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Information Systems in The Enterprise: © 2003 by Prentice Hall

The document discusses different types of information systems used in organizations including transaction processing systems, management information systems, decision support systems, executive support systems, and office automation systems. It provides examples and descriptions of each type of system.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views

Information Systems in The Enterprise: © 2003 by Prentice Hall

The document discusses different types of information systems used in organizations including transaction processing systems, management information systems, decision support systems, executive support systems, and office automation systems. It provides examples and descriptions of each type of system.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lesson 3

INFORMATION
SYSTEMS IN THE
ENTERPRISE

2.1 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 3 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Major Types of Systems

• Executive Support Systems (ESS)


• Decision Support Systems (DSS)
• Management Information Systems (MIS)
• Office Automation System (OAS)
• Transaction Processing Systems (TPS)

2.2 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 3 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Major Types of Systems

2.3 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 3 Information Systems in the Enterprise

INTEGRATING FUNCTIONS AND BUSINESS PROCESSES

Enterprise Systems

2.4 Figure 2-17 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

INTEGRATING FUNCTIONS AND BUSINESS PROCESSES

Traditional View of the Systems

Figure 2-16
2.5 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Transaction Processing Systems (TPS):

• Transaction Processing System is operational-level


systems at the bottom of the pyramid. Transaction
Processing Systems ("TPS") are designed to
process routine transactions efficiently and
accurately
• This data is usually obtained through the
automated or semi-automated tracking of low-level
activities and basic transactions.

2.6 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION


Types of TPS Systems

Figure 2-4
2.7 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
System Architecture: Transaction Processing
System

2.8 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Financing and Accounting Systems

Major functions of systems:


• Budgeting, general ledger, billing, cost
accounting

Major application systems:


• General ledger, accounts receivable,
accounts payable, budgeting, funds
management systems

2.9 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Sales and Marketing Systems

Major functions of systems:


• Sales management, market research,
promotion, pricing, new products

Major application systems:


• Sales order info system, market research
system, pricing system

2.10 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Manufacturing and Production Systems

Major functions of systems:


• Scheduling, purchasing, shipping,
receiving, engineering, operations

Major application systems:


• Materials resource planning systems,
purchase order control systems,
engineering systems, quality control
systems

2.11 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Human Resource Systems

Major functions of systems:


• Personnel records, benefits,
compensation, labor relations, training

Major application systems:


• Payroll, employee records, benefit
systems, career path systems, personnel
training systems

2.12 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Human Resource Systems

Figure 2-11
2.13 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Payroll TPS

Figure 2-3
2.14 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
System Example: Payroll System (TPS)

2.15 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Overview of Inventory Systems

Figure 2-10
2.16 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

Office Automation System (OAS)


• Office Automation Systems are systems that try to
improve the productivity of employees who need to
process data and information.
• improve the productivity of employees working in an
office

Ex. (e.g. Microsoft Office XP) or systems that allow


employees to work from home or whilst on the move.

2.17 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


• Management Information System (MIS)
– , Management Information Systems are
management-level systems that are used by
middle managers to help ensure the smooth
running of the organization in the short to medium
term
– MIS provides information to the users in the form
of reports. Output, or reports, are usually
generated through accumulation of transaction
processing data.
– The highly structured information provided by
these systems allows managers to evaluate an
organization's performance by comparing current
18
with previous outputs.
2.18 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

Management Information System (MIS)

Figure 2-5
2.19 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
System Architecture: Management
Information System

2.20 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


MIS Management Information System

Creates reports managers can use


to make routine business decisions

• Scheduled reports
• Key-indicator reports
• Exception reports
• Ad hoc (demand) reports
• Drill-down reports

2.21 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Scheduled
Reports
Produced
periodically, or
on a schedule
(daily, weekly,
monthly).

22
2.22 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Key-Indicator Report
Summarizes the previous day’s critical activities
and typically available at the beginning of each
day.
2.23 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Demand
Report
Gives certain
information at a
manager’s
request.

Exception
Report
Automatically
produced when a
situation is unusual
or requires
management action.
24
2.24 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Drill Down
Reports
Provide detailed
data about a
situation.

25
2.25 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Decision Support System (DSS):

• used by senior managers, which facilitates


the creation of knowledge and allow its
integration into the organization
• analyze existing structured information
and allow managers to project the
potential effects of their decisions into the
future.

2.26 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Function of Decision Support


System (DSS):

• manipulate and build upon the information


from a MIS and/or TPS to generate
insights and new information.

2.27 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Decision Support System (DSS)

Figure 2-7
2.28 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Executive support system (ESS)

• Top level management

• Designed to the individual

• Ties CEO to all levels

• Very expensive to keep up

• Extensive support staff


2.29 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Executive Support System (ESS):

• Executive Information Systems are strategic-level


information systems that are found at the top of
the Pyramid
• help executives and senior managers analyze the
environment in which the organization operates,
to identify long-term trends, and to plan
appropriate courses of action
• designed to be operated directly by executives
without the need for intermediaries and easily
tailored to the preferences of the individual using
them

2.30 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Executive Support System (ESS)

2.31
Figure 2-8
© 2003 by Prentice Hall
Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION


Types of Information Systems

2.32 Figure 2-1 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

TYPES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS

Figure 2-2
2.33 © 2003 by Prentice Hall
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS IN THE
ENTERPRISE

2.34 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

KEY SYSTEM APPLICATIONS IN THE ORGANIZATION

Knowledge Work Systems (KWS):

Knowledge level
• Inputs: Design specs
• Processing: Modeling
• Outputs: Designs, graphics
• Users: Technical staff

Example: Engineering work station

2.35 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

INTEGRATING FUNCTIONS AND BUSINESS PROCESSES

Business Processes and Information Systems

Information systems help organizations

• Achieve great efficiencies by automating


parts of processes

• Rethink and streamline processes

2.36 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

SYSTEMS FROM A FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Human Resource Systems

SYSTEM DESCRIPTION ORGANIZATIONAL LEVEL

TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT TRACK TRAINING, SKILLS, APPRAISALS OPERATIONAL

CAREER PATHING DESIGN EMPLOYEE CAREER PATHS KNOWLEDGE

COMPENSATION ANALYSIS MONITOR WAGES, SALARIES, BENEFITS MANAGEMENT

HUMAN RESOURCES PLANNING PLAN LONG-TERM LABOR FORCE NEEDS STRATEGIC

2.37 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
LESSON 3 - Information Systems in the Enterprise

INTEGRATING FUNCTIONS AND BUSINESS PROCESSES

Examples of Business Processes

• Finance and accounting: Paying


creditors, creating financial statements,
managing cash accounts

• Human Resources: Hiring employees,


evaluating performance, enrolling
employees in benefits plans

2.38 © 2003 by Prentice Hall


Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 2 Information Systems in the Enterprise

INTEGRATING FUNCTIONS AND BUSINESS PROCESSES

Examples of Business Processes

• Manufacturing and production:


Assembling product, checking quality,
producing bills of materials

• Sales and marketing: Identifying


customers, creating customer awareness,
selling

2.39 © 2003 by Prentice Hall

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