Everyone has a role to play in this stage: leaders may focus more on strategic issues while individuals concentrate on personal capabilities and practice. Indicative responsibilities include:
- Reviewing and evaluating progress against goals set - at individual and at organisational level
- Reporting on progress using established reporting structures and procedures as well as informal networks and communities of practice
- Reviewing mechanisms for monitoring and evidencing success - amending and updating these as necessary
- Gathering case studies and examples of best practice sharing ‘what works’ and lessons learned
- Feeding successes into team meetings and staff and student development programmes, inviting those involved to lead sessions
- Establishing and supporting networks and special interest groups - both internal and external, subject specific and themes that are applicable to more than one subject or topic - making use of existing channels where they exist
- Promoting identified reward and recognition schemes to staff and students to encourage participation
- Ensuring development of individual digital capabilities is recognised within individual performance and appraisal mechanisms
- Embedding digital capabilities in HR processes
- Encouraging student-staff partnerships to co-develop digital capabilities
- Taking responsibility for developing own digital capabilities and supporting others to do the same