Ackoff ManagementMisinformationSystems 1967
Ackoff ManagementMisinformationSystems 1967
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Science
RUSSELL L. ACKOFF
University of Pennsylvania
Most MIS's are designed on the assumption that the critical deficiency under
which most managers operate is the lack of relevant information. I do not deny
that most managers lack a good deal of information that they should have, but
I do deny that this is the most important informational deficiency from which
they suffer. It seems to me that they suffer more from an over abundance of
irrelevant information.
was in one of its four versions: 100%, 67%, 33 %, or abstract. Each version of
each article was read by two students. All were given the same examinations.
The average scores on the examinations were then compared.
For the above-average articles there was no significant difference between
average test scores for the 100%, 67%, and 33 % versions, but there was a
significant decrease in average test scores for those who had read only the
abstract. For the below-average articles there was no difference in average test
scores among those who had read the 100 %, 67 %, and 33 % versions, but there
was a significant increase in average test scores of those who had read only the
abstract.
The sample used was obviously too small for general conclusions but the
results strongly indicate the extent to which even good writing can be condensed
without loss of information. I refrain from drawing the obvious conclusion
about bad writing.
It seems clear that condensation as well as filtration, performed mechanically
or otherwise, should be an essential part of an MIS, and that such a system
should be capable of handling much, if not all, of the unsolicited as well as
solicited information that a manager receives.
customers' perception of the amount of time lost by stoppong for service. The
relevance of all but a few of the variables used by the market researchers could
be explained by their effect on such perception.
The moral is simple: one cannot specify what information is required for
decision making until an explanatory model of the decision process and the
system involved has been constructed and tested. Information systems are
subsystems of control systems. They cannot be designed adequately without
taking control in account. Furthermore, whatever else regression analyses can
yield, they cannot yield understanding and explanation of phenomena. They
describe and, at best, predict.
One characteristic of most MIS's which I have seen is that they provide
managers with better current information about what other managers and their
departments and divisions are doing. Underlying this provision is the belief
that better interdepartmental communication enables managers to coordinate
their decisions more effectively and hence improves the organization's overall
performance. Not only is this not necessarily so, but it seldom is so. One would
hardly expect two competing companies to become more cooperative because
the information each acquires about the other is improved. This analogy is not
as far fetched as one might first suppose. For example, consider the following
very much simplified version of a situation I once ran into. The simplification of
the case does not affect any of its essential characteristics.
A department store has two "line" operations: buying and selling. Each
function is performed by a separate department. The Purchasing Department
primarily controls one variable: how much of each item is bought. The Merchan-
dising Department controls the price at which it is sold. Typically, the measure
of performance applied to the Purchasing Department was the turnover rate
of inventory. The measure applied to the Merchandising Department was gross
sales; this department sought to maximize the number of items sold times
their price.
Now by examining a single item let us consider what happens in this system.
The merchandising manager, using his knowledge of competition and con-
sumption, set a price which he judged would maximize gross sales. In doing so
he utilized price-demand curves for each type of item. For each price the curves
show the expected sales and values on an upper and lower confidence band as
well. (See Figure 1.) When instructing the Purchasing Department how many
items to make available, the merchandising manager quite naturally used the
value on the upper confidence curve. This minimized the chances of his running
short which, if it occurred, would hurt his performance. It also maximized the
chances of being over-stocked but this was not his concern, only the purchasing
manager's. Say, therefore, that the merchandising manager initially selected
price P1 and requested that amount Q, be made available by the Purchasing
Department.
In this company the purchasing manager also had access to the price-demand
curves. He knew the merchandising manager always ordered optimistically.
o \\I
E Q2 --u-\
03 0 1
I E~SS4IM IC
Pt P2 P3
PRICE
Therefore, using the same curve he read over from Qi to the upper limit and
down to the expected value from which he obtained Q2, the quantity he actually
intended to make available. He did not intend to pay for the merchandising
manager's optimism. If merchandising ran out of stock, it was not his worry.
Now the merchandising manager was informed about what the purchasing
manager had done so he adjusted his price to P2. The purchasing manager in
turn was told that the merchandising manager had made this readjustment so
he planned to make only Q3 available. If this process-made possible only by
perfect communication between departments-had been allowed to continue,
nothing would have been bought and nothing would have been sold. This out-
come was avoided by prohibiting communication between the two departments
and forcing each to guess what the other was doing.
I have obviously caricatured the situation in order to make the point clear:
when organizational units have inappropriate measures of performance which
put them in conflict with each other, as is often the case, communication be-
tween them may hurt organizational performance, not help it. Organizational
structure and performance measurement must be taken into account before
opening the flood gates and permitting the free flow of information between
parts of the organization. (A more rigorous discussion of organizational structure
and the relationship of communication to it can be found in [1].)
Most MIS designers seek to make their systems as innocuous and unobtrusive
as possible to managers lest they become frightened. The designers try to provide
managers with very easy access to the system and assure them that they need
to know nothing more about it. The designers usually succeed in keeping man-
agers ignorant in this regard. This leaves managers unable to evaluate the MIS as
a whole. It often makes them afraid to even try to do so lest they display their
ignorance publicly. In failing to evaluate their MIS, managers delegate much of
the control of the organization to the system's designers and operators who
may have many virtues, but managerial competence is seldom among them.
