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CHAPTER 1. INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN BUSINESS. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY’S ROLE IN BUSINESS. Information technology is everywhere in business Anyone involved in business must understand technology. Information Technology’s Impact on Business Operations.
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CHAPTER 1 INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN BUSINESS
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY’S ROLE IN BUSINESS • Information technology is everywhere in business • Anyone involved in business must understand technology
Information Technology’s Impact on Business Operations • Customer service: click-to-talk, call scripting, auto answering, call centers • Finance: accounting packages, Sarbanes Oxley • Sales and marketing: campaign management, customer relationship management • Operations: supply chain management • Human resources: software to track employees at risk of leaving
Information Technology’s Impact on Business Operations • Which types of IT services can be used to meet these types of goals? • Reduce costs/ improve productivity: supply chain management, enterprise resource planning • Improve customer satisfaction/loyalty: customer relationship management, loyalty programs • Create competitive advantage: business intelligence/data warehousing • Generate growth: sales management systems • Streamline supply chain: demand planning software • Global expansion: e-business
Information Technology’s Impact on Business Operations • Organizations typically operate by functional areas or functional silos • Functional areas are interdependent • they require information from around the organization to operate
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY BASICS • Information technology (IT) – any computer-based tool that people use to work with information and support the information and information-processing needs of an organization • Information technology is an important enablerof business success and innovation. IT does not guarantee success!
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY BASICS • Management information systems (MIS) – the business function that plans for, develops, implements, and maintains IT hardware, software, and applications that people use to support the goals of an organization • MIS is a business function, similar to Accounting, Finance, Operations, and Human Resources
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY BASICS • When beginning to learn about information technology it is important to understand the following: • Information • IT resources • IT cultures
Information • Data - raw facts that describe the characteristic of an event • Information - data converted into a meaningful and useful context • If you were building a system to track students: • Data might include height, name, and hair color • Information might include student to professor ratio, percentage of marketing majors who are female, number of students who pass the course. • If you were building a system to track inventory: • Data might include chair manufacturer, chair color, and chair size • Information might include number of chairs required for students in each class, average number of chairs needed to be replaced each semester.
IT Resources • People use • Information technology to work with • Information
IT Cultures • Information-Functional Culture • Employees use information as a means of exercising influence or power over others. For example, a manager in sales refuses to share information with marketing. This causes marketing to need the sales manager’s input each time a new sales strategy is developed. • Information-Sharing Culture • Employees across departments trust each other to use information (especially about problems and failures) to improve performance. • Information-Inquiring Culture • Employees across departments search for information to better understand the future and align themselves with current trends and new directions. • Information-Discovery Culture • Employees across departments are open to new insights about crisis and radical changes and seek ways to create competitive advantages.
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Information technology is a relatively new functional area, having only been around formally for around 40 years • Recent IT strategic positions include: • Chief Information Officer (CIO) • Chief Technology Officer (CTO) • Chief Security Officer (CSO) • Chief Privacy Officer (CPO) • Chief Knowledge Office (CKO)
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Chief Information Officer (CIO) – oversees all uses of IT and ensures the strategic alignment of IT with business goals and objectives • Broad CIO functions include: • Manager – ensuring the delivery of all IT projects, on time and within budget • Leader – ensuring the strategic vision of IT is in line with the strategic vision of the organization • Communicator – building and maintaining strong executive relationships
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Average CIO compensation by industry
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • What concerns CIOs the most
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Chief Technology Officer (CTO) – responsible for ensuring the throughput, speed, accuracy, availability, and reliability of IT • Chief Security Officer (CSO) – responsible for ensuring the security of IT systems • Chief Privacy Officer (CPO) – responsible for ensuring the ethical and legal use of information • Chief Knowledge Office (CKO) - responsible for collecting, maintaining, and distributing the organization’s knowledge
