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Lecture 2. The use of Information systems in business processes. The Organisation. A business process .
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Lecture 2 The use of Information systems in business processes
A business process • A business process is a set of logically related tasks & behaviors that organization develop to produce specific business results and the manner in which these activities are organized and coordinated. • ”these activities are designed to produce a specific output for a particular customer or market” and give the firm a competitive advantage in order to generate revenue.
Some core Business Processes • Sales/Marketing: • Customer Strategy & Relationships (Marketing) • Customer Acquisition (Sales) • Finance and accounting • Financial Analysis, Reporting, & Capital Management • Management Responsibility • Accounting Management
Some core business processes • H.R. • Employee Development & Satisfaction • Production • Product Development • Product/Service Delivery • Technology Management
The Digital Firm • A company/organisation/firm in which all business process with customers, suppliers and employees are digitally “managed”. • Corporate assets: intellectual property and core competencies (activities and resources that could give a competitive advantage), financial and human assets are digitally managed. • These firms sense and respond to environmental changes rapidly as any information is available anytime and anywhere.
The digital firm • Two implications are: • Time shifting refers to business being conducted continuously, 24x7, rather than in narrow "work day" time bands of 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. • Space shifting means that work takes place in a global workshop, as well as within national boundaries.
Strategic Business Objectives of IS • Ideally the objectives of Information's systems are the Interdependence between a firm’s ability to: • Use information technology • Implement corporate strategies and achieve corporate goals
Strategic Business Objectives of IS • Six Strategic Business objectives include: • Operational Excellence • New products, services and business models • Improve customer and supplier relations • Improved decision making • Competitive advantage • Survival
Operational Excellence • Improvement of efficiency to attain higher profitability • Information systems, technology an important tool in achieving greater efficiency and productivity • Companies that pursue operational excellence provide consumers with products at the lowest total cost but the same quality.—operational excellence demands zero defects. • Procedures for manufacturing pursue the highest level of efficiency, often using IT to track inventory and orders. • A “Customer service” product pursues the highest level of convenience, with the goal of making every customer interaction easy, pleasant, quick, and accurate • Wal-Mart, McDonalds, Dell, and Ryanair are examples of companies that pursue, arguably, operational excellence.
Operational excellence example • RetaillinkWalmart’ssystem used to tracks and store all point of sales data for the company. • Walmart handles more than 1m customer transactions every hour and stores of over 2.5 petabytes (1000 terabyte) of data • A large amount of this data is available to Walmart supplier who can register for access to their companies information. • This allows companies to accurately track sales, manage inventory, review forecasts, and perform a variety of granular analysis to improve their business.
New products, services, and business models: • Describes how company produces, delivers, and sells product or service to create wealth [ensure a competitive advantage] • Information systems and technology are major enabling tools for “new products, services, business models” • E.g. Apple’s iPod, iTunes and Netflix’s Internet-based DVD rentals • Can you think of any other examples?
Customer and supplier intimacy: • Serving customers well leads to customers returning, which raises revenues and profits • E.g. large hotels that use computers to track customer preferences and subsequently use to monitor and customize environment • Intimacy with suppliers allows them to provide vital inputs, which lowers costs • E.g. Wal Marts or that of most big retail firms’ information system which links sales records to contact manufacturer. Can assist in “just in time” production
Improved decision-making • Without accurate information: • Managers must use forecasts, best guesses, luck • Leads to: • Overproduction, underproduction of goods and services • Misallocation of resources • Poor response times • Poor outcomes raise costs, lose customers
Competitive advantage • Delivering better performance • Charging less for superior products • Responding to customers and suppliers in real time • Often achieved when firm achieves one of first four advantages • E.g. Dell: Consistent profitability over 25 years; Dell remains one of the most efficient producer of PCs in world. • But Dell has lost some of its advantages to fast followers-- HP
Survival • Information technologies as necessity of business • May be: • Industry-level changes, e.g. Citibank’s introduction of ATMs • Governmental regulations requiring record-keeping
Information Systems • Information Technology: All hardware and software that a firm needs to achieve business objectives. • Information System • Set of interrelated components that collect, process, store and distribute information to support decision making, coordination & control of organizations. • Also help in analyzing problems, visualize complex subjects and create new products.
Information Systems Information Systems contain information about: • People • Places • Things
Data, Information, and Systems • Data vs. Information • Data • A “given” or fact: a number, a statement, or a picture • The raw materials in the production of information • Information • Data that have meaning within a context • Raw data or data that have been manipulated
Data Manipulation • Raw data • Time-consuming to read • Difficult to understand • Manipulated Data • Provides useful information
Generating Information • Raw data are processed in an IS to create final useful information • Process: Manipulation of data • Computer-based ISs: process data to produce information
Information: Important Resource • Information must be useful • Relevant • Complete • Accurate • Current • Cost effective in business
The Four Stages of Data Processing • Input: Data are collected and entered into computer • Data processing: Data are manipulated into information using mathematical, statistical, and other tools • Output: Information is displayed or presented • Storage: Data and information are maintained for later use
Computer Equipment for Information System • Input devices: introduce data into the IS • Processor: manipulates data through the IS • Output devices: display information • Storage devices: store data and information
Dimensions of Information Systems • Computer Literacy: Knowledge of information technology • Information Systems Literacy: Understanding: • Organization • Management • Information Technology (technical)
Organisational Dimension of information systems • Hierarchy of authority, responsibility • Senior management • Middle management • Operational management • Knowledge workers • Data workers • Production or service workers
Organisational Dimension of information systems (2) • Separation of business functions • Sales and marketing • Human resources • Finance and accounting • Production and manufacturing) • Unique business processes • Unique business culture • Organizational politics
Management dimension of information systems • Managers set organizational strategy for responding to business challenges • In addition, managers must act creatively: • Creation of new products and services • Occasionally re-creating the organization
Technology dimension of information systems • Computer hardware and software • Data management technology • Networking and telecommunications technology • Networks, the Internet, intranets and extranets, World Wide Web • IT infrastructure: provides platform that system is built on
Business Perspective on IS • Investment in information Technology & systems must provide economic value to business • Return on investment must be justified • RoI must be better than other investments in other tangible assets • Increase productivity • Increase revenues • Strategic positioning • High stocks value
Business Perspective on IS • Creating VALUE for the firm • Decrease costs • Improve decision making • Improve execution of business processes • Provide solution to a problem or a challenge
Business information value chain • Raw data acquired and transformed through stages that add value to that information • Value of information system determined in part by extent to which it leads to better decisions, greater efficiency, and higher profits
Investing in information technology does not guarantee good returns • Considerable variation in the returns firms receive from systems investments • Factors: • Adopting the right business model • Investing in complementary assets (organizational and management capital)
Complementary assets • Assets required to derive value from a primary investment • Firms supporting technology investments with investment in complementary assets receive superior returns • E.g.: invest in technology and the people to make it work properly
Complementary assets include • Organizational investments, e.g. • Appropriate business model • Efficient business processes • Managerial investments, e.g. • Incentives for management innovation • Teamwork and collaborative work environments • Social investments, e.g. • The Internet and telecommunications infrastructure • Technology standards