Chapter 1 - MIS
Chapter 1 - MIS
INFORMATION CONCEPTS
Foundation Concepts
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component of successful businesses Helps businesses expand and compete Improves efficiency and effectiveness of business processes Facilitates managerial decision making and workgroup collaboration
What is a System?
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A set of interrelated components With a clearly defined boundary Working together To achieve a common set of objectives
Data: raw facts Information: collection of facts organized in such a way that they have value beyond the facts themselves
Information System
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A set of interrelated components that collect, manipulate & disseminate data & information & provide feedback to meet an objective.
People
signals Library card catalogs Book bag, day planner, and notebooks Cash registers Accounting ledger
An organized combination of
People
Hardware
This system
Stores,
Information Technologies
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Information Systems
All
the components and resources necessary to deliver information and functions to the organization Could be paper based
Information Technologies
Hardware,
Foundation Concepts: fundamental behavioral, technical, business and managerial concepts Information Technology: Hardware, software, networks, data management and Internetbased technology Business Applications: Major uses of the IS in the organization Development Processes: How to plan, develop and implement IS to meet business opportunities Management Challenges: The challenges of effectively and ethically managing IT
Support of business processes and operations. Support of decision making by employees and managers. Support of strategies for competitive advantage.
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Components of a CBIS
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Components of a CBIS
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Hardware - computer equipment used to perform input, processing, and output activities. Software - computer programs that govern the operation of the computer.
Database - an organized collection of facts and information, typically consisting of two or more related data files.
People - the most important element in most computer-based information systems. Procedures - include the strategies, policies, methods, and rules for using the CBIS.
Fundamentals of Information Systems, Second Edition
Telecommunications - the electronic transmission of signals for communications. Networks - used to connect computers and computer equipment in a building, around the country, or around the world to enable electronic communications. Internet - the worlds largest computer network, actually consisting of thousands of interconnected networks
Fundamentals of Information Systems, Second Edition
Globalization opportunities
Internet has drastically reduced costs of operating on global scale Presents both challenges and opportunities
Information technology investment, defined as hardware, software, and communications equipment, grew from 32% to 51% between 1980 and 2008.
Source: Based on data in U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts, 2008.
Figure 1-1
Virtual Meetings: Smart Management Read the Interactive Session and then discuss the following questions:
What are the advantages of using videoconferencing technologies? What are the disadvantages? What is telepresence and what sorts of companies are best suited to use it as a communications tool? What kinds of companies could benefit from using videoconferencing? Are there any companies that might not derive any benefits from this technology?
Growing interdependence between ability to use information technology and ability to implement corporate strategies and achieve corporate goals Business firms invest heavily in information systems to achieve six strategic business objectives: IT Strategic Role
Operational excellence New products, services, and business models Customer and supplier intimacy Improved decision making Competitive advantage Survival
Operational excellence:
Improvement of efficiency to attain higher profitability Information systems, technology an important tool in achieving greater efficiency and productivity Wal-Marts RetailLink system links suppliers to stores for superior replenishment system
Examples: Apples iPod, iTunes, and iPhone, Netflixs Internetbased DVD rentals
Serving customers well leads to customers returning, which raises revenues and profits
Example: High-end hotels that use computers to track customer preferences and use to monitor and customize environment
Intimacy with suppliers allows them to provide vital inputs, which lowers costs
Example: J.C.Penneys information system which links sales records to contract manufacturer
Overproduction, underproduction of goods and services Misallocation of resources Poor response times
Example: Verizons Web-based digital dashboard to provide managers with real-time data on customer complaints, network performance, line outages, etc.
Operational excellence:
Competitive advantage
Delivering
better performance Charging less for superior products Responding to customers and suppliers in real time Example: Toyota and TPS (Toyota Production System) enjoy a considerable advantage over competitors information systems are critical to the implementation of TPS
Survival
Information
May
be:
Industry-level
In contemporary systems there is a growing interdependence between a firms information systems and its business capabilities. Changes in strategy, rules, and business processes increasingly require changes in hardware, software, databases, and telecommunications. Often, what the organization would like to do depends on what its systems will permit it to do.
