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Information System Project Requests. Reasons for project proposalCapability: greater processing speed, increased volume, faster information retrieval.Control: greater accuracy and consistency, better security.Communication: enhanced communication, integration of business areas.Cost: monitoring,
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1. INFORMATION SYSTEM PROJECT INITIATION IS Project Requests (reasons, sources)
Project Review and Selection
Preliminary Investigation
Requirements Determination
Requirements anticipation
Requirements investigation
Requirements specification
2. Information System Project Requests Reasons for project proposal
Capability: greater processing speed, increased volume, faster information retrieval.
Control: greater accuracy and consistency, better security.
Communication: enhanced communication, integration of business areas.
Cost: monitoring, reduction
Competitive Advantage: lock-in customers, lock-out competitors, improve arrangements with suppliers, new product development. Sources of project requests
Department Managers: to solve a problem or improve efficiency within the department.
Senior Executives: broad, institutional projects.
System Analysts: improvement of existing applications or projects for the systems dept.
Outside Groups: government, ISO.
3. Project Review and Selection Method
Steering Committee
Upper Management (Executive VP, VP Manufacturing)
Departmental Managers (Marketing, Accounting)
Technical Managers (R&D, QC)
Information Systems Group (DP manager, Senior Analyst)
Information Systems Committee
User-Group Committee
Management Planning Committees Integrating the Applications Portfolio
Horizontal Integration spans functional business areas
Vertical Integration links applications up and down the management hierarchy within specific business functions
Physical Integration: spans geographic boundaries
External-to-internal Integration brings outside data sources into the company as well as communication with entities such as customers, suppliers.
4. Preliminary Investigation Evaluation of project requests Objective Orientation (New Systems)
Start with objectives
Convert objectives to responsibilities
Decisions to carry out the responsibilities
Information needs to make these decisions (CSF, BSP) Problem Orientation (Modification of existing system)
Focus on problems
Decisions necessary to solve the problems
Information needs to make these decisions
5. Preliminary Investigation IS Performance Criteria
6. Preliminary Investigation Evaluation of project requests
7. Preliminary Investigation Evaluation of project requests Define the problem step 2 (Clarify and understand the project request):
What is required?
Why?
What management levels are involved?
Which functional areas?
Which subsystems are deficient?
Separate symptoms from causes.
Determine the size of the project:
New development or modification?
Time
Number of people
8. What is the problem?
Inventory records are frequently inaccurate, causing shortages at manufacturing time and variances in cost of goods sold.
Details of problem
Quantity on hand and actual physical count records do not always agree no pattern is evident. Sometimes quantity on record is high and other times it is low. The quantity should always agree if material requisitions are posted properly. The two buyers usually ensure that enough material has been ordered and delivered on time.
How significant is the problem?
The shortage causes major problems. Sometimes we even have to shutdown lines until emergency reorders are filled. The controller objects when costs become excessive at end of month. The inventory manager complains when books are out of agreement with the on-hand actuals.
Preliminary InvestigationClarify and understand the project request
9. What does user feel is the solution?
We need to automate receiving, withdrawal, inventory records, and posting to eliminate arithmetic errors.
How will information systems help?
Cut down on arithmetic errors; also provide quicker information.
Who else knows about this and could be contacted?
Controller
Buyers
Manager of Inventory
Signed by Manufacturing Manager Preliminary InvestigationClarify and understand the project request
10. Preliminary Investigation Evaluation of project requests Set system objectives step 3 (functional VPs))
All IS objectives should help firm to achieve its objectives
Lower level objectives must support higher level objectives
Objectives should be valid (steer firm in the direction it wants to go)
Objectives should be realistic, yet stimulate improvement
Objectives should produce measurable standards
11. Preliminary Investigation Evaluation of project requests Identify system constraints step 4 to minimise modifications later on.
Constraints imposed by the environment (government regulations ex. tax reporting; customers)
Internal constraints (cost and time limits, expertise)
12. Preliminary InvestigationEvaluation of project requests Conduct feasibility study step 5
operational: support from users and management for current system, their involvement in project request, external and internal system constraints, major barriers to implementation.
technical: does the company have the necessary technology, equipment capacity for new system, adequate response time for number and location of users, data security?
financial: estimation of cost of development, hardware, software, benefits in terms of reduced costs or fewer errors, cost if nothing changes.
Project must be feasible operationally and technically as well as financially.
legal: will the system operate within legal and ethical boundaries?
13. Preliminary InvestigationEvaluation of project requests Prepare project proposal step 6: written report of findings and recommendations to committee (by systems staff). (Committee approves/disapproves step 7; establishes control mechanism for project step8)
Introduction reason for proposal
Problem definition
Possible alternatives
Recommended course of action
Tasks to be accomplished
Resource requirements
Time
Cost
Anticipated results (organizational, operational, financial impact)
General implementation plan
Project objectives (tasks, budget)
Summary
14. System Development Life Cycle Requirements Determination (Systems Analysis)
Requirements anticipation
Requirements investigation
Requirements specification
System Design
General system design
Design of output, input, data base
System Development (software, hardware)
Implementation and Evaluation
Training and other implementation activities
Conversion
Postimplementation review and maintenance
15. Requirements Determination
16. Requirements investigation Understand the main business processes
Identify the data used and info produced
Determine frequency, time and volume
Identify controls what is the purpose of the activity?
what steps are performed?
where are they performed?
who performs them?
who uses the resulting information?
inputs and outputs of each business process
how often (trigger)?
how long does it take?
number of transactions?
are there any specific performance standards?
who compares actual versus standard?
how are mistakes caught?
how are errors handled?
are errors excessive?
17. Requirements specification
18. Requirements specification Capacity
People
Equipment
Space
Procedures
increase capabilities
lower expectations
redefine nature of tasks
19. Requirements specification Control of deviations, missing activities, handling of unanticipated events.
procedure control
content control to ensure that data entering the system is correct (input validation)
audit control
responsibility control
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20. Requirements specification(Control continued) Control
procedure control are all steps in a process performed? properly? any extra unauthorised steps? duplicate activities? will management know if steps are not performed?
content control to ensure that data entering the system is correct (input validation)
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21. Requirements specification(Control continued) Control
audit control record of a transaction; who performed it? when? what results did it produce?
responsibility control is anyone assigned to oversee the achievement of specific performance levels? are these levels vague?
design to avoid control problems
design to detect and report control problems
design to detect and fix control problems
22. Requirements specification Accessibility : does the information exist? is the info available? reliable? retrievable? presentable? is there a procedural problem to access it?
Complexity