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2. The MIS Function and Information Systems Planning. Organization of the MIS FunctionMIS SpecialistsEstablishing Organizational MIS RequirementsEvaluating the Relative Worth of MIS ApplicationsLinking Business and systems planning. 3. The MIS Function and Information Systems Planning. Cost-Benefit AnalysisMethods of Acquiring ISThe MIS Development ProcessAgents Involved in an MIS Project Who Initiates A Project?.
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1. 1 Management Information Systems The MIS Function and Information Systems Planning
Jerry Fjermestad
Copyright 1998-1999
2. 2 The MIS Function and Information Systems Planning Organization of the MIS Function
MIS Specialists
Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements
Evaluating the Relative Worth of MIS Applications
Linking Business and systems planning
3. 3 The MIS Function and Information Systems Planning Cost-Benefit Analysis
Methods of Acquiring IS
The MIS Development Process
Agents Involved in an MIS Project
Who Initiates A Project?
4. 4 Organization of the MIS Function MIS is responsible for providing and coordinating computer-base information services:
developing
operating
maintaining
facilitating the acquisition
adaptation of software & hardware
5. 5 Organization of the MIS Function A distributed MIS organization FIGURE 17.1
Corporate MIS:
Responsible for:
infrastructure- telecommunications networks,
corporate data center
corporate STANDARDS
interacting with vendors to gain discounts & for scanning
6. 6
7. 7
8. 8 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements To be effective competitor:
a vision
a model
a framework
9. 9 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements A. Contents of an MIS Master Plan
First MIS is a major corporate asset
provides benefits
uses resources- Money
The planning process provides support for business objects
the planning process allocates resources based upon priorities
in THEORY the MIS plan should be aligned with the Corporate business strategy
10. 10 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements A. Contents of an MIS Master Plan (cont)
A long term Plan
Coordination of MIS Plan with business plans
Content
Timing
Personnel
11. 11 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements A linkage between MIS & Business Plans has:
the corporate business plan states the informational needs
the MIS plan refers to the requirements of the business plan
the MIS plan is checked against the business plan
non-MIS managers participate in the MIS planning process
MIS managers participate in the business planning process
Corporate and MIS calendars are in sink with each other
12. 12 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements The MIS plan is reviewed periodically
The conceptual contents o the plan
13. 13 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements B. Derivation of the MIS Requirements
Derived directly from the business plan
14. 14
15. 15 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements C. The Strategic Cube the cube provides a framework
basic questions:
Will it face increasing customer power?
Are there fewer customer who are larger?
Is the firm to pursue a differentiating strategy?
Does the firm have a track record for innovation?
16. 16
17. 17 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements D. Strategy Set Transformations
1. Identify the organizational stakeholder
customers
employees
suppliers
2. Develop goals, strategies, objectives to fit each group of stakeholder
18. 18 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements D. Strategy Set Transformations (cont)
3. Determine the needed informational requirements for the strategies
Example from text:
Stakeholder: Customer
Strategy: improve service
Innovation: Confirm orders within one hour
19. 19 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements E. Approaches to Planning
1. Overview: There are several different approaches to systems planning
Some look at assimilation of IT in organizations
Some focus on defining informational needs
Some discuss categorizing applications
20. 20 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements E. Approaches to Planning (cont)
2. The basic set of approaches:
Business Systems Planning (BSP)
Critical Success Factors (CSF)
Investment strategy analysis
Scenario approach
Linkage analysis planning
Creative problem solving
Enterprise Analysis
The Architecture approach
The crystal Ball Approach
21. 21 17.3 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements BSP developed by IBM
Philosophy: Data is a corporate resource (Enterprise data)
Goal: discover a stable information architecture that supports all processes of the business.
Objective: to assure the data necessary to support the business plan are available and that a stable information system architecture is developed.
22. 22
23. 23 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements BSP (cont)
1. Defining the business process
identify the activities
identify the decisions
identify the systems, processes, flows
2. Defining Business data
classes of data (customers, employees, places, objects)
determine data usage
Example: Inventory record- SKU, Name, quantity on hand, lead time
24. 24 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements BSP (cont)
3. Define information architecture
Creating processes
Using processes
25. 25 17.3 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements Critical Success Factors (Rockart, 1979)
A method for defining executive information needs.