Figure 1-2
An information system contains information about an organization and its surrounding environment. Three basic activitiesinput, processing, and outputproduce the information organizations need. Feedback is output returned to appropriate people or activities in the organization to evaluate and refine the input. Environmental actors, such as customers, suppliers, competitors, stockholders, and regulatory agencies, interact with the organization and its information systems.
Figure 1-4
Using information systems effectively requires an understanding of the organization, management, and information technology shaping the systems. An information system creates value for the firm as an organizational and management solution to challenges posed by the environment.
Figure 1-5
of authority, responsibility
management Middle management Operational management Knowledge workers Data workers Production or service workers
Levels in a Firm
Business organizations are hierarchies consisting of three principal levels: senior management, middle management, and operational management. Information systems serve each of these levels. Scientists and knowledge workers often work with middle management.
Figure 1-6
WHY Information SYSTEMS ? Levels: Senior managers: make longrange strategic decisions about products and services
Management
Operational managers:
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT FOR MANAGERS TODAY TO CONSIDER THE STRATEGIC ROLE OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS?
is strategy? What is strategic advantage? Information Systems as a strategic resource How do we use Information Systems to achieve some form of strategic advantage over competitors?
WHAT IS STRATEGY?
What is Strategy?
Strategy Definitions
Strategy
A
A well coordinated set of objectives, policies, and plans aimed at securing a long-term competitive advantage. A vision for the organization that is implemented.
Websters
Dictionary
a careful plan or method the art of devising or employing plans toward a goal the art and science of military command exercised to meet the enemy in combat under advantageous
What is Strategy?
Strategy Definitions
Strategy
Henry Mintzberg:
Planned Strategy
Executed Strategy
Failed Strategy
Emergent Strategy
STRATEGIC ADVANTAGE
Competitive Strategy
Competitive Advantage
Strategy Speeding Up
defensible market position, unique core competence long-term barriers to competition, non-competitive profits (>0)
Strategic Advantage
performance a result of businesses you pick to be in motivated by economies of scale performance a result of internal processes and routines, which provide distinctive capabilities motivated by economies of scale and scope
performance a result of building a wide array of relationships with external companies that possess hard-to-imitate capabilities motivated by economies of scale, scope, and expertise
Information Architecture
(Conceptual Model)
Information Infrastructure
(Specific Resources Actually Put In Place)
Classification of types of I.T. (Taxonomies) Engineers must know and the performance characteristics Understanding of relationship specific I.T. resources of between I.T. types and capabilities/performance
Inwardly Strategic
focused
Outwardly Strategic
aimed
on internal processes
lower costs increase employee productivity improve teamwork enhance communication
Hayes and Wheelwright (1985) - operations effectiveness, applies equally well to ISD effectiveness
not seen as a source of process improvement technology Minimize negative impact of functional area on organization Top management in control; tells dept. what to do not seen as a source of external competitive advantage source of internally focused competitive advantages viewed as competitive force in the business function drives issues of top-management strategy making
Externally Strategic
Company A
Internally Strategic
Company B
Intelligence
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TECHNICAL APPROACHES
COMPUTER
SCIENCE MANAGEMENT SCIENCE OPERATIONS RESEARCH
MIS
SOCIOLOGY ECONOMICS
PSYCHOLOGY
BEHAVIORAL APPROACHES
TECHNICAL APPROACH
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Emphasizes mathematically based, normative models to study information systems, as well as the physical technology and formal capabilities of these systems. Computer science: computability, computation, data storage and access. Management science: development of models for decision making and management practices. Operations research: techniques for optimizing selected parameters of organizations.
BEHAVIORAL APPROACH
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Behavioral issues arise in the development and long-term maintenance of IS. Sociologists study IS with an eye toward how groups and organizations shape the development of systems and also how systems affect individuals, groups, and organizations. Psychologists study IS with an interest in how formal information is perceived and used by human decision makers. Economists study IS with an interest in what impact systems have on control and cost structures within the firm and within markets.
SOCIOTECHNICAL PERSPECTIVE
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The challenge and excitement of the information system field is that it requires an appreciation and tolerance of many different approaches. We stress the need to optimize the performance of the system as a whole. Both the technical and behavioral components need attention.
SOCIOTECHNICAL PERSPECTIVE
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OPTIMIZE SYSTEM PERFORMANCE: Technology & organization mutually adjust to One another Until fit is satisfactory