Re: Cayuse vs. InfoEd. . Jessica Soderlind 02 Dec 2008 10:54 EST

Thank you to everyone for the useful feedback.  It was greatly
appreciated!

Thanks again!
Jessica

Jessica Soderlind | Grants and Contracts Manager
The Geneva Foundation
9501 Lakewood Drive, Suite D | Tacoma, WA 98499
T | 253.682.3813
F | 253.383.8874
TheGenevaFoundation.org
Integrity | Teamwork | Innovation | Quality | Superior Customer Service
| Respect for All

-----Original Message-----
From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@hrinet.org] On
Behalf Of Beryline Temples
Sent: Monday, December 01, 2008 1:07 PM
To: xxxxxx@hrinet.org
Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Cayuse vs. InfoEd. .

Jessica,
We have been using Cayuse since September 2007.  Being a PUI with about
$6M in awards annually and 5 staff members, we researched many systems.
We've been an InfoEd customer of SPIN & SMARTS for about 14 years and
used their SPAS stand-alone system until this past year.  It would have
been so comfortable just to continue using their system, BUT, the price
was so out of our reach we couldn't even begin to consider them.  The
same with Click Commerce.  And then our lives changed when we found out
about Cayuse424.  This product has given us everything we needed and
more at a price we could afford!  Our faculty love it!  Our IT people
love it because we're not clogging up the e-mail system with large
proposals!   The support is phenomenal!  There's always someone for us
to talk to whenever we need help and they are always listening to our
thoughts and suggestions.  It has cut down the time it takes to get our
proposals approved tremendously.  If you would like a personal recomm!
 endation from any of our staff or faculty, please give me a call.
Good luck!
Beryline
_________________________
Beryline Temples
Sponsored Programs Administrator
Sponsored Programs Office
University of Central Arkansas
201 Donaghey Avenue
Torreyson Library 324
Conway, AR 72035-0001
phone:  (501) 450-3451
fax:  (501) 450-5339
xxxxxx@uca.edu
http://spo.uca.edu

>>> William Caskey <xxxxxx@SFBR.ORG> 11/26/2008 8:41 AM >>>
Now that the NIH deadlines are over, I have a chance to second the
comments Johnna made below; and I won't re-iterate those. We are using
the hosted solution and have had no access-related issues and the system
has always been responsive. The PIs find proposal development to be
straightforward and intuitive. The interface is so intuitive that little
or no training is necessary. Budget calculations are very easy and we
use the software to develop the budgets for programs that still require
paper submissions. We  are still in the process of fully implementing
the routing/approval functions but the tests have worked well.
Validation of the proposal is also excellent. All warning and errors are
identified and clicking on the warning/error message takes one right to
the field needing attention. We've not had a proposal rejected because
of an error after Cayuse424 has validated the proposal.

Each proposal in the system has a Summary which we use for routing.  We
can enter the information for the non-electronic proposals and scan the
relevant documents (up to 10 can be attached). I've created a Word form
that is completed by the PI containing the additional information we
need for our database and attach that as one of the documents. So, we'll
use the routing system for all proposals; this is the portion we're
still working on. Even during the recent problems at Grants.gov, we
submitted all proposals on time with no problems (except for the delay
in receiving confirmation of receipt by NIH Commons).

Probably the biggest difference between Cayuse424 and InfoEd is that
Cayuse424 focuses on proposal development and submission whereas InfoEd,
as noted by others, offers a modular approach to a rather complete
research administration software system. Cayuse424 does have a data
export feature which allows retrieval of the information for proposals
as an XML data stream. I  can't attest to the support required for
InfoEd but I can say that we have no dedicated IT personnel, not even a
portion of an FTE, for Cayuse424. We simply haven't needed it...Bill

Bill Caskey, PhD
Director, Office of Sponsored Programs
Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research
P.O. Box 760549
San Antonio, TX  78245-0549

Phone:  210.258.9544
Fax:  210.670.3335
E-mail:  xxxxxx@sfbr.org<mailto:xxxxxx@sfbr.org>

Physical Address for express mail:
7620 NW Loop 410
San Antonio, TX  78227-5301

From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@hrinet.org] On
Behalf Of Kincaid, Johnna K
Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 2:28 PM
To: xxxxxx@hrinet.org
Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Cayuse vs. InfoEd. .

I can also vouch for Cayuse on behalf of my institution.  We looked at
several S2S products (including Coeus and InfoEd) and started using
Cayuse424 last March.   It is much easier to use than Coeus and more
affordable than InfoEd.  My staff in Office of Sponsored Projects, the
faculty and their grants administrators are very pleased with Cayuse.
Fast vs. right?  Cayuse does both.  Cayuse is web-based and we're using
the hosted solution.  Technical support at Cayuse is excellent and they
even have a guy who used to be in research administration at a
university so they understand our business.  They are very responsive to
their users.  Cayuse uses the SF424 form set that we're all familiar
with.  When building a proposal Cayuse424 provides auto-fill capability
from institutional and professional profiles that are built one time.
It also flags items in the budget if the auto-fill is overridden which
makes budget review in my office a breeze. Cayuse provides continuous
valida!
 tion of the proposal for errors and warnings so you know when you
submit you have 'zero' errors.  Security is role-based and can be
managed at the personnel level or the proposal level.  I could go on and
on ... If this sounds like a plug for Cayuse then so be it.  We're just
very happy with it (especially with Adobe coming) and I know our
institution is not alone.  Talk to any Cayuse user and you'll hear more
of the same.