They are key areas or activities that must work right in order for the organization to be successful.
They are time dependent and therefore must be measured .
26. 26
27. 27 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements 1. Sources for the CSF's
industry:
the company
the environment
social
legal
technological
economic
political
Temporal: areas of the organization which do not normally need concern, but are currently unacceptable (The open can of worms).
28. 28
29. 29
30. 30 Other Methods Investment Strategy Analysis
A strategy based upon portfolio planning and investment analysis.
Four major types of systems for the 1990's
1. Institutional procedures- the processing of internal transactions, as represented by many of today's mainline systems
2. Professional support system- engineering support (CAD) Managerial decision-making support (DSS, GSS)
3. Physical automation
31. 31 Other Methods 4. Systems that serve users outside the company, i.e. customers and suppliers. EDI, Voice mail, 800 numbers, Fax
5. Basic infrastructure
telecommunications
networking
data base
office automation & DSS
32. 32 Other Methods Alpha Company
1. Renovate existing manufacturing systems around data base technology
2. Invest heavily in increasing the productivity of engineers
3. Foster innovation among the professional staff
4. Invest heavily in CAD/CAM
Beta Company
1. Create new systems only when old ones fail
2. BE A FOLLOWER
3. Invest only when IT has a bottom line impact
33. 33 Other Methods Scenario Planning (WHAT IF)
The scenarios help identify problems and manage assumptions.
They also provide flexibility in the plans and a means of escape if necessary.
34. 34 Other Methods 1. Elements of a scenario
the business environment
the effects of deregulation
shifting towards a service economy ; away from MASS production
Mergers and acquisitions
increased foreign competition
National budget deficits
Interest rates (not in 1992)
Changes in the strength of the US dollar
unemployment
corporate down sizing
35. 35 Other Methods Government & society
information accuracy
privacy (see Scientific American August, 1992)
access to information
property rights
people changes
Financial considerations
ROI
TECHNOLOGY
speed of change
quick obsolescence
36. 36 Other Methods 2. Creating Scenarios
a. deterministic : spreadsheet what if analysis
Lotus 123
b. Cross-impact analysis: a model of major events and trends. Data can come from Delphi studies.
37. 37 Other methods Creative problem Solving
Couger's Method; a 1992 Working paper
the 5 phases
1. fact finding
2. problem finding
3. idea finding
4. solution finding
5. acceptance finding
38. 38 Other Methods Creative problem Solving (cont)
divergence-convergence activities
recursiveness (iterative) and non-linearity
using creativity techniques in each phase
EBS
alternative selection
39. 39 Other Methods The Architecture Building Approach
The blue print for the information technology infrastructure.
1. support communications flows
the flow of formal authority - financial consolidations of profit and loss centers via a computer
flows of regulated activities- online banking systems
informal communication flows- E-mail, voice mail
work constellations- expert systems
ad hoc decision processes- document retrieval
40. 40 Other Methods The Architecture Building Approach (cont)
2. help people communicate
provide different types of views of the same thing
3. support organizational decision making
help executives rethink how the business should be what kind of structure is needed ?
41. 41 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements SUMMARY
Successful strategy has two main ingredients:
1. Look to the future
2. link system plans to business plans
42. 42 Establishing Organizational MIS Requirements SUMMARY
The 3 Stages of developing a plan:
1. Understand the business
use a model or framework to help
USE THE RIGHT MODEL OR FRAMEWORK
2. Identify the firms INFORMATION needs
3. Rank the opportunities presented by information technology in terms of their relative importance and the relative VALUE added to the business.
43. 43
44. 44 Evaluating the Relative Worth of MIS Applications strategic: IS activities critical to the current competitive strategy and to future strategic decisions. IS applications are part of new strategic direction
Factory: IS applications are vital to the successful functioning of well-defined, well accepted activities. Not part of future strategic operations
45. 45 Evaluating the Relative Worth of MIS Applications Support: IS applications are useful in supporting activities. not vital to critical operations and not included as part of future strategic direction.
