E N D
2. Outline Information Hierarchy
Extended Enterprise & Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
Information Architecture and Enabling Technologies
Business Process Reengineering / Management
Electronic Commerce
Conclusions
3. Information Life Cycle
4. Even the Caveman Needs Knowledge to Survive The information-knowledge-wisdom hierarchy. The caveman has lots of information; he selects and organizes useful information into knowledge, but he does not achieve wisdom until he has integrated his knowledge into a whole that is more than useful than the sum of its parts.
5. Information Hierarchy
6. Nolan????????
7. E-Business and E-Commerce
8. The Extended Enterprise Monolithic architecture
Constituting a monolith: a monolithic sculpture.
Massive, solid, and uniform: the monolithic proportions of Stalinist architecture.
Constituting or acting as a single, often rigid, uniform whole: a monolithic worldwide movement.
Mention Documentation-centric view
Opportunity
Integrate the virtual company
Multi-system, multi-company, multi-audience
Rapidly adapt to changing business
Improve developer productivity, time to market
Challenge: Lack of infrastructure
Interoperability an afterthought
Expensive, hard, time-consuming, brittle
Deployment, management, scalability, security
Current model can’t keep up with business
Opportunity
Integrate the virtual company
Multi-system, multi-company, multi-audience
Rapidly adapt to changing business
Improve developer productivity, time to market
Challenge: Lack of infrastructure
Interoperability an afterthought
Expensive, hard, time-consuming, brittle
Deployment, management, scalability, security
Current model can’t keep up with business
Monolithic architecture
Constituting a monolith: a monolithic sculpture.
Massive, solid, and uniform: the monolithic proportions of Stalinist architecture.
Constituting or acting as a single, often rigid, uniform whole: a monolithic worldwide movement.
Mention Documentation-centric view
Opportunity
Integrate the virtual company
Multi-system, multi-company, multi-audience
Rapidly adapt to changing business
Improve developer productivity, time to market
Challenge: Lack of infrastructure
Interoperability an afterthought
Expensive, hard, time-consuming, brittle
Deployment, management, scalability, security
Current model can’t keep up with business
Opportunity
Integrate the virtual company
Multi-system, multi-company, multi-audience
Rapidly adapt to changing business
Improve developer productivity, time to market
Challenge: Lack of infrastructure
Interoperability an afterthought
Expensive, hard, time-consuming, brittle
Deployment, management, scalability, security
Current model can’t keep up with business
9. A Federation of Information Systems Teaching Notes
This slide visually illustrates front- and back-office applications and highlights the following:
Many organizations purchase their back-office systems in the form of enterprise resource planning (ERP) products such as SAP, PeopleSoft, and Oracle.
The ERP industry is trying to expand into the front-office applications.
It might be noted that electronic commerce and business extensions are being added to both front- and back-office applications in order to streamline interfaces to both customers and suppliers.
E-commerce is being driven by the Internet (and private extranets).
E-business is being enabled by intranets.Teaching Notes
This slide visually illustrates front- and back-office applications and highlights the following:
Many organizations purchase their back-office systems in the form of enterprise resource planning (ERP) products such as SAP, PeopleSoft, and Oracle.
The ERP industry is trying to expand into the front-office applications.
It might be noted that electronic commerce and business extensions are being added to both front- and back-office applications in order to streamline interfaces to both customers and suppliers.
E-commerce is being driven by the Internet (and private extranets).
E-business is being enabled by intranets.
10. ERP????
11. R/3 Logistics Process Flow
12. Information Systems Triad
13. Information System Applications Teaching Notes
It may be useful to walk through this diagram in class. The textbook coverage included numbered annotations that highlight portions of this diagram.
Remind students that any given information system may include many instances of each of these IS application processes and databases.Teaching Notes
It may be useful to walk through this diagram in class. The textbook coverage included numbered annotations that highlight portions of this diagram.
Remind students that any given information system may include many instances of each of these IS application processes and databases.
14. Information Needs
15. Architecture of Data Warehouse
16. Dimensional Model
17. Pivot Table in Excel
18. Team Work & Groupware
19. Generic Problem-Solving Process and TeamSpirit
20. Select a Meeting Agenda to Participate
21. Multi-Aspect Brainstorming
22. Rate Alternatives
24. Multicriteria Evaluation Tool
25. Enterprise Portal Strategy MS has been focused and been successful on providing a ubiquitous suite for individual productivity, Office.
