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Chapter 13 Organizing Information Systems Resources

Chapter 13 Organizing Information Systems Resources. The Strategic Management of Information Technology. Transaction Processing System. Input. Process. Output. Systems Development. Communication. Information. Object-Oriented Approach. Catalog objects Found by keywords

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Chapter 13 Organizing Information Systems Resources

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  1. Chapter 13Organizing Information Systems Resources The Strategic Management of Information Technology

  2. Transaction Processing System Input Process Output Systems Development Communication Information

  3. Object-Oriented Approach • Catalog objects • Found by keywords • In a Library or Database • Objects • Exhibit certain behaviors • Attributes and operations are encapsulated or pulled together • Operations describes how attributes are processed • Behave in certain ways in response to messages

  4. Object-Oriented Approach • Classes • Set of Objects that share common structure and behavior • Inheritance • Objects receive attributes and operations from other objects • Add more attributes and operations of their own • Polymorphism • Ability of object to respond to and implement each object

  5. An Integrated System

  6. Object/Oriented Programming Client/Server Technology Project Management Research Directions:Systems Development • Object/Oriented Programming • Client/Server Technology • Project Management

  7. Research Directions:Systems Development:Object/Oriented Programming • Defining Objects, Classes, and Use Cases • Identifying: • Objects • Components • Applets • Expediting Code Process • Reuse • Data Repositories • Data Libraries Client/Server Technology Object/Oriented Programming Project Management

  8. Research Directions:Systems Development:Client/Server Technology • Local Area Network Implementation • Novell • Unix • Windows/NT • Mail and Database Considerations • Internet Linkages • Three-Tier and Two-Tier Architectures • Mainframe • LAN • Personal Computer Client/Server Technology Object/Oriented Programming Project Management

  9. Research Directions:Systems Development:Project Management • Breaking Development Process into: • Tasks • Summary Tasks • Milestones • Tracking Development Process • Cost • Resources • Duration • Time • Completion • Project Management Tools • Microsoft Project • AllClear • Project Workbench Client/Server Technology Object/Oriented Programming Project Management

  10. Business Integration • Business integration is a process, not a project • People need time to change • Recognize the potential up front • Make job changes throughout the organization • Manage the pace of change

  11. Transition from “Art” to a More Structured Approach • Implement systems planning and project management techniques. • Stress systems analysis to define user requirements. • Develop alternative conceptual systems designs for evaluation and selection before making a major commitment to detailed design, technology acquisition, and software development. • Design all systems components functionally, including technology and controls, for further review, evaluation, and implementation. • Use the detailed functional design as a blueprint or guide in applying software designing, coding, and testing. • Use a coordinated, planned approach to systems implementation. • Prepare clear, complete, and current documentation. • Perform a postimplementation review. • Design for and perform systems maintenance.

  12. Two Organizational Systems • An information link is a value-added chain between two organizations, such as between a dealer and a manufacturer, used after the two organizations have established a relationship • An electronic market is a computerized marketplace with several buyers and several sellers, with someone acting as the market intermediary.

  13. Business Integration • Guiding vision is put in its place • Program management is given proper support • Underlying technical problems are tackled fully and early enough • People are given the appropriate help in changing the way they work

  14. The Difference Between a Product-Line Approach and a Customer Segmentation Approach to Marketing • In the product line approach (technology-driven), products are spawned from the technology to create wants, while in the customer segmentation approach (market-driven), products are assembled to meet predetermined needs of customer segments. • In the product line approach, the systems development and the delivery function (marketing) are the responsibility of the managers of technology. Product marketing by the producers in a popular structure for entrepreneurial products (leading edge technologies) and organizations in early growth. • In the customer segmentation approach, the delivery function (marketing) is customer-oriented and market-driven (instead of technology-driven). Products are developed to meet well defined needs by employing only those technologies that are necessary to do so.

  15. Five responsibility Areas in the Leadership Role for CIO’s • Understand the business • Establish credibility of the systems department • Increase the technological maturity of the firm • Create a vision of the future and sell it • Implement an information system architecture

  16. Seven ways to “Learn the Business” • Have project teams study the marketplace • Concentrate on lines of business • Sponsor weekly briefings • Attend industry meetings with line executives • Read industry publications • Hold informal listening sessions • Become a “Partner” with a line manager

  17. Vision • A Vision is a statement of how someone wants the future to be or believes it will be; it is used to set direction for an organization. • Strategies tell how someone is going to get somewhere; it is their plan for the future.

