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MBAD 6121. Class Notes Dr. Parker Foley University of North Carolina-Charlotte Summer II, 2001. Class Roster Card. Please fill out the note card distributed with the information in the same order as the template below. Last Name___________ First Name_____________
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MBAD 6121 Class Notes Dr. Parker Foley University of North Carolina-Charlotte Summer II, 2001
Class Roster Card Please fill out the note card distributed with the information in the same order as the template below. Last Name___________ First Name_____________ Type of Job __________________________________ Company ____________________________________ “Real E-mail Address __________________________ Area of Concentration (Major in MBA Program)
Introduction to Course • What is the course about? • Who am I and what does that mean? • The calendar • The text and readings. • The assignments and projects. • Tests and grading. • Teams and team selection.
First Session Tasks • Note Cards • Selection of Groups • Scheduling of Chapter Outline Presentations
Outline of the Text • Table of Contents • PART I: IT in the Organization • CH 1 - Organizations, Environments, and Information TechnologyCH 2 - Information Technologies: Concepts and ManagementCH 3 - Strategic Information SystemsCH 4 - Business Process Reengineering and Information Technology • PART II: Networks and IT • CH 5 - Network Computing: Discovery, Communication, and CollaborationCH 6 - Electronic CommerceCH 7 - Impacts of IT on Organizations, Individuals, and Society • PART III: Using IT • CH 8 - Transaction Processing, Innovative Functional Systems, and Supply Chain IntegrationCH 9 - Supporting Management and Decision MakingCH 10 - Data and Knowledge ManagementCH 11 - Intelligent Support Systems • PART IV: Managing IT • CH 12 - Planning for Information Technology and SystemsCH 13 - Information Technology EconomicsCH 14 - Systems DevelopmentCH 15 - Managing Information Resources, Control, and Security • Technology Reference Guides • T-1 HardwareT-2 SoftwareT-3 Data and DatabasesT-4 Telecommunications and the Internet
General Chapter One Notes Major Turban Concepts • Globalization of business • Technological innovations • Social and political changes • Increased awareness and demands of customers Which means…
General Chapter One Notes Competition is tough… very tough, so organizations must: • Increase productivity • Improve quality of service • Enhance competitive ability This requires…
General Chapter One Notes New management approaches, like: • Mass customization • E-commerce And, guess what?…
General Chapter One Notes The driving force behind much of the changes needed and most of the innovations used is… IT!
Figure 01.01 General Chapter One Notes Business Drivers/Pressures
Figure 01.02 General Chapter One Notes The BIG three: • The Market • Technology • Society
Figure 01.04 General Chapter One Notes
Figure 01.05 General Chapter One Notes Critical Response Activities • Strategic Systems • Business Alliances • Continuous Improvement • Electronic Commerce • Business Process Reengineering
Information Systems General Chapter One Notes • What is one? (Page 16) “An information system (IS) collects, processes, stores, analyzes, and disseminates information for a specific purpose.” Like any other system it includes: inputs, outputs, and feedback. • Formal and informal • Case Samples
Computer-Based Information Systems General Chapter One Notes “A computer-based information system (CBIS) is an information systems that uses computer technology to perform some or all of its intended tasks.” Components: • Hardware • Software • Database • Network • Procedures • People
Figure 01.07 General Chapter One Notes Systems Theory Approach Bill Payment
General Chapter One Notes Bill Payment Examples Invoices Bills Reconcile Cut checks Create ACH File Post to AP Checks ACH credits AP posting file Audit Team
General Chapter One Notes General Technology Trends • Cost/performance • Storage and memory • GUIs • Data warehousing • Multimedia and Virtual Reality • Intelligent systems • Object Oriented Environment/Document Management • Compactness
Portability Client/Server Architecture Network Computer Integrated Home Computing Intranets and Extranets Electronic Commerce Intelligent Agents Internet and Info Superhighway Networked Enterprise General Chapter One Notes Network Computing
Chapter One Organizations, Environments, and Information Technology • The Message • New World of Business • Environment • Organizational Structure • Technology • Short-term profit push • Dynamics • Customer power • Interest group power • Intensity of competition • Speed of change • The Boyett & Boyett Business Pressure Model • Market Pressures • Technology Pressures • Societal Pressures • Organizations Respond to the Pressures • Scott-Morton Model • 5 components: Strategy, Structure/Culture, Management/Process, Individuals/Roles, IT • Notes • These factors have always effected business processes and success, but they seem to have both intensified and accelerated over the past 10-15 years. • The need for businesses to heed each in both planning and execution reached down even to fairly small business. • The concept of a global economy (bantered about for at least 20 years) is now practiced not only by large corporate players, but by even a single consumer with just a few mouse clicks. • Information technology is critical now. It also is sometimes the cause as will as the cure. • Models like this not only are useful in conceptualizing how factors effect a business and each other, but are often used by management in corporations for planning and strategic direction • Many trends are strong in corporations in the 90s: Continuous Improvement, Total Quality Management, Business Process Reengineering, Empowerment of (fill in blank). IT is in the center of most. • To Ponder • Environment includes: government (regulation/deregulation), environmental issues, social issues and trends. • Organizational structure includes labor, workplace, trends/models. • Technology is a two-edged sword--it is used both to improve and imprison; to bring just the right information and to bury one in data. • When you see an organizational models mentally overlay your corporation/business onto the model and see how it fits. • Non of these models, trends, programs work without: • Senior management commitment and understanding • Strong training/support mechanism for the employee--ONGOING!
Chapter OneContinued • The Message • Information Systems and IT • What ‘R’ one? • Difference between IS • and IT • The basic Systems • Theory model • The Examples-- In Chapter One and throughout the book • Technology Trends. • Table 1.3 • Notes • IT is the technical subset of an IS, which is the whole ball of wax, including the process and the people. • The basic systems model (Input-process-output…with feedback and control loops), though simple in concept is FUNDAMENTAL to IS and IT • Use these to help understand the concepts, the models, and the systems. Also to see how all of this “stuff” must integrate and inter-operate. • The table and the discussion on pp. 26-28 are important and will keep reappearing in our discussions and in your work place. • To Ponder • As Information Systems become increasingly important, understanding these subtitles is not only important but an edge. • Organizations consistently forget the fundamentals of systems theory both in planning new systems and in the analysis and enhancement of old ones. Another “edge” opportunity. • These example are good material for your questions and projects. They should also be challenged for what is not said. (They are true stories and really happen and really did improve the companies, but what was the cost, how are things now with the company, how painful was the implementation? Were there cost over-runs, delays, false starts?) • If the cost-performance ratios are so wonderful, why do we keep spending more and more of our budget on IT and why is there more paper than ever!
Chapter OneContinued • The Message • Why should you learn about information technology? • The “Managerial Issues” at the end of all chapters are what the authors want you to “ponder.” • Notes • As MBA students you really have an obligation to be grounded in basic information systems fundamentals, even if you never become a “techie.” • The jobs descriptions and opportunities in Table 1.4 are for real. The demand is high and those salaries are very in line in corporations. (Go for it!) • We will usually pick out one or two to discuss. They make good fodder for your Critical Questions and they are good guides for helping with class discussion when you are doing your Chapter Outline presentations. • To Ponder • When I am interviewing people for employment, I expect broader-based knowledge of business systems and processes from an MBA than either a straight business major or a straight IT or IS major, and I am not alone.