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Week 3. Major Business Initiatives: Gaining Competitive Advantage with IT. STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES. Define supply chain management (SCM) systems and describe their strategic and competitive opportunities.
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Week 3 Major Business Initiatives: Gaining Competitive Advantage with IT
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES • Define supply chain management (SCM) systems and describe their strategic and competitive opportunities. • Define customer relationship management (CRM) systems and describe their strategic and competitive opportunities.
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES • Explain the significance of enterprise resource planning (ERP) software as the integration of functional software systems. • Define social media and describe a few of its many dimensions that make it important in the business world.
Outrageous Industry Transformation: Death of a Travel Agent • Mid-1990’s • Airline directly • Visit travel agency
DEATH OF A TRAVEL AGENT Today many, but not most, people book their travel needs online. • 57%-car rentals • 43%- airline reservations • 28%-hotel reservations • 8%-cruises
Technology the Game Changer • Some businesses will win • Some will lose • Winners will work diligently to survive and will focus its initiatives around the use of technology— That’s what we will focus on—Business initiatives and gaining the competitive advantage with IT
IT Implementations • Supply Chain Management • Customer Relationship Management • Enterprise Resource Planning • Social Media
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT buy hold sell • Traditional computer manufacturers use a distribution chain • A lot of inventory • Rental space costs • Antiquated supply
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT sell source ship • A supply chain consists of all parties involved, directly or indirectly, in fulfilling a customer request. The supply chain not only includes the manufacturer and suppliers, but also transporters, warehouses, retailers, and customers themselves. Customer Web site-takes orders Dell’s suppliers Assembly plant
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT • Dell’s example illustrates that the customer is an integral part of the supply chain. The primary purpose from the existence of any supply chain is to satisfy customer needs, in the process generating profits for itself.
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT • A typical supply chain may involve a variety of stages. These supply chain stages include: • Customers • Retailers • Wholesalers/Distributors • Manufacturers • Component/Raw material supplier
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT • Supply chain management (SCM) – • tracks inventory and information among business processes and across companies • It is an IT system that supports supply chain management activities • Just-in-time (JIT) – method for producing or delivering a product or service just at the time the customer wants it
Supply Chain Management • Most supply chains use inter-modal transportation, multiple transportation channels (railway, truck, etc.) to move products from origin destination • This creates supply chain complexities
Opportunities of SCM • Business strategy • Overall cost leadership • Running the organization (RGT) framework • Goal is to squeeze out every penny of cost possible in the supply chain
Opportunities of SCM • This will optimize • fulfillment, • logistics, • production, • revenue and profit, • and cost and price
IT Support for SCM • SCM systems pioneered by specialist companies • SCM is now part of ERP software (discussed later) • Learn more • Supply Chain Knowledge Base • Supply Chain Management Review • i2 Technologies • CIO Magazine
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT • Customer relationship management (CRM) is a model for managing a company’s interactions with current and future customers. It involves using technology to organize, automate, and synchronize sales, marketing, customer service, and technical support.
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT • Customer relationship management (CRM) system – uses information about customers to gain insight into their needs, wants, and behaviors in order to serve them better • Includes multi-channel service delivery, multiple ways in which customers can interact with a business
The Focuses of Customer Relationship Management Analytics is now a huge part of CRM. Analytics use hard data to support decision making.
Customer Relationship Management • Sales force automation (SFA) systems – automatically track all the steps in the sales process • Sales lead tracking • Listing potential customers • Market and customer analysis • Product configuration • Getting repeat customers
Opportunities of CRM • Business strategy • Differentiation and focus • Growing the organization • Classic goals • Treating customers better • Understanding their needs and wants • Tailoring offerings • Providing “delightful” experiences
IT Support for CRM • Software-as-a-service (SaaS) – software model in which you pay for software on a pay-per-use basis instead of buying the software • Learn more • Salesforce.com • CIO Magazine • CRM Today • destinationCRM.com