quantity purchased. All stakeholders should clearly understand all usage rights and restrictions attached to every product they use, and comply with them diligently. Procurement and IT teams need to vet service agreements against their own legal, privacy, accessibility, and computing policies, as well as applicable laws.

Risk reduction must be a core priority in any college or university’s software licensing strategy. Aggregated and centralized management of software licenses can help with this by reducing the overall level of risk to schools through visibility and education.

Kivuto Partners with The Douglas Stewart Company to Expand Reach Into Education

Image result for Kivuto logo

Kivuto, a provider of academic digital resources, announces its partnership with The Douglas Stewart Company, North America’s distributor of educational software and technology products. Together, they will provide a tailored solution for the management and distribution of the Adobe Student License Pack for Higher Education.

Cloud license management and provisioning is a challenge for academic IT departments as it is difficult to actively manage those who have access, the length and amount of access, and the rules around software license use. Kivuto Cloud addresses these challenges, empowering educational institutions to effortlessly deliver both product key license verification and distribution, and named user license distribution for schools where software is required by students, faculty, and staff.

With the release of Adobe’s new VIP Student License Pack for Higher Education, Kivuto and Douglas Stewart will work together to provide a tailored solution for customers and their reseller partners that automates the entire digital supply, while eliminating the complexities tied to licensing individual end users. Douglas Stewart’s global reach and extensive education portfolio of products and services offers Kivuto the opportunity to extend its reach to a vast array of additional educational markets.

Jeff Blacklock, president at Kivuto, said: “Getting solutions into the hands of key individuals within educational institutions is challenging. Kivuto recognizes Douglas Stewart’s strength in the market and the reputation they have built over the past 65 years as an education reseller. We are pleased to have the opportunity to partner with them, adding extended value in the academic IT sector. With this partnership, Kivuto and Douglas Stewart will work together to solve some of the most challenging problems educational IT departments are faced with today.”

Charles Hulan, president at Douglas Stewart, said: “By partnering with Kivuto, we are now able to offer a solution that enables IT within educational institutions to safely, securely, and confidently verify and distribute software and resources to authorized students, faculty, and staff. Kivuto Cloud enables IT departments to have full control over a centralized model that can provide the much-needed adoption and insights that have been missing for so long. Kivuto Cloud will be a great addition to the solutions we offer to our clients.”