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Skills pivotal for success in executive IT roles
The Gap Between Business Personnel and IT Personnel • Business personnel possess expertise in functional areas such as marketing, accounting, and sales • IT personnel have the technological expertise • This typically causes a communications gap between the business personnel and IT personnel
Improving Communications • Business personnel must seek to increase their understanding of IT • IT personnel must seek to increase their understanding of the business • It is the responsibility of the CIO to ensure effective communication between business personnel and IT personnel
MEASURING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY’S SUCCESS • Key performance indicator(KPI) – measures that are tied to business drivers • Metrics are detailed measures that feed KPIs • Performance metrics fall into the nebulous area of business intelligence that is neither technology, nor business centered, but requires input from both IT and business professionals
Efficiency and Effectiveness Metrics • Efficiency IT metric – measures the performance of the IT system itself including throughput, speed, and availability • Efficiency focuses on the extent to which an organization is using its resources in an optimal way, “Doing things right” • Effectiveness IT metric – measures the impact IT has on business processes and activities including customer satisfaction, conversion rates, and sell-through increases • Effectiveness focuses on how well an organization is achieving its goals and objectives, “Doing the right things”
Benchmarking – Baselining Metrics • Regardless of what is measured, how it is measured, and whether it is for the sake of efficiency or effectiveness, there must be benchmarks – baseline values the system seeks to attain • Benchmarking – a process of continuously measuring system results, comparing those results to optimal system performance (benchmark values), and identifying steps and procedures to improve system performance
Benchmarking – Baselining Metrics • E-governement benchmarks
E-governement benchmarks • E-government efficiency metrics includes the number of computers per 100 citizens, the number of Internet hosts per 10,000 citizens, the percentage of the citizen population online • E-government effectiveness metrics include CRM practices, customer-service vision, approaches to offering e-government services through multiple-service delivery channels, and initiatives for identifying services for individual citizen segments
The Interrelationships of Efficiency and Effectiveness IT Metrics • Efficiency IT metrics focus on technology and include: • Throughput • Transaction speed • System availability • Information accuracy • Web traffic • Response time
The Interrelationships of Efficiency and Effectiveness IT Metrics • Effectiveness IT metrics focus on an organization’s goals, strategies, and objectives and include: • Usability • Customer satisfaction • Conversion rates • Financial
The Interrelationships of Efficiency and Effectiveness IT Metrics • Security is an issue for any organization offering products or services over the Internet • It is inefficient for an organization to implement Internet security, since it slows down processing • However, to be effective it must implement Internet security • Secure Internet connections must offer encryption and Secure Sockets Layers (SSL denoted by the lock symbol in the lower right corner of a browser)
The Interrelationships of Efficiency and Effectiveness IT Metrics
OPENING CASE QUESTIONSApple - Merging Technology, Business and Entertainment • What might have happened to Apple if its top executives had not supported investment in iPods? • Formulate a strategy for how Apple can use efficiency IT metrics to improve its business • Formulate a strategy for how Apple can use effectiveness IT metrics to improve its business • Why would it be unethical for Apple to sell its iTunes customer information to other businesses? • Evaluate the effects on Apple’s business if it failed to secure its customer’s information and it was accidentally posted to an anonymous Web site
IDENTIFYING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES • To survive and thrive an organization must create a competitive advantage • Competitive advantage – a product or service that an organization’s customers place a greater value on than similar offerings from a competitor • First-mover advantage – occurs when an organization can significantly impact its market share by being first to market with a competitive advantage
IDENTIFYING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES • Competitive advantages are important for an organization but it is even more important to understand that competitive advantages are typically temporary since competitors are quick to copy competitive advantages • United was the first airline to offer a competitive advantage with its frequent flyer mileage (this first-mover advantage was temporary) • Sony had a competitive advantage with its portable stereo systems (this first-mover advantage was temporary) • Microsoft had a competitive advantage with its unique Windows operating system • Does Microsoft still has a competitive advantage with its Windows operating system?