Turnaround: IS in transition- from support to strategic. Vital to strategic success.
How does this relate to the Daft Weick Model?
What about Uncertainty/Equivocality?
46. 46
47. 47 Linking Businessand systems planning Using Steering Committees
1. Can consist of
upper management from all divisions and functions
Department management from all divisions and functions
Technical management from all divisions and functions
IS, IE, Eng
48. 48 Linking Businessand systems planning 2. There job is to:
"steer" direct, push, pull, etc. the Organization investments in the direction that benefits the company the most; the STRATEGIC direction.
3. How do they do that?
Information scanning
49. 49 Linking Businessand systems planning 4. Advantages of steering committees from Drury (1984)
1. Increases the attention of top management to computing
2. Users become more involved with the system
3. The system departments are more aware of user needs
4. There is better long range planning for IS
50. 50 Linking Businessand systems planning Other approaches
IS mgrs. and analysts
User-group
Multi-department, IS, executive mgmt
Combination
51. 51 Cost-Benefit Analysis A technique for estimating the payoff to be expected from an information system.
A. Cost benefit Analysis
a quantitative support $
Table 17.6 p 693
52. 52
53. 53 Cost-Benefit Analysis B. Basic Stages of Cost benefit analysis
Identification of costs
fixed costs
operational costs (variable costs)
Identify Benefits
Tangible $
cost savings
Cost avoidance
revenue increases
54. 54 Cost-Benefit Analysis B. Basic Stages of Cost benefit analysis (cont)
Intangible not $
Table 17.7 page 694
Compare and analyze
NVP
IRR
ROI
Then PRAY
55. 55
56. 56 Methods of Acquiring IS 1. Internal Development
Pros and Cons Discussion
Techniques
SDLC
Prototyping
SAD
57. 57 Methods of Acquiring IS 2. Purchase
Canned vs Custom Discussion
3. External Systems integrator
4. Outsourcing
5. A combination approach
58. 58
59. 59
60. 60
61. 61
62. 62
63. 63 Agents Involved inan MIS Project A. The Actors
Z-1992 Figure 17.10 p 704
B. The theories From Markus
C. The Roles:
The users are interested in system performance Yes/NO
Management controls the resources Yes/no
MIS implements a system that SATISFIES the users' needs as well as the constraints and objectives from MGT.
64. 64
65. 65 Agents Involved inan MIS Project D. Problems Encountered:
Actors have their own agendas
Users generally do not KNOW what they want/need
COMMUNICATION can be a problem
cognitive style
66. 66 Who Initiates A Project? Managing The Application Development Portfolio
I. How System Projects are begun
A. Reasons for Projects
1. Solve a problem
2. Capitalize on an opportunity
3. Respond to a directive
67. 67 Who Initiates A Project? Capability: Efficiency
improve processing speed
Point of sale systems, Bar coding
ability to handle increased volume
PC vs. manual methods, more PC's, LAN
faster retrieval of information
Bigger, faster data storage, SQL-based DBMS
Canned-software (Order entry, Manufacturing, etc.)
68. 68 Who Initiates A Project? Control: Efficiency/Effectiveness
Improved accuracy and consistency
automating the process to reduce human error
Computer prompting, error detection, field value checks
Provide better security
Need to know screens
Password protection
69. 69 Who Initiates A Project? Communication: Effectiveness
Enhance communication
Credit card systems, brokerage systems, E-Mail
Integration of business areas: Coordination
CIM, LAN communication, Manufacturing systems
(ACCOUNTING, MATERIALS MGMT & MANUFACTURING)
70. 70 Who Initiates A Project? Cost: Effectiveness
Monitor Costs
Tracking cost through a system (manufacturing LED-CS)
Reducing costs
automatic calculation-retrieval systems PTOS
71. 71 Who Initiates A Project? Competitive Advantage: Effectiveness: a strategic weapon
Lock in customers
by offering a better price
by providing a unique service
by presenting distinctive products
Examples: American Hospital Supply, Eaasy Saber System, MAC
Lock out competitors
This happens when one locks in customers
72. 72 Who Initiates A Project? Competitive Advantage: Effectiveness: a strategic weapon (cont)
Improve arrangement with suppliers
EDI, long term contracts, the Japanese way, JIT
Quality programs, Shared Data Bases
Form a basis for new products
the value of information, commercial data bases on anything, mailing lists, Market Research, Shop Rite Price Plus, Prodigy, CompuServe.
