Foundations of Information Systems in Business
Foundations of Information Systems in Business
1
Foundations of
Information Systems in Business
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Foundation Concepts
1-2
What is a System?
1-3
What is an Information System?
1-4
Information Technologies
• Information Technologies
• Hardware
• Software
• Networking
• Data management
1-5
What Should Business Professionals Know
About Information Systems?
1-6
Roles of IS in Business
1-7
Trends in Information Systems
1-8
What is E-Business?
• Business processes
• Electronic commerce
• Collaboration within a company
• Collaboration with customers, suppliers, and
other business stakeholders
1-9
How E-Business is Being Used
1-10
E-Business Use
• Reengineering
• Re-engineer Internal business processes
• Enterprise collaboration systems
• Support communications, coordination and
coordination among teams and work groups
• Electronic commerce
• Buying, selling, marketing, and servicing of
products and services over networks
1-11
Types of Information Systems
1-12
Purposes of Information Systems
1-13
Operations Support Systems
1-14
Types of Operations Support Systems
• Batch Processing
• Accumulate transactions over time and process
periodically
• Example: a bank processes all checks received in
a batch at night
• Online Processing
• Process transactions immediately
• Example: a bank processes an ATM withdrawal
immediately
1-16
Management Support Systems
1-17
Types of Management Support Systems
1-18
Other Information Systems
• Expert Systems
• Provide expert advice
• Example: credit application advisor
• Knowledge Management Systems
• Support creation, organization, and dissemination
of business knowledge throughout company
• Example: intranet access to best business
practices
1-19
Developing IS Solutions
1-20
Advanced Applications of IT
1-21
What is a System?
• A system is…
• A set of interrelated components
• With a clearly defined boundary
• Working together
• To achieve a common set of objectives
• By accepting inputs and producing outputs
• In an organized transformation process
1-22
Basic Functions of a System
• Input
• Capturing and assembling elements that enter the
system to be processed
• Processing
• Transformation process that converts input into
output
• Output
• Transferring transformed elements to their
ultimate destination
1-23
A Business as a System
1-24
Components of an IS
1-25
Information System Resources
• People Resources
• Specialists
• End users
• Hardware Resources
• Machines
• Media
• Software Resources
• Programs
• Procedures
1-26
Information System Resources
• Data Resources
• Product descriptions, customer records, employee
files, inventory databases
• Network Resources
• Communications media, communications
processors, network access and control software
• Information Resources
• Management reports and business documents
using text and graphics displays, audio responses,
and paper forms
1-27
Data Versus Information
1-28