Johnna K. Kincaid
Executive Director, Sponsored Projects Administration
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
P.O. Box 20036
Houston, TX 77225-0036
Phone Number:  (713) 500-3094
Fax Number:  (713) 500-0355
E-Mail:  xxxxxx@uth.tmc.edu
________________________________
From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@hrinet.org] On
Behalf Of Greene, Susan A
Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 8:06 AM
To: xxxxxx@hrinet.org
Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Cayuse vs. InfoEd. .

I don't know anything about InfoEd to make a comparison but the same
things Terri mentioned below are true about Cayuse.  It might be helpful
to review case studies or demo movies at this link:
http://www.cayuse.com/insight/case-studies.php

For over a year and a half MUSC has successfully submitted to NIH, AHRQ,
CDC, CDMRP, DOD, NSF, ONR and HHS agencies and are extremely satisfied
with both the intuitive software and the top-notch customer service.
Hope this helps!

Susan A. Greene
MUSC, Research & Sponsored Programs
843-792-2040

From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@hrinet.org] On
Behalf Of Terri Hall
Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2008 5:23 PM
To: xxxxxx@hrinet.org
Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Cayuse vs. InfoEd. .

We've been successfully submitting NIH proposals via InfoEd for over a
year now and are excited about the other federal sponsors to be added
early next year.  We plan on implementing several other modules of the
InfoEd suite to provide cradle-to-grave support for our research
enterprise. I encourage you to contact InfoEd for more information to
decide what'll meet your needs the best. Just deciding on what those
needs actually are is a time-consuming but worthwhile exercise.

Here are some of the benefits we've already noted with infoEd:
1) Our faculty are quite impressed with the electronic routing
2) whenever there's been a problem with a submission, the InfoEd support
staff has promptly responded
3) an interface between our HR system and InfoEd pre-populates much of
the oft-requested information on forms so we needn't re-enter everything
as we have to with Grants.gov applications
4) the InfoEd budget component allows us to inflate salaries in
succeeding years, so e.g., we enter year 1 salaries, select 3%, and
years 2-5 are automatically calculated in seconds

As with any implementation, ours has not been without its bugs, so
expect some delays when they occur and realize you just have to work
through them. One recommendation I'd say is absolutely necessary is to
include experts in your business process as well as technical experts
from your office of information technology, and as many stakeholders as
you can get on your project team. The input from these folks has been
invaluable and we couldn't have made the progress we have without them.

While there may be systems out there that can be up-n-running in hours,
you'll need to decide if your goal is to do it fast or to do it right.
We opted for the latter and have not regretted it.
Terri

Terri M. Hall, CRA
Director, Electronic Research Administration
Office of Research
University of Notre Dame
(574) 631-7378
xxxxxx@nd.edu<mailto:xxxxxx@nd.edu>
Many things in life will catch your eye,
but only a few will catch your heart.  Pursue those.

________________________________
From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@hrinet.org] On
Behalf Of Turner, Don
Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2008 4:43 PM
To: xxxxxx@hrinet.org
Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Cayuse vs. InfoEd. .

Don't forget about Click Commerce in this equation.  They have been very
good partners and, having strong positive attributes and good support.
Cayuse and the crew there are certainly very good partners as well.  You
would be hard pressed to go wrong with either Click Commerce or Cayuse.
Either of those establish a partnership with the customer that is worth
it's weight in gold when crunch time hits and little issues arise that
need to be overcome.  Click is completely configurable too by you, for
your unique flavor and handles routing and approvals and scheduled
automated processes.

Click Commerce has several modules including Grant Submission, IRB,
IACUC, Biohazard, Clinical Trials,etc.  It just depends on what you need
or want at this time...good luck and happy hunting.

________________________________
From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@hrinet.org] On
Behalf Of Charlie Hathaway
Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2008 12:05 PM
To: xxxxxx@hrinet.org
Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Cayuse vs. InfoEd. .
The big difference is size.  Cayuse is primarily a proposal preparation
and submission tool, and I think a very good one.  InfoEd should be
considered if you want to ALSO add on modules to handle other stuff
(tech transfer, human subjects).  so...do you want to buy best of breed
for one or all components?  Or buy a single multi-faceted unit?

I would also ask yourself how much time you want to spend in
implementation (including training).  Our first proposal preparation and
submission using Cayuse was done in less than 12 hours by a PI and dept
administrator who had never seen the system previously or had any
training.  (We did provide some phone assistance but they did it
themselves.)  I do not advise this "method" for most of our users...but
clearly the system is user friendly and intuitive.  I have no experience
using InfoEd.

Charlie

At 12:28 PM 11/20/2008, you wrote:
Hello,

My Foundation is interested in purchasing software to facilitate
grants.gov submissions.  Can anyone provide insight into Cayuse vs.
InfoEd?  I have participated in a webinar hosted by Cayuse and I was
quite impressed.  I dont know too much about InfoEd. I know this has
been a topic on this Listserv in the past but when I searched the
archives I only retrieved hits from 2006.  It is my understanding that
both Cayuse and InfoEd have been updated since then (as well as problems
within grants.gov).

Thank you for your continued support.

~Jessica

Jessica Soderlind | Grants and Contracts Manager

The Geneva Foundation

9501 Lakewood Drive, Suite D | Tacoma, WA 98499

T | 253.682.3813

F | 253.383.8874

TheGenevaFoundation.org

Integrity | Teamwork | Innovation | Quality | Superior Customer Service
| Respect for All

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subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available via
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 Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including
 subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available
 via our web site at http://www.hrinet.org (click on "Listserv Lists")
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 Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including
 subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available
 via our web site at http://www.hrinet.org (click on "Listserv Lists")
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 subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available
 via our web site at http://www.hrinet.org (click on "Listserv Lists")
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