Note 3
Note 3
● Role of IT in an organization
1. IT and Information Processing
2. Effect of Technological change
2
Introduction
3
• In the early decade (1950s and '60s), “elecsystems” could
be afforded by only the largest organizations. They were
used to record and store bookkeeping data such as journal
entries, specialized journals.
• “were used to generate a limited range of predefined
reports, including income statements, balance sheets and
sales reports. They were trying to perform a decision
making support role, but they were not up to the task”.
4
Role of IT in an organization
IT role for a modern organization is based on 3
classification that fundamentally influence its efficiency
and effectiveness :
– the basic role,
– the informational role
– the managing process role
5
Role of IT in an organization
NT
MANAGEME
TOP managing process role
MIDDLE MANAGEMENT
informational role
LOWER MANAGEMENT
basic role
6
Role of IT in an organization
7
IT as a Solution to
Environmental Change
8
Huber (1990)
referred role of IT as a
● devices that transmit, manipulate, analyze, or
exploit information;
a) in which a digital computer processes information
integral to the user's communication or decision
task; and
b) that have made their appearance since 1970 or
exist in a form that aids in communication or
decision tasks to a significantly greater degree than
did pre-1971 forms.
9
IT and New Organizational Structures
of Interdependence
• Benjamin and Levinson (1993) emphasized that for
IT-based change to be effective, technology, business
processes, and organization need to be adapted to
each other.
• Comparing the present information revolution with
the Industrial Revolution, Malone and Rockart (1993)
indicated that the latest changes in IT would lead to
the evolution of new technology-intensive
organizational structures.
10
Role of IT in organization
11
Role of IT in organization
12
6 Elements of
a computer system
13
6 Elements of a computer system
18
4 Components of
Information Processing System
19
Input
• In information processing, input refers to either
information received or the process of receiving it.
• In human-computer interaction, input is the
information produced by the user with the purpose of
controlling the computer program.
• The user interface determines what kinds of input the
program accepts (eg. control strings or text typed with
keyboard and mouse clicks).
20
Processor
• Processor, (Central Processing Unit) is the
component in a digital computer that interprets
instructions and processes data contained in
computer programs
21
Storage
• Computer devices designed for information storage and
retrieval.
– Computer storage
– Hard drive
– Computer memory
• Collections of stored information:
– Archive — a collection of records
– Books
– Memory stores the record of experience
22
Output
• Output is information produced by the computer
program and perceived by the user.
• User Interface of the program define the kinds of
output the program produces, and the kinds of input
the program accepts.
• Output tends to refer specifically to explicit output,
something that is intentionally provided for the user.
• The whole process known as human-computer
interaction
23
How is data processed
into information?
Data Information
* 3 stages involved…
24
How is data processed
into information?
Data
Input Process Output
Document
Stored Data
26
The effects of
technological change
• Technophobia
• Cyberphobia
• Computer anxiety
• Technostress
Technophobia, Cyberphobia,
computer anxiety & Technostress
28
• The research of Rosen and Weil (2000) in the USA has
explored human reactions to the introduction of
additional technologies into the home and the
workplace in recent years.
• They studied the responses of clerical and support staff,
managers and executives in businesses across the USA
and found that, although there are people who are
genuinely excited by new technology and enjoy using it,
there are a substantial number who are resistant to
technology.
29
• Human fears of technology may emerge because its
introduction, or increase in use, appears to threaten
the status quo.
• That could be a change in the routine at work that
was happily undertaken for the past 20 years, or the
fear of being left behind, or replaced by others who
have the relevant technology skills.
30
• Change generally can bring both uncertainty and
discomfort into our lives (Burton, 1992). It may
provoke strong emotional reactions in people
ranging from the confusion, fear and stress (Cooper,
1998) often associated with loss and bereavement.
• “The equivalent of a bereavement (sadness) … might
be … the introduction of a computer system using
the World Wide Web” (Whetherley, 1998).
31
Resistance in the workplace
33
Physical changes
34
Physical changes
• Although barriers and filters have been introduced to
minimize the glare of VDUs, library staff often stand
looking at PC screens for long periods.
• Carpal tunnel syndrome is a problem which, resulting
from repetitive motions such as using a keyboard,
can lead to numbness or tingling in the hands (Quinn,
1995) and was reported recently by respondents in a
study of university library support staff (Jones, 1999).
35
Fear of the unknown
36
Fear of the unknown
37
Reduced the opportunity
39
Attitudes of library staff
to technological change
• A study carried out in 1989 investigated the
impact of IT on staff deployment in UK public
libraries and found that the introduction of IT
had been a positive experience in general,
although some staff had found it to be an initial
barrier.
40
Training and
technological change
41
References
Drucker, P.F., "Playing in the Information-based 'Orchestra'," Wall Street Journal,
(June 4, 1985).
Huber, G.P., "A Theory of the Effects of Advanced Information Technologies on
Organizational Design, Intelligence, and Decision Making," Academy of Management
Review, 15 (1990), 47-71.
Benjamin, R. & Levinson, E., "A Framework for Managing IT- Enabled Change," Sloan
Management Review, (Summer 1993), 23- 33.
Malone, T.W. & Rockart, J.F., "How Will Information Technology Reshape
Organizations?: Computers as Coordination Technology," in S.P. Bradley, J.A.
Hausman and R.L. Nolan (Eds.), Globalization, Technology, and Competition: The
Fusion of Computers and Telecommunications in the 1990s, Harvard Business School
Press, Boston, 1993, 37-55.
42
THANK YOU
SEE YOU NEXT WEEK, FOLKS!