  18. Boeing’s Three Visions • The right part in the right place at the right time. • Create an enhanced information stream • Define a strategic business architecture

  19. Five Waves of Innovation • Wave 1: Reducing cost • Wave 2: Leveraging investments • Wave 3: Enhancing products and services • Wave 4: Enhancing executive decisionmaking • Wave 5: Reaching the consumer

  20. Five Attitudes CEOs Take Toward ITWilson’s Study • The majority of CEOs interviewed -- 52% to be exact -- are neutral, believing they do not have enough knowledge to direct IT investments. • Quadrant 1: CEOs in this category have a high degree of confidence in receiving benefits from IT investments. 12% • Quadrant 2: CEOs in this category are well aware that implementation problems can destroy that potential. 26% • Quadrant 3: CEOs countered here are pessimistic about IT, believing that all systems will be delivered over-budget. 8% • Quadrant 4: CEOs in this category believe that IT is harmful because it introduces chaos and too much change for people to cope well. 2%

  21. Major Roles for Systems Departments • An increasing trend to outsourcing • The appearance of high-impact projects by high-caliber SWAT teams

  22. Relationships for CIOs (Keen) • Cooperative external relationships • Partnerships between systems and senior management • Partnering between systems professionals and users

  23. Marketplace Changes • The quality imperative • Consumer computing • Deregulation of some major industries • Crossing industry boundaries • Traditional customers are “leaving” • Crossing national boundaries • Production is becoming global • New product and service development cycles are shortening

  24. Two Ways Companies and Alliances Compete with Information Technology To Stay in Business • Quality • Service • Innovation • Speed To Gain Market Share • Competing With Time • Total Quality Management • Customer is King • Innovate or Die

  25. Wiseman’s Approach to Strategic Thrusts • Differentiation • Cost • Innovation • Growth • Forming alliances

  26. TELOS • Technical Feasibility • Economic Feasibility • Legal Feasibility • Operational Feasibility • Schedule Feasibility

  27. Unsuccessful Systems • Systems were developed which did not support business strategies and objectives. • Poor systems planning and inadequate project management. • Failure to define or understand user requirements. • Negligence in estimating costs and benefits of the systems project. • Creation of a myriad of design defects and errors. • Acquisition of computers and software that no one needs or knows how to use. • Installation of incompatible or inadequate technology. • Negligence in implementing adequate controls. • Development of unstructured, unmaintainable software. • Inadequate implementation tasks.

  28. SMDS • Switched Multimegabit Data Services is a switched service for MANs that uses cell relay technology. • The service is now being offered by local telephone companies and promoted for linking LANs within metropolitan areas. • Long distance carriers are also looking into offering it between MANs, as is Stanford University to transfer medical images (such as CAT scans) and earth resources mapping images among buildings on the campus

  29. Characteristics of Interorganizational Systems • At least two parties to create an IOS, thus the partners in the venture must have a willingness to cooperate and the ability to perform the work. • Standards play a major role in permitting many IOS efforts to get off the ground. • Education of potential partners is often more of a hurdle than the technology. • Coordination of joint systems often entails using a third party. • The various efforts need to be synchronized. • Work processes are often re-evaluated. • Technical issues are minor compared to the relationship issues. • IOS often requires more openness than traditional system development.

  30. Interoperability • The capability for different machines, using different operating systems, on different networks to work together on tasks-exchanging information in standard ways without any changes in the command language or in functionality and without physical intervention.

  31. Investment Strategy Analysis Approach To Studying Current Expeditures • The true “intensity of beliefs” about the use of technology, says Norton. It allows the managers to stand back from the business, see where the investments are currently being made, and then decide where they should be made in order to align the information systems investment with the business strategy.

  32. Problem-Solving Approach to Information Systems • Techniques that can be used to enhance several I/S/ planning approaches. • Recognizing the problem, analyzing problem information to develop a useful problem definition, generating solutions, and selecting and implementing a solution. • Opportunity identification • Nonlinearity and recursiveness of the model, and the identification of a variety of creativity techniques for each problem-solving phase. Couger’s three variants to the classical method

  33. Critical Success Factors in the Systems Planning Process • Critical success factors are the few key areas of the job where things must go right in order for the organization to flourish. Factors are critical for accomplishing the objectives, and are also used to determine the prime measures for satisfying each factor.

  34. Examples of Distributed Systems Structures • A hierarchy of processors is the most familiar data processing structure, with a large, controlling computer at the top of the hierarchy and PCs or terminals at the lowest level. The important characteristic of its structure is that the mainframe, or host computer, is the central, and controlling, component. • Decentralized stand-alone systems do not really form a distributed system at all. They are basically a holdover from the 1960s, when departments put in their own departmental computers, with no intention of connecting them to other systems. Hence, they are decentralized, not distributed. • Systems based on a local area network (LAN) have become widely used as the basis for distributed systems. This approach began in the office system arena with LANs providing the links between PCs, print servers, and gateways to other networks. This structure has no hierarchy, processors communicate on a peer-to-peer basis. • LAN-based systems that communicate with mainframe-based systems another structure for distributed systems. It is essentially a combination of the hierarchy approach (for mainframe-based processing) and the LAN-based system (in offices). • Cooperative systems are the newest member of the distributed system family. A cooperative system melds and extends the previous approaches. All the components are linked to each other via interconnected LANs and wide area networks (WANs). In essence it is an internet-a network of networks. All machines are equal; no machine is at the hub.

