Managing in the Information Age - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Managing in the Information Age

Description:

The information revolution has been underway for close to five decades ... IT managers must develop good people management skills and be attuned to these issues ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:642
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: john867
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Managing in the Information Age


1
Chapter 1
  • Managing in the Information Age

2
Introduction
  • The information revolution has been underway for
    close to five decades
  • Important information, broadly disseminated,
    radically alters the balance of power among
    individuals, institutions, and governments
  • To succeed in this rapidly changing environment,
    managers must remain fluent in new practices and
    techniques

3
How Organizations Use Information
  • Organizational Resources
  • Money
  • Skilled Employees
  • Information
  • Physical Property
  • Time
  • The task of managers is to use these resources in
    an optimal way to fulfill an organizations
    mission, that is, resource management

4
Information and People
  • In the information-intensive environment, the
    creative combination of people and information
    can be a powerful force in achieving superior
    performance
  • Skilled people coupled with advanced information
    technology has revolutionized commerce and
    altered the concept of management

5
IT Impacts on Business
  • Advanced technology redistributes knowledge among
    all employees and undermines traditional
    authority that is based on privileged access to
    information
  • Rapid, constant, and deep access to institutional
    knowledge will radically transform organizations,
    collapsing levels of management, and flattening
    organizational hierarchy

6
Information Technology Organizations
  • On an organizational chart, IT is generally
    classed as a department like marketing or
    manufacturing
  • Operationally, IT operates as a business within a
    business, supporting all other units in different
    ways

7
Functions and IT Support
  • Product Development
  • Manufacturing
  • Distribution
  • Sales
  • Service
  • Finance and Accounting
  • Administration
  • Design Automation
  • Materials Logistics
  • Warehouse Automation
  • Order Entry, Sales Analysis
  • Parts Logistics
  • Ledger, Planning, AP, AR
  • Office Systems, Personnel Records

8
Management Tasks
  • Line Responsibilities directly related to
    accomplishing the responsibilities of the
    organization
  • Staff Responsibilities - support line functions
    in accomplishing their primary mission
  • Senior IT managers have a hybrid role, blending
    both staff and line missions

9
Managing Information Technology
  • IT describes an organizations computing and
    communications infrastructure
  • IT management includes the tasks of managing the
    infrastructure, standards, and operations making
    technology-related investments and recommending
    appropriate corporate policy

10
Evolution of IT Management
  • 1950s to 1960s automation of routine business
    data handling
  • 1970s connection of terminals to mainframes
    shifted focus from providing data to creating
    knowledge (Decision Support