IDENTIFYING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES • Organizations watch their competition through environmental scanning • Environmental scanning – the acquisition and analysis of events and trends in the environment external to an organization • Frito-Lay does not just send its representatives into grocery stores to stock shelves—they carry handheld computers and record the product offerings, inventory, and even product locations of competitors. • This information is used to gain business intelligence on everything from how well competing products are selling to the strategic placement of its own products. • Three common tools used in industry to analyze and develop competitive advantages include: • Porter’s Five Forces Model • Porter’s three generic strategies • Value chains
THE FIVE FORCES MODEL – EVALUATING BUSINESS SEGMENTS • Porter’s Five Forces Model determines the relative attractiveness of an industry
Buyer Power • Buyer power – high when buyers have many choices of whom to buy from and low when their choices are few • One way to reduce buyer power is through loyalty programs • Loyalty program – rewards customers based on the amount of business they do with a particular organization
Supplier Power • Supplier power – high when buyers have few choices of whom to buy from and low when their choices are many • Supply chain – consists of all parties involved in the procurement of a product or raw material
Supplier Power • Organizations that are buying goods and services in the supply chain can create a competitive advantage by locating alternative supply sources (decreasing supplier power) through B2B marketplaces • Business-to-Business (B2B) marketplace – an Internet-based service that brings together many buyers and sellers
Supplier Power • Two types of business-to-business (B2B) marketplaces • Private exchange – a single buyer posts its needs and then opens the bidding to any supplier who would care to bid • Reverse auction – an auction format in which increasingly lower bids are solicited from organizations willing to supply the desired product or service at an increasingly lower price
Threat of Substitute Products or Services • Threat of substitute products or services – high when there are many alternatives to a product or service and low when there are few alternatives from which to choose • Switching cost – costs that can make customers reluctant to switch to another product or service • Examples??
Threat of New Entrants • Threat of new entrants – high when it is easy for new competitors to enter a market and low when there are significant entry barriers to entering a market • Entry barrier – a product or service feature that customers have come to expect from organizations in a particular industry and must be offered by an entering organization to compete and survive • Example of high and low??
Rivalry Among Existing Competitors • Rivalry among existing competitors – high when competition is fierce in a market and low when competition is more complacent • Although competition is always more intense in some industries than in others, the overall trend is toward increased competition in just about every industry
Class Exercise • Choose two products to perform a Porter’s Five Forces analysis. The two products must compete in the same market. • Potential Products • Laptop Computer and Desktop Computer • PDA and Laptop Computer • iPod and Walkman • DVD Player and VCR Player • Digital camera and Polaroid Camera • Cell Phone and Blackberry PDA • Coca-Cola Plastic Bottle and Coca-Cola Glass Bottle • GPS Device and a Road Atlas • Roller skates and Rollerblades • Digital Books to Printed Books • Digital Paper to Paper
THE THREE GENERIC STRATEGIES – CREATING A BUSINESS FOCUS • Organizations typically follow one of Porter’s three generic strategies when entering a new market • Broad strategies reach a large market segment • Broad cost leadership • Broad differentiation • Focused strategy • Target a niche market • Concentrate on either cost leadership or differentiation
Value Creation • Once an organization chooses its strategy, it can use tools such as the value chain to determine the success or failure of its chosen strategy • Business process – a standardized set of activities that accomplish a specific task, such as processing a customer’s order • Value chain – views an organization as a series of processes, each of which adds value to the product or service for each customer
Value Creation Value Chain
Value Creation • Primary value activities acquire raw materials and manufacture, deliver, market, sell, and provide after-sales services • Support value activities support the primary value activities • Customers determine the extent to which each activity adds value to the product or service • The competitive advantage is to: • Target high value-adding activities to further enhance their value • Target low value-adding activities to increase their value • Perform some combination of the two
Applying IT to the Value Chain • IT can be applied to add value to both primary and support value activities • Marketing campaign management system (primary) • Target marketing campaigns more efficiently thereby helping to reduce costs • Better pinpoint target market needs to help increase sales • HR system (support) • More efficiently reward employees based on performance • Identify employees at risk of leaving their jobs and find additional challenges or opportunities to help retain the employees and reduce turnover costs
Value Creation • Value chains with Porter’s Five Forces