INNOVATION
73. 73 Who Initiates A Project? B. Sources of Project Requests
1.Department Managers: Improve control, Power
Form processing systems, QC
2. Senior executives: Strategic, competitive advantage EIS, DSS, Market Research , E-Mail, Big systems
3. Systems analysts: Efficiency Speed accuracy, upgrades
4. Outside Groups: Regulatory Special accounting systems, OSA control
74. 74 Who Initiates A Project? C. Managing the portfolio direction
There are limited resources (money, manpower, material, etc)
In a rational organization
classify impact of project
can the project be redesigned to support multiple business functions or fewer
ensure funding
judge fit, function, form,
recommend development strategy SDLC, SA, Prototyping
ask 5 C's
75. 75 Who Initiates A Project? C. Managing the portfolio direction (cont)
In other organizations
Power
Political
Favored son
Fear
76. 76 Who Initiates A Project? D. Integration
Application should be integrated (yes & no)
Horizontal- (marketing, Manufacturing, accounting)
Vertical- upper level to lower level mgmt
Distributed- separate system in different plants different hardware, software
Integration- External-Internal EDI
77. 77 Who Initiates A Project? II The Project
A. Project request
WHAT IS THE PROBLEM
DETAILS of THE PROBLEM
IMPACT OF THE PROBLEM (how significant is it)
PROPOSED SOLUTION
JUSTIFICATION (5 C's)
BENEFITS (5 C's)
Who else knows
Intangibles
78. 78 Who Initiates A Project? B. Preliminary Investigation
(Fig 2.6, 75)
by the team- SA, IE, Mgrs., etc
1. Scope of the study
Clarify and understand the project request
Determine size
Assess cost/benefits
Determine feasibility - Technical, operational, economic
Report findings with recommendations
79. 79
80. 80 Who Initiates A Project? 2. Conducting the investigation
Reviewing organizational documents
Conducting interviews
Observations
Questionnaires
Do the work
Experiment
Plant site visits
Vendor demonstrations
Seminar
81. 81 Who Initiates A Project? 2. Conducting the investigation (cont)
Conferences
Workshops
literature: trade/academic
Personal contacts
KEY: Learn, Understand, Listen, Integrate
82. 82 Who Initiates A Project? 3. Testing Project Feasibility
Operational
Is there support/resistance; from or by who
Are current business methods acceptable?
If not a change may be welcomed
Have the user's been involved? If not get them involved
Will the system cause harm?
83. 83 Who Initiates A Project? 3. Testing Project Feasibility (cont)
Technical
Does the necessary tech exist? Can it be acquired?
Does the proposed equipment have the right capacity for the data? Remember Tracks System
Does the propose have the right:
response time, interface,
Can the system be expanded?
Are the accuracy, reliability, ease of use, ease of access, security ok?
84. 84 Who Initiates A Project? 3. Testing Project Feasibility (cont)
Economic
include cost to conduct full systems integration
cost of hardware/software/ other
benefits in terms of reduced costs
opportunity costs
85. 85 Who Initiates A Project? III. Selecting the Project Development Strategy
(Table 2.2, 81)
1. Institutional Vs End user
Organizational systems (i.e. MRP, CIM) vs.
End-user (PC- lotus, Dbase)
86. 86
87. 87 Who Initiates A Project? 2. End-User development approach
specification of information requirements in conjunction with a specific task or decision
Querying a data base with special software HP-Access to lotus
development of an application with a package
88. 88 Who Initiates A Project? 3. Suitable end-user developments
One-time Inquires
Simple reports
Minor changes
Presentations
What if analysis
89. 89 Who Initiates A Project? 4. What should not be handled
High volume transactions
Use of traditional programming languages
(Basic, FORTRAN, etc.) Yeah right!!
Changing data values in a Org DB
Applications spanning several departments
Applications requiring formal documentation
Major long-term applications (the New Post office)
Applications requiring formal spec's
In time as hardware/software changes these will also change.