  35. Key Messages for Managers and Analysts • Process innovation is a new and desirable approach to transforming organizations and improving their performance • An explicit approach to process innovation is important • Information and information technology are powerful tools for enabling and implementing process innovation • How a firm approaches organization and human resources is critical to the enablement and implementation of innovative processes • Process innovation must occur within a strategic context and be guided by a vision of the future process state • Innovation initiatives can benefit all manner of processes

  36. Scenario Approach to Planning • A way to manage the assumptions required for planning by creating scenarios that combine trends, events, environmental factors, and the relationships among them.

  37. Scenarios should Include: • BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT • GOVERNMENT AND SOCIETY • PEOPLE CHANGES • FINANCIAL CONSIDERATIONS • TECHNOLOGY

  38. High Five. Business scope redefinition Four. Business network redesign Revolutionary levels Three. Business process redesign Evolutionary levels Two. Internal Integration One. Localized exploitation Low Low High Range of potential benefits

  39. Enablers Inhibitors • Technological • Favorable cost- performance trends • Vendor push--system solutions • Technological • Obsolescence • Further reduction in cost-performance IT-induced reconfiguration: Level One • Organizational • Localized impact • Ease of assessing efficiency benefits • Minimal disturbance to operations • Organizational • Lack of strategic vision • Unwillingness to recognize the strategic role of IT and IS

  40. Enablers Inhibitors • Technological • Favorable cost- performance trends • Technological • Uncertainty • Cost of redesign IT-induced reconfiguration: Level Three • Organizational • Awareness of the power of IT • Willingness to make quantum changes to fully exploit IT power • Organizational • Lack of strategic vision for redesign • Organizational inertia • Costs of transforming the organization • Marketplace • Competitive pressures

  41. Tightly coupled Business network redesign Collaborative advantage Business governance Electronic infrastructure Competitive advantage Loosely coupled Common role Unique role Information technology governance

  42. Technology Enablers and Inhibitors Enablers Inhibitors • Lack of standards • Lack of vision and understanding • Lack of commitment to integration • Possible erosion of market positions • Ability to specify and/or create standards for integration • Identification of value-added services • Recognition of mutual benefits IT-induced reconfiguration: Level Four

  43. Three Phases of Business Transformation NEW CORE COMPETENCE Phase 3 Redefinition VALUE-ADDED PROCESSES AND SERVICES Phase 2 Enhancement EXCELLENCE Performance Focus Phase 1 Automation TRANSITION BARRIERS EFFICIENCY INTERNAL OPERATIONS CUSTOMER AND SUPPLIER INTERFACE NEW BUSINESS UNITS Organizational Focus

  44. Boundary transforming technologies MARKET RELATIONS BOUNDARY -INFORMATION REFINERIES -OSS -ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING -INFORMATION GATEWAYS ENTERPRISE

  45. Attributes of Innovations Relative advantage - The innovation is technically superior (in terms of cost, functionality, “image”, etc.) than the technology it supersedes. Compatibility - The innovation compatible with existing values, skills, and work practices of potential adopters. Complexity - The innovation is relatively difficult to understand and use. Trialability - The innovation can be experimented with on a trial basis without undue effort and expense; it can be implemented incrementally and still provide a net positive benefit. Observability - The results and benefits of the innovation’s use can be easily observed and communicated to others.

  46. Economic Factors Impacting Technology Adoption Prior Technology Drag - A prior technology provides significant network benefits because of a large and mature installed base. Irreversibility of Investments - Adoption of the technology requires irreversible investments in areas such as products, training, and accumulated project experience. Sponsorship - A single entity (person, organization, consortium) exists to define the technology, set standards, subsidize early adopters, and otherwise promote adoption of the new technology. Expectations - The technology benefits from an extended period of widespread expectations that it will be pervasively adopted in the future.

  47. Strategic Process Elements Technology Forecasting Implementation Plans and Measurement Competitive Analysis Business and IT Alignment Assessment of Effectiveness Initiative Identification and Justification Models and Architectures Culture and Commitment

  48. Systems Maintenance Phase • Systems Plan Report • Systems Analysis Report • General Systems Design Report • Systems Evaluation and Selection Report • Detailed Systems Design Report • Systems Implementation Report

  49. Prototyping • User requirements • Input, output, and transactions • Databases • Controls • Technology • Applications

  50. Four Types Of Documentation • Systems Documentation • Software Documentation • Operations Documentation • User Documentation

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