Information Systems (IS) Development/ Application Development - Systems Approach
Information Systems (IS) Development/ Application Development - Systems Approach
When the systems approach is applied to the development of an information systems solution to
business problems, it is called information systems development or application development.
Systems Approach
A problem-solving technique that uses a systems orientation to define problems and
opportunities and develop appropriate and feasible solutions. The approach means it is the
method or way of understanding the problem and opportunities and how this problem will be
solved for achieving an organizational goal.
#Two most common Approaches
i. Object-Oriented Analysis and Design
ii. Traditional Method/ Lifecycle
#Analyzing a problem and formulating a solution involves these interrelated activities---
Recognize and define a problem or opportunity using systems thinking
Develop and evaluate alternative system solutions
Select the solution that best meets your requirements
Design the selected system solution
Implement and evaluate the success of the system
System Investigation
The main task involved in the system investigation is "What is the problem", "What are the
different types of opportunities we have existing", "Why should we introduce the new
information system" which means assess the current information system.
The first step in the systems development process.
May involve consideration of proposals generated by a business/IT planning process.
Also includes the preliminary feasibility study of proposed information system solutions.
Feasibility Studies- A preliminary study to determine the information needs of prospective
users, resource requirements, costs, benefits, feasibility.
There are Varieties of Feasibility
o Operational Feasibility- How well the proposed system will support the business
priorities of the organization, solve the identified problem, and fit with the existing
organizational structure.
o Economic Feasibility- An assessment of cost savings, increased revenue, and
decreased investment requirements, increased profits, and cost/benefit analysis.
o Technical Feasibility- Determine the following that can meet the needs of a
proposed system and can be acquired or developed hardware, software, network in
the required time.
o Human Factors Feasibility- Assess the acceptance level of employees, customers,
suppliers, management support, and determine the right people for the various new
or revised roles.
o Legal/Political Feasibility- Assess possible patent or copyright violations, software
licensing for developer side only, governmental restrictions, changes to the existing
reporting structure.
System Analysis
The main task involved in the system investigation is "how to solve this problem".
System analysis can come back to the system investigation.
An in-depth study of end-user information needs
It produces the functional requirements used as the basis for the design of an IS
It typically involves a detailed study of the information needs of a company and end-users
It involves activities, resources, and products of one or more of the information systems
currently being used
The information system capabilities required to meet the information needs of business
stakeholders
o Organizational Analysis- Study of the organization, including management
structure, people, business activities, environmental systems, and current information
systems like input, processing, output, storage, and control.
o Analysis of the Present System- Before designing a new system, it is important to
study the system to be improved or replaced hardware and software, network. People
resources are used to convert data resources into information products. System
activities of input, processing, output, storage, and control.
o Logical Analysis- A logical model is a blueprint of the current system. It displays
what the current system does, without regard to how it does it. It allows an analyst to
understand the processes, functions, and data associated with a system without
getting bogged down with hardware and software.
o Functional Requirements- This step of systems analysis is one of the most
difficult. It determines what type of information each business activity requires. Try
to determine the information processing capabilities required for each system
activity. The goal is to identify what should be done, not how to do it.
o Examples of Functional Requirements
User Interface: Automatic entry of product data and easy-to-use data entry
screens for Web customers
Processing: Fast, automatic calculation of sales totals and shipping costs
Storage: Fast retrieval and update of data from the product, pricing, and
customer databases
Control: Signals for data entry errors and quick e-mail confirmation for
customers
System Design
Systems Design Focuses on Three Areas
User Interface Design- Focuses on supporting the interactions between
end-users and their computer-based applications. Designers concentrate on
the design of attractive and efficient forms of user input and output.
Frequently prototyping process. Produces detailed design specifications for
information products, such as display screens. Example: Screen, Form,
Report, and Dialog Design.
Data Design- Data element structure design
Process Design- Program and procedure design
Develop logical methods of the new system.
o Prototyping- It is the rapid development and testing of working models. An
interactive, iterative process was used during the design phase. Makes development
faster and easier, especially when end-user requirements are hard to define. It has
enlarged the role of business stakeholders.
o Prototyping Life Cycle
Investigation/ Analysis- End users identify their business needs and access
the feasibility of several alternative information system solutions
Analysis/ Design- End-user or IS specialists use application development
tools to interactivity design and test prototypes of information system
components that meet end-user business needs.
Design/ Implementation- The business system prototypes are tested,
evaluate, and modified repeatedly until end users find them acceptable.