Let me cite a case in point. A Chairman of a Board of a medium-size company
asked for help on the following problem. One of his larger (decentralized) divi-
sions had installed a computerized production-inventory control and manu-
facturing-manager information system about a year earlier. It had acquired
about $2,000,000 worth of equipment to do so. The Board Chairman had just
received a request from the Division for permission to replace the original
equipment with newly announced equipment which would cost several times
the original amount. An extensive "justification" for so doing was provided
with the request. The Chairman wanted to know whether the request was
really justified. He admitted to complete incompetence in this connection.
A meeting was arranged at the Division at which I was subjected to an ex-
tended and detailed briefing. The system was large but relatively simple. At
the heart of it was a reorder point for each item and a maximum allowable
stock level. Reorder quantities took lead-time as well as the allowable maximum
into account. The computer kept track of stock, ordered items when required
and generated numerous reports on both the state of the system it controlled
and its own "actions."
When the briefing was over I was asked if I had any questions. I did. First
I asked if, when the system had been installed, there had been many parts
whose stock level exceeded the maximum amount possible under the new system.
I was told there were many. I asked for a list of about thirty and for some graph
paper. Both were provided. With the help of the system designer and volumes
of old daily reports I began to plot the stock level of the first listed item over
time. When this item reached the maximum "allowable" stock level it had been
reordered. The system designer was surprised and said that by sheer "luck" I
had found one of the few errors made by the system. Continued plotting showed
that because of repeated premature reordering the item had never gone much
below the maximum stock level. Clearly the program was confusing the maximum
allowable stock level and the reorder point. This turned out to be the case in more
than half of the items on the list.
Next I asked if they had many paired parts, ones that were only used with
each other; for example, matched nuts and bolts. They had many. A list was pro-
duced and we began checking the previous day's withdrawals. For more than
half of the pairs the differences in the numbers recorded as withdrawn were very
large. No explanation was provided.
Before the day was out it was possible to show by some quick and dirty
calculations that the new computerized system was costing the company almost
$150,000 per month more than the hand system which it had replaced, most of
this in excess inventories.
The recommendation was that the system be redesigned as quickly as pos-
sible and that the new equipment not be authorized for the time being.
The questions asked of the system had been obvious and simple ones. Man-
agers should have been able to ask them but-and this is the point-they felt
themselves incompetent to do so. They would not have allowed a handoperated
system to get so far out of their control.
No MIS should ever be installed unless the managers for whom it is intended
are trained to evaluate and hence control it rather than be controlled by it.
pany I found that make-or-buy decisions concerning parts were made only at
the time when a part was introduced into stock and was never subsequently
reviewed. For some items this decision had gone unreviewed for as many as
twenty years. Obviously, such decisions should be made more often; in some
cases, every time an order is placed in order to take account of current shop
loading, underused shifts, delivery times from suppliers, and so on.
Decision-flow analyses are usually self-justifying. They often reveal important
decisions that are being made by default (e.g., the make-buy decision referred to
above), and they disclose interdependent decisions that are being made in-
dependently. Decision-flow charts frequently suggest changes in managerial
responsibility, organizational structure, and measure of performance which can
correct the types of deficiencies cited.
Decision analyses can be conducted with varying degrees of detail, that is,
they may be anywhere from coarse to fine grained. How much detail one should
become involved with depends on the amount of time and resources that are
available for the analysis. Although practical considerations frequently restrict
initial analyses to a particular organizational function, it is preferable to perform
a coarse analysis of all of an organization's managerial functions rather than a
fine analysis of one or a subset of functions. It is easier to introduce finer in-
formation into an integrated information system than it is to combine fine sub-
systems into one integrated system.
S. Aggregation Of Decisions
It must be assumed that the system that is being designed will be deficient
in many and significant ways. Therefore it is necessary to identify the ways in
which it may be deficient, to design procedures for detecting its deficiencies, and
for correcting the system so as to remove or reduce them. Hence the system
should be designed to be flexible and adaptive. This is little more than a platitude,
but it has a not-so-obvious implication. No completely computerized system
can be as flexible and adaptive as can a man-machine system. This is illustrated
by a concluding example of a system that is being developed and is partially in
operation. (See Figure 2.)
The company involved has its market divided into approximately two hundred
marketing areas. A model for each has been constructed as is "in" the computer.
On the basis of competivive intelligence supplied to the service marketing
manager by marketing researchers and information specialists he and his staff
make policy decisions for each area each month. Their tentative decisions are
fed into the computer which yields a forecast of expected performance. Changes
are made until the expectations match what is desired. In this way they arrive
at "final" decisions. At the end of the month the computer compares the actual
performance of each area with what was predicted. If a deviation exceeds what
could be expected by chance, the company's OR Group then seeks the reason
for the deviation, performing as much research as is required to find it. If the
cause is found to be permanent the computerized model is adjusted appropriately.
The result is an adaptive man-machine system whose precision and generality
is continuously increasing with use.
Finally it should be noted that in carrying out the design steps enumerated
PROPOSED POLICIES
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Reference
1. SENGUPTA, S. S., AND ACKOFF, R. L., "Systems Theory from an Operations Research
Point of View," IEEE Transactions on Systems Science and Cybernetics, Vol. 1 (Nov.
1965), pp. 9-13.