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Chapter One Overview. SECTION 1.1 – INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN BUSINESS Information Technology’s Role in Business Information Technology Basics Roles and Responsibilities in Information Technology Measuring Information Technology’s Success SECTION 1.2 – BUSINESS STRATEGY
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Chapter One Overview • SECTION 1.1 – INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN BUSINESS • Information Technology’s Role in Business • Information Technology Basics • Roles and Responsibilities in Information Technology • Measuring Information Technology’s Success • SECTION 1.2 – BUSINESS STRATEGY • Identifying Competitive Advantages • The Five Forces Model – Evaluating Business Segments • The Three Generic Strategies – Creating a Business Focus • Value Chain Analysis – Targeting Business Processes
SECTION 1.1 INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN BUSINESS
Information Technology’s Impact on Business Operations • Organizations typically operate by functional areas or functional silos • Functional areas are interdependent
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 enabler (or disabler) of business success and innovation
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY BASICS • Management information systems (MIS) – the 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 • Data - raw facts that describe the characteristic of an event • Information - data converted into a meaningful and useful context • Noise – an overload of information
IT Resources • People use • Information technology to work with • Information
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 • 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 ITBrief Summary (CInformationO) Ensure strategic alignment (CTechnologyO) Proper equipment/software (CSecurityO) Protect from viruses & hackers (CPrivacyO) restrict access to private info (CKnowledgeO) databases and AI systems
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • What concerns CIOs the most
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Average CIO compensation by industry
ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN IT • Skills pivotal for success in executive IT roles
Why we need MIS majors • 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 • MIS Majors bridge the gap.
Improving Communications • Business personnel must seek to increase their understanding of IT –Why? • IT personnel must seek to increase their understanding of the business – Why? • 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 • What is an example of a business driver? • Metrics are detailed measures (numbers) that feed KPIs • Performance metrics can measure both efficiency and effectiveness.
Efficiency and Effectiveness Metrics • Efficiency IT metric – measures the performance of the IT system itself including throughput, speed, and availability • Effectiveness IT metric – measures the impact IT has on business processes and activities including customer satisfaction, conversion rates, and sell-through increases
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
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 Reality usually involves tradeoffs.
SECTION 1.2 BUSINESS STRATEGY
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 • Organizations watch their competition through environmental scanning • Environmental scanning – the acquisition and analysis of events and trends in the environment external to an organization • 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
BCG Model uses metrics • Market growth (High - Low) • Relative market share. (High – Low) • Invest in companies that are high in both
THE THREE GENERIC STRATEGIES – CREATING A BUSINESS FOCUS • Organizations typically follow one of Porter’s three generic strategies • Broad cost leadership • Broad differentiation • Focused strategy
THE THREE GENERIC STRATEGIES – CREATING A BUSINESS FOCUS This Porter model doesn’t cover all business situations, particularly E business. Where do you classify Ebay, Google, Yahoo, Amazon? What about Microsoft, Comcast, and other monopolies? Location based businesses – barbers, childcare, car washes, etc
Value Creation • Once an organization chooses its strategy, it can use tools such as the value chain. • 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