Title: Organizations
1Organizations Systems
2Outline
- What is an Organization?
- Interaction of IT with the Organization
- Network Effects Economics
- Classifying Business Organization Units
Information Systems
3What is an Organization?
- Technical Definition "A stable, formal, social
structure that takes resources from the
environment and proceses them to produce
outputs." (Laudon Laudon) - Information Technology is introduced into this
structure to make the production of outputs more
efficient.
4What is an Organization?
- Structural, Behavioural and Other
- Hierarchy of authority
- Impersonality
- Written rules of conduct (operating procedures)
- Promotion based on achievement (technical
qualifications for positions meritocracy) - Specialized division of labor
- Efficiency (maximal organizational efficiency)
- IT innovations can create conflicts between these.
5A Pre-IT Insurance Claims Office (c 1965)
Giuliani, V. E. The Mechanization Of Office
Work. in Forester, T., ed. The Information
Technology Revolution. MIT Press 1985.
6A Post-IT Insurance Claims Office (c 1985)
Giuliani, V. E. The Mechanization Of Office
Work. in Forester, T., ed. The Information
Technology Revolution. MIT Press 1985.
7A Post-IT Insurance Claims Office (c 2004)
8IT THE ORGANIZATION BEFORE AFTER
IP Pre-IT
IP Post-IT
Information Needs
- structured flows
- limited access
- structured storage
- broad access
Skill Levels
Responsiveness
9IT THE ORGANIZATION BEFORE AFTER
IP Pre-IT
IP Post-IT
Tasks
- specialized
- compartmentalized
- repetitive
- generalized
- interconnected
- varied/novel
Work Flow
Standard of Performance
10IT THE ORGANIZATION BEFORE AFTER
IP Pre-IT
IP Post-IT
Workforce
Organizational Structure
- strongly hierarchical
- weakly networked
- strongly networked
- weakly hierarchical
113 Economic effects of IT on the Organization
- 1.Information technology costs generally fall,
labour costs generally rise. IT can be
substituted for labour, and result in fewer
middle managers and clerical workers. - 2.Information technology lowers transaction
costs. Firms should therefore become smaller, and
have more external transactions (e.g. through
outsourcing). - 3.Information technology lowers internal
management (supervision and coordination) costs.
Firms can therefore become larger. (?)
12Org. Units IT Systems
13Examples Webtrends
- See learningspaces.org/1311
14Enterprise Systems the Org
old integration of ITs
15Enterprise Systems the Org
new integration of ITs
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18The Major Eras Of The Computer Age
1964-1980 The System Centric Era 1964
introduction of the IBM 360
1981-1993 The PC Centric Era 1981 introduction
of the IBM PC
1994-2005 The Network Centric Era
2006-2015 The Content Centric Era?
19FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
SYSTEMS CENTRIC Corporate Transistor Groschs
Law Proprietary Systems Data Center Efficiency
Vertical Integration US systems 10
million 20 billion
20FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
SYSTEMS CENTRIC Corporate Transistor Groschs
Law Proprietary Systems Data Center Efficiency
Vertical Integration US systems 10
million 20 billion
PC CENTRIC Professional Microprocessor Moores
Law Standard Products LAN/WAN Productivity Hor
izontal value chain US Components 100
million 460 billion
21FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
SYSTEMS CENTRIC Corporate Transistor Groschs
Law Proprietary Systems Data Center Efficiency
Vertical Integration US systems 10
million 20 billion
PC CENTRIC Professional Microprocessor Moores
Law Standard Products LAN/WAN Productivity Hor
izontal value chain US Components 100
million 460 billion
22FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
PC CENTRIC Professional Microprocessor Moores
Law Standard Products LAN/WAN Productivity Hor
izontal value chain US Components 100
million 460 billion
NETWORK CENTRIC Consumer Bandwidth Metcalfes
Law Value Added Services Public
Network Customer Service Unified Computer
Communications Chain National Carriers 1
Billion 3 trillion
23FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
PC CENTRIC Professional Microprocessor Moores
Law Standard Products LAN/WAN Productivity Hor
izontal value chain US Components 100
million 460 billion
NETWORK CENTRIC Consumer Bandwidth Metcalfes
Law Value Added Services Public
Network Customer Service Unified Computer
Communications Chain National Carriers 1
Billion 3 trillion
24FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
NETWORK CENTRIC Consumer Bandwidth Metcalfes
Law Value Added Services Public
Network Customer Service Unified Computer
Communications Chain National Carriers 1
Billion 3 trillion
CONTENT CENTRIC Individual Software Transforma
tion Law Custom Services Transparent Virtualiz
ation Embedded Content Providers Universal Too
embedded to measure
25FEATURE Audience Technology Principle Offering
s Network Focus User Focus Supplier
Structure Supplier Leadership Users at
end Market Size
NETWORK CENTRIC Consumer Bandwidth Metcalfes
Law Value Added Services Public
Network Customer Service Unified Computer
Communications Chain National Carriers 1
Billion 3 trillion
CONTENT CENTRIC Individual Software Transforma
tion Law Custom Services Transparent Virtualiz
ation Embedded Content Providers Universal Too
embedded to measure