Collaboration has been deployed in a disconnected fashion.
IT deploying monolithic collaborative applications top-down (not agile, not enough autonomy for businesses, can’t be deployed quickly)
BDMs deploying collaborative solutions that deliver immediate benefit but don’t connect to the rest of the organization (created islands of collaboration that weren’t connected)
Organizations need/want portals and collaboration to be integrated
Individuals have base level of productivity
Power comes from expanding the scope to add participants as necessary
Needs to roll up to the complete enterprise
Team
The place where real work gets done
Division
Place where business process and collaboration come together
Good success at relatively simple and effective content targeting because of shared organizational goals
Enterprise
Employees need to be able to go to a single place to find information to help them on a new task
They need a place to go to to see everything going on in the organization and drill down into the areas they’re interested in
Corporations need a way to effectively create a shared culture and be able to distribute company wide data. They need it to integrate well with their other LOB systems.
No platform vendor has provided a single environment that addresses this continuum of needs
SharePoint is the only technology bet that can provide the full continuum
Combines easy-to-use solutions and a robust web services environment
Enterprise collaboration and enterprise portal frameworks need to merge
Microsoft is the first vendor to provide this with SharePoint
“citizens of multiple collaborative environments at the same time”
personal
teams
division/enterprise
“solutions across these scopes have been disparate and difficult”
poor integration across scopes
capturing and reusing information has been difficult
“strategy is not about portal or team, per se – it’s about how you organize your intranet”
MS has been focused and been successful on providing a ubiquitous suite for individual productivity, Office.
Collaboration has been deployed in a disconnected fashion.
IT deploying monolithic collaborative applications top-down (not agile, not enough autonomy for businesses, can’t be deployed quickly)
BDMs deploying collaborative solutions that deliver immediate benefit but don’t connect to the rest of the organization (created islands of collaboration that weren’t connected)
Organizations need/want portals and collaboration to be integrated
Individuals have base level of productivity
Power comes from expanding the scope to add participants as necessary
Needs to roll up to the complete enterprise
Team
The place where real work gets done
Division
Place where business process and collaboration come together
Good success at relatively simple and effective content targeting because of shared organizational goals
Enterprise
Employees need to be able to go to a single place to find information to help them on a new task
They need a place to go to to see everything going on in the organization and drill down into the areas they’re interested in
Corporations need a way to effectively create a shared culture and be able to distribute company wide data. They need it to integrate well with their other LOB systems.
No platform vendor has provided a single environment that addresses this continuum of needs
SharePoint is the only technology bet that can provide the full continuum
Combines easy-to-use solutions and a robust web services environment
Enterprise collaboration and enterprise portal frameworks need to merge
Microsoft is the first vendor to provide this with SharePoint
“citizens of multiple collaborative environments at the same time”
personal
teams
division/enterprise
“solutions across these scopes have been disparate and difficult”
poor integration across scopes
capturing and reusing information has been difficult
“strategy is not about portal or team, per se – it’s about how you organize your intranet”
26. Information Aggregation Capabilities
Customizable presentation & personalization
Content and Document management and publishing
Business Intelligence
Information aggregation and search
Taxonomy
Enterprise Application Integration In this scenario you’ll see different products depending on customer requirements:
-SPS may deliver this scenario alone
-SPS may deliver this scenario with integration with CMS for content management and templates
-CMS may deliver this scenario with integration with SPS for search
-SPS may deliver this scenario with integration from BizTalk for back-end applications.In this scenario you’ll see different products depending on customer requirements:
-SPS may deliver this scenario alone
-SPS may deliver this scenario with integration with CMS for content management and templates
-CMS may deliver this scenario with integration with SPS for search
-SPS may deliver this scenario with integration from BizTalk for back-end applications.