Implementation/ Maintenance- The accepted business system can be
modified easily since most system documents are stored on disk.
o Checklist for Corporate Websites- Remember the customer, Aesthetics,
Broadband content, Easy to navigate, Searchability, Incompatibilities, Registration
forms, Dead links.
o System Specifications- Formalizing the design of user interface methods and
products, database structures, processing procedures, and control procedures.
o Examples of System Specifications
User interface specifications: Use personalized screens that welcome
repeat Web customers and that make product recommendations.
Database specifications: Develop databases that use object/relational
database management software to organize access to all customer and
inventory data and multimedia product information
Software specifications: Acquire an e-commerce software engine to
process all e-commerce transactions with fast responses, i.e., retrieve
necessary product data and compute all sales amounts in less than one
second
Hardware and network specifications: Install redundant networked Web
servers and sufficient high-bandwidth telecommunications lines to host the
company e-commerce website
Personnel Specifications: Hire an e-commerce manager and specialists and
a webmaster and Web designer to plan, develop, and manage e-commerce
operations
o End-User Development
IS professionals play a consulting role, while uses do their application
development
A staff of user consultants may be available to help with analysis, design,
and installation
Application package training
Hardware and software advice
Help to gain access to organization databases
System Implementation
System implementation may come back or may return to the design analysis and
investigation phase.
The Systems Implementation Stage involves
Hardware and software acquisition
Software development
Testing of programs and procedures
Conversion of data resources
Conversion alternatives
Education/training of end-users and specialists who will operate the new
system
o Project Management- The skills and knowledge necessary to be a good project
manager will translate into virtually any project environment. The people who have
acquired them are sought after by most organizations.
o What is a Project- Every project has a set of activities with a clear beginning and
end, goals, objectives, tasks, limitations, or constraints, a series of steps or phases.
-Managing a project effectively requires process, tools, techniques.
o Phases of Project Management- There are five phases in most projects
Initiating/Defining
State the problem(s) and/or goal(s)
Identify the objectives
Secure resources
Explore the costs/benefits in the feasibility study
Planning
Identify and sequence activities
Identify the “critical path”
Estimate the time and resources needed for project completion
Write a detailed project plan
Executing
Commit resources to specific tasks
Add additional resources and/or personnel if necessary
Initiate work on the project
Controlling
Establish reporting obligations
Create reporting tools
Compare actual progress with baseline
Initiate control interventions, if necessary
Closing
Install all deliverables
Finalize all obligations and commitments
Meet with stakeholders
Release project resources
Document the project
Issue a final report
o Evaluating Hardware, Software, Services
Establish minimum physical and performance characteristics for all
hardware and software
Formalize these requirements in an RFP/RFQ
Send RFQ to appropriate vendors
Evaluate bids when received all claims must be demonstrated, obtain
recommendations from other users, search independent sources for
evaluations, and benchmark test programs and test data
o What factors you should consider before evaluating hardware?
Major evaluation factors—
Performance
Cost
Reliability
Compatibility
Technology
Ergonomics
Connectivity
Scalability
Software
Support
o Software Evaluation Factors
Hardware evaluation factors apply to software, as do these--
Quality
Efficiency
Flexibility
Security
Connectivity
Maintenance
Documentation
Hardware
o Evaluating IS Services
Developing a company website
Installation or conversion of hardware/software
Employee training
Hardware maintenance
System design and/or integration
Contract programming
Consulting services
o IS Service Evaluation Factors
Performance
Systems development
Maintenance
Conversion
Training
Backup facilities and services
Accessibility to sales and support
Business position and financial strength
Hardware selection and compatibility
Software packages offered
Disadvantages
Takes the most time
Created the most disruption to the organization over
time
o Post-Implementation Activities
The single most costly activity
Correcting errors or faults in the system
Improving system performance
Adapting the system to changes in the operating or
business environment
Requires more programmers than does application
development
May exist for years
System Maintenance
Product improved system.
Use a post-implementation review process to monitor, evaluate, and modify the business
system as needed.
There are Four Basic Categories of System Maintenance
Corrective: Fix bugs and logical errors
Adaptive: Add new functionality
Perfective: Improve performance
Preventive: Reduce chances of failure
o Post-Implementation Review
Ensures that the newly implemented system meets the
established business objectives
Errors must be corrected by the maintenance process
Includes a periodic review/audit of the system as well
as continuous monitoring