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The GIS Implementation Process

The GIS Implementation Process. POEC 6383 Management and Implementation of GIS. GIS Implementation. no guaranteed recipe for success no cookie-cutter formula to apply BUT there are general procedures and processes which help immeasurably ignorance of problems & past failures is not bliss

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The GIS Implementation Process

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  1. The GIS Implementation Process POEC 6383 Management and Implementation of GIS POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  2. GIS Implementation • no guaranteed recipe for success • no cookie-cutter formula to apply BUT • there are general procedures and processes which help immeasurably • ignorance of problems & past failures is not bliss • to be forewarned is to be forearmed POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  3. No cookie-cutter formula ---but there are models which help POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  4. Context for Successful GIS Implementation • GIS Paradigm • Use geography as integrating framework for information • Data Management Principles • Extend data management principles to include geographic focus • Technology • Select appropriate GIS-enabling technology and plan to evolve • Organizational Setting • Organizational setting must be conducive to GIS implementation, management must make a committment Discussed these in general last week, and will be returning to them in subsequent weeks. For now, we focus on process…. POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  5. I. Data acquisition (never underestimate the cost!) paper maps digital files remote sensing/satellite fieldwork II. Preprocessing: preparation & integration format conversion digitizing and/or scanning edge matching and rectification III. Data Management variable selection & definition table design (performance v. usability) CRUD policies/procedures: Create (data entry), Retrieve (view), Update (change), Deletion (remove) IV. Manipulation and Analysis (all the user cares about!) address matching network analysis terrain modelling (e.g. slopes, aspects) V. Product Generation tabular reports graphics (maps and charts) Steps in a GIS Project Appropriate for a project, but insufficient for an enterprise implementation. POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  6. GIS Enterprise Planning Process: general strategy • Needs Assessment/ Requirements Study: why do it • does it support organization’s goal or strategic plan? • Huxhold Chap. 3 Strategic Planning for GIS • Conceptual Design: what it does • what business process(es) will be supported? • Huxhold Chap. 5 Systems Design Methodology • Physical design: how it will do it • hardware, software, data, applications, people & their management • Huxhold Chap. 4 Implementation Planning • Implementation: getting it going • actually doing it! • Huxhold Chap. 6 Implementation Management • On-going System Management: keeping it going • operations, maintenance, update and use • Huxhold Chap. 7 Managing the System POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  7. Modifies organization’s structure Modifies organization’s plans GIS Enterprise Planning Process--general strategy with feedback loops Strategic Business Plan • Needs Assessment/ Requirements Study • does it support organization’s goal or strategic plan? • Conceptual Design • what business process(es) will be supported? • Physical design • hardware, software, data, applications, people • Implementation • actually doing it! • On-Going System Management • managing actual system use Modified Strategic Business Plan POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  8. GIS Enterprise Planing Process:Primary Phases and Tasks to be Accomplished • Prepare Strategic Plan for GIS: longer term, more abstract, context and justification • based on organization’s strategic plan, if it has one (most public sector orgs don’t) • requires conceptual understanding of the organization • Prepare Implementation Plan: detailed blueprint for what is to be done • needs assessment/requirements (incl. hardware, software and data surveys) • conceptual design (“system design”) • physical design (“design specifications”) • data and database • applications • Manage the Actual Implementation: conduct tasks to create operational system • administrative framework & staffing: responsibilities, timetables, milestones • benchmarking and pilot studies • hardware & software procurement and installation • data conversion and data base construction • application development • training • system installation This is the framework that we will use for our detailed discussion in later lectures, but its not the only one... POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  9. Needs Assessment Conceptual Design Database Database Planning Construction and Design GIS Use and Available GIS System Application Database Data Survey Integration Development Maintenance Aquisition of Pilot/ GIS Hardware Benchmark and Software H/W & S/W Survey GIS Development GuidesState of New York, Local Government Technology Services (1997) http://www.sara.nysed.gov/pubs/gis/gisindex.htm 1 2 5 6 3 9 10 11 7 8 “Its not the order or precise structure of the tasks but rather that, in one way or another, all get completed.” 