27. Types of Processes
28. IT Capability and Their Organizational Impacts Capability Organizational Impact and Benefit
Transactional Transform unstructured processes into routinized transactions
Geographical Transfer information across long distances easily to make processes independent of geographical areas
Automational Reduce or reduce human labor in a process
Analytical Bring complex analytical methods to bear in a process
Informational Analyze and present vast amount of detailed information about a process
Parallel Change sequential tasks in a process into parallel ones
Knowledge Mgmt. Capture and disseminate expertise to amplify human cognition
Tracking Allow real-time and detailed tracking of tasks status, and inputs and outputs of a process
Disintermediation Remove intermediaries and connect two parties in a process directly
29. New Thinking
30. Process Classification Scheme: AA Global Best Practice KB
31. 30 steps, 5 departments, 19 persons
Issuance application processing cycle time: 24 hours minimum; average 22 days
only 17 minutes in actually processing the application New Life Insurance Policy Application Process at Mutual Benefits Life Before Reengineering*
32. The New Life Insurance Policy Application Process Handled by Case Managers application processing cycle time: 4 hours minimum; 2-5 days average
Application handling capacity double
Cut 100 field office positions
33. Reengineering Example
34. Reengineered Process
35. Empowered Customer-Focus Processes
36. Boss-Focus Processes
37. Customers Obsess over your customers
Remember that the Web is an infant
What do you have to offer that the physical world cannot in order to attract customers?
If you make one customer unhappy, he won't tell five friends -- he'll tell 5,000 on newsgroups, list servers, and so on.
"Word of mouth" factor gets amplified on the Net
The shifts of balance of power away from business and toward customer.
- Jeff Bezos
38. MOT Analysis Example Prio to MOT
Recognition
Information gathering
Comparison
MOT
Applying for Credit Card
Receiving Credit Card
Using Credit Card
Providing Information
Changing and Upgrading
Gifts giving
Emergency Assisting
After MOT
No usage follow-up
Stop membership follow-up
39. End-to-End Processes
40. Think from the Customer Back
41. Reengineering & Customers* Paradigm Shift:
Make and sell ð Sense and service
Mass marketing ð Micro-marketing
Transaction marketing ð Relationship marketing
IT Enablers
Multimedia: e-Learning
Communication networks: Internet and intranet
Scanning technologies: RFID
Electronics commerce
Customer databases: CRM
Mobile computing
42. The Low-Friction Market
"[The Internet] will carry us into a new world of low friction, low-overhead capitalism,
in which market information will be plentiful and transaction costs low."
-- Bill Gates, The Road Ahead
The Low-Friction Market
"[The Internet] will carry us into a new world of low friction, low-overhead capitalism,
in which market information will be plentiful and transaction costs low."
-- Bill Gates, The Road Ahead
43. Is EC Appropriate for You?
44. EC Strategies: 4 Cs
45. Virtual Communities
46. EC and Business Processes
47. Business Models Based on the Value Chain in the Market Place The concept of complete disintermediation - the elimination of the middleman - remains a theory. New intermediaries are emerging.
Cisco System has 2 billion dollars annual sales on the Web.
70% of Cisco online business comes from VARs and distributors.
Distributors have to do lot of value-add and customer support to survive.
Fruit of Loom Inc. has 31 of its 55 distributors up on its extranet called Activewear Online.
The concept of complete disintermediation - the elimination of the middleman - remains a theory. New intermediaries are emerging.
Cisco System has 2 billion dollars annual sales on the Web.
70% of Cisco online business comes from VARs and distributors.
Distributors have to do lot of value-add and customer support to survive.
Fruit of Loom Inc. has 31 of its 55 distributors up on its extranet called Activewear Online.
48. E-Business Integration Imperatives Integration Scenarios – Talk about this…
Document exchange (XML) through something like BizTalk server
Biz App Integrations: Checking inventory status.
Integration Scenarios – Talk about this…
Document exchange (XML) through something like BizTalk server
Biz App Integrations: Checking inventory status.
49. The B2C Business Models – Bricks, Clicks, Revolution and Evolution
50. IT Technology Driven vs. Business Pulled
51. The Zachman Framework for Enterprise Architecture http://www.intervista-institute.com/resources/zachman-poster.html
http://www.intervista-institute.com/resources/zachman-poster.html
52. ????????
53. Man, Market, Money, Method, Machine, Material, Message
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