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1. Vigilant Information Systems: The Western Digital Experience Yu-Hui Tao
3. Abstract Cost-conscious & turbulent economy
Lean and high-velocity supply chain
High volume suppliers whose large customers change requirements often
To be vigilant means to be alertly watchful
Sensing and responding capabilities
Western Digital (WD) VIS
underlying layer of business intelligence applications
Analyzing data from numerous sources
A management dashboards automating alerting process
Means for responding
4. Vigilant Information Systems VIS allows information and business intelligence to be integrated and distilled from various sources to detect changes, initiate alerts, assist with diagnosing and analyzing problems, and support communication for quick actions (Walls et al., 1992)
How VISs differ from traditional ISs (Figure 17.1)
User vs. system initiates the process
How the concept of OODA (Observe/Orient/Decide/Act) loop is useful (Figure 17.2)
U.S Air Force Coloner John Boyd (1986)
How fighter pilots flying aircraft with inferior maneuverability won air combat engagements (dog fights)?
Compressed the cycle of activities
Observe (see the situation and adversary)
Orient (size up vulnerabilities and opportunities)
Decide (choose the combat maneuver to take)
Act (execute the maneuver)
5. Vigilant Information Systems(count.) Stalk and Hout (1990) & Haeckel and Nolan (1993) converted OODA to business use
Observe (see the changes signals)
Orient (interpret the signals)
Decide (formulate and appropriate response)
Act (execute the selected response)
Four requirement of VIS
Capabilities for observing visibility into critical business process capturing KPIs in real time; information from various sources
Capabilities for orienting graphical dashboards; sending alerts; drilling in data; slice-and-dice data; report trends
Capabilities for deciding asking what-if questions; descriptive statistics; time series comparison
Capabilities for acting architectures for communicating decisions quickly; follow-up tracking
6. Business Challenges of WD $2 billion global designer and manufacturing of high-performance bard drives for desktop personal computers, corporate networks, enterprise storages, and home entertainment applications
Founded in 1970
10,000 employees worldwide
Top five challenges:
Constantly changing customer requirements
A fiercely competitive global industry
Avoiding business disruption, product returns,
Short product life cycle
Need for extremely high quality and reliability
Early 1990, over 11 manufacturers 3 to 5 now
2002 unit volume rose 30% - toughest years in IT industry
Survival strategy:
React more quickly to changes; integrated information; Follow-the-sun
Difficulties for consolidating data: different results from ERP reports using different filters
Solution: VIS and its real-time management dashboards
7. WDs Vigilant Information System Too complex four sections below:
Architecture
Three foundation capabilities
Revamping WDs business processes
Management dashboards
8. WDs VIS - Architecture Bottom-up schematic view (Figure 17.3):
Layer 1: Raw data
Layer 2: Functional Applications (Observe)
Layer 3: Business Intelligence (Orient)
Layer 4: Dashboards (Decide and act)
9. WDs VIS Three foundation capabilities As can be seen in Figure 17.3
ERP system - 1997
Data warehouse - 1999
Quality Information System (QIS) - 1999
? They capture and integrate the data need for the VIS
However:
Legacy systems remained disconnected
The data refresh rate was inadequate
Managers needed better analysis capabilities
10. WDs VIS Revamping WDs Business Processes New business policies and processes to put the VIS to work
Three critical ones
Align time-based objectives across the enterprise
Capture KPIs in real time
Foster cross-team collaborative decision making
11. WDs VIS The Management Dashboards Two real-time dashboard systems
for the factory developed in house and rolled out in late 2000
for demand planning, distribution, and sales information
Figure 17.4
Top: 4 types of factory and 10 types of corporate dashboards
Middle: VIS and its information flow
Bottom: three constituencies factories in Asia, corporate offices in California and customers around the globe
Information flow from right (customers) to left (corporate and factory)
Core requirements for the 5 factory dashboards (Figure 17.5) were to:
Show KPIs
Display metrics
Allow drill down
Issue alerts distinguishes them from EIS
Allow staff and managers to see KPIs in near real time
Each parameter on a dashboard target value to be triggered.
Corporate dashboards can be see from Figure 17.4
12. How the VIS Accelerates WDs OODA Loops A well-designed dashboard can help people accelerate the OODA loop of the processes monitored
The factory and corporate dashboards are used in a three-level nesting of OODA loops (Figure 17.6)
Shop floor OODA loop
Factory OODA loop
Corporate OODA loop
Factory and corporate dashboards:
Not electronically connected but through the data the share and the communications of the managers who use them
13. The Business Impacts of WDs VISCost Savings 225 managers and professional use the dashboard
Better visibility, more efficient querying, less information overload, faster decision making
increasing inventory turns from 22 to 29
decreasing inventory by $25 million in 2002
annual savings of $3 million in inventory carrying costs
estimated cost to be $1.2 million
ROI to be one year (actually less than 1 year)
Margins more than doubled over the three-plus years
It cost $1500 for DBA one cross-application or cross-database report users create multiple views on the fly
Reports request dropped from 200 to 50 per quarter ? savings $900,000 per year
Printer paper save $800,000 per year
Customer reports 10 minutes for managers to create
Daily production meetings now take 1.5 hours rather than 3 hours involve 15 supervisor and managers ? $350,000 saving per year
14. The Business Impacts of WDs VISStrategic Advantage Faster analysis and decision making, immediately available information, quicker reflexes, and faster OODA loops
Help focus management attention
Everyone sees the same information, anytime, anywhere, and updated at the appropriate time intervals
Shortened reaction time between receiving data and acting on it from hours or days to minutes
Longer-term exist and are clearly strategic
Agile competitor
Ties together executive decision making, supply movements, and internal operations into a virtuous circle that can function effectively as various situation unfold
15. The Business Impacts of WDs VISLessons Learned #1 Design the real-time management dashboards to be the nerve center of a VIS
#2 Plan and schedule the coordination among teams to use real-time dashboards to manage enterprise-wide
#3 Build a learning loop around each OODA loop to foster group learning because the faster the loop, the more important and frequent the learning reviews need to be
#4 Match the time latency of each OODA loop to the organizations needs and cap bilities to become truly vigilant; do not indiscriminately chase zero latency
#5 Vigilant information systems may need to be justified on some basis other than return on investment
#6 Implementing an enterprise-wide VIS is a management initiative more than a technology initiative because it requires active, collaborative engagement from all top management to install the needed organizational transformation
16. The Future of Vigilant Information Systems Internally, output to wireless device is planned
Externally, dashboards for collaborating with supply chain partners
Figure 17.7 four types of real-time management dashboards based on the amount of business horsepower required of their underlying VIS.
17. Figure 17.1
18. Figure 17.2
19. Figure 17.3
20. Figure 17.4
21. Figure 17.5
22. Figure 17.6
23. Figure 17.7