4 POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  10. Task One: IT Plan provide basic IT plan relating to current and future needs include review of existing hardware/software include identification of hardware, software, communications, and network requirements to support a standard GIS Task Two: GIS Environment inventory map, record, & data sources inventory data being collected definition source documents reconciliation and compilation needs review & specify cartographic symbols Task Three: Applications conduct three remote application definition workshops document 3rd party software requirements document application development requirements Task Four: GIS System Development define GIS module requirements define GIS software requirements for desktops evaluate RDBMS requirements plan for development of logical and physical design for existing and proposed ArcView data bases or any additional RDBMS related to proposed or existing GIS applications Task Five: Blue Print GIS Implementation Plan prepare GIS Implementation Cost estimate prepare applications development paln prepare Pilot Program design conduct implementation Planning workshop Tarrant Regional Water District: Request for Qualifications (1998) POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  11. Lessons from Elsewhere --to be forewarned is to be forearmed POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  12. Lessons from Integrated Municipal Information Systems ProjectHuxhold (1993) • Agencies adopt GIS when they have a problem and see GIS as a solution, not because of its potential alone • shared implementations require a common goal that also reflects individual goals and is aligned with the overall goals of the organization • scope must be understood by all participants, including an understanding of potential for changes in organizational structure and procedures POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  13. Human Factors ParamountCampbell, 1992 • Organizations, and units in them, jealously guard their scope of activity and treat with suspicion proposals that may change this • administrative applications associated with cost savings are more readily accepted than decision-making applications to be used by policy makers • local communities very suspicious of developments that suggest centralization of information and therefore power • GIS techies often uncomfortable with social and political aspects of system implementation and utilization, thus need to involve politically-adept users/line managers/policy makers POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  14. Lessons from IT ApplicationsBooth (1983) • Involve users and their bosses in systems analysis and design • define goals and objectives as completely as possible, in writing, before beginning the design • obtain written agreement from users and their bosses that the defined goals and objectives are appropriate • do not view these objectives, even though signed, as cast in concrete • allow “change orders” • realize that even experienced users have trouble visualizing what a future system can/could do • implement and install in manageable phases: • provides checkpoints on progress • allows users to see what they signed for • sustains user enthusiasm and managerial support • Neither technology nor system design methodology are the keys to success, its: • ---defining what the system will do • ---communicating between IT folks and users/users’ bosses POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  15. Nine Principles for GIS Implementation International Association of Assessing Officials/Urban and Regional InformationSystems Association • A GIS is a data-driven, data-based information system • GIS data and maps must be maintained • A GIS is most useful when geographic references are registered on a consistent, continuous coordinate system • A GIS has topology • A GIS has many uses and should be shared by many different functions & users • A GIS contains hardware and software that are constantly undergoing change, which improves its functionality over time • A GIS grows incrementally in terms of technology, cost, and administrative support needs, therefore, a long-term commitment essential • A GIS causes changes in procedures, operations, and institutional arrangements among all users • A cadre of trained, educated, motivated, and dedicated people is crucial Does your plan incorporate all these principles? POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  16. Organizational Response and GIS Implementation Organizational response can assist or cripple GIS implementation at several stages: • Initial commitment, both morally and $-wise • Hardware/Software selection • Data acquisition/development • Pilot study • Integration with existing information systems • Applications address organizational objectives • Staffing • Data maintenance You’ve got to get it to go the right way at each stage. POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  17. Evolution of Issues During ImplementationCampbell, (1992) • Technological, associated with system compatibility • data-related, associated with lack of consistency between data sets • organizational, associated with data ownership and control • institutional, associated with how to use data in the policy-making process as implementation proceeds Each challenge must be overcome as the implementation process proceeds. POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  18. Conclusion: GIS Implementation • GIS is both an enabling technology and a set of concepts about organizing work and data, thus it will impact an organization’s established “way of doing business” • a comprehensive, systematic approach to planning, design and implementation will more likely produce a successful GIS implementation (but no guarantees!) • management and institutional issues raise the greatest challenges, thus must be addressed • open, participative processes are more likely to deal successfully with with these management and institutional issues ( and the technical ones!), therefore involve people • GIS is a complex information technology application, thus many of the same principles apply as in IT…... POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

  19. Conclusion: Information Technology Implementation • Organizational change is both a cause and an effect of evolving information technology • Human aspects of organizational change are more important and challenging than technical aspects • While information technology can improve organizational performance, the technology alone will not transform an organization • Successful implementation depends on planned, well-conceived and managed integration of information technology change and organizational change A corresponding list of implementation challenges from an IT text! POEC 6383 GIS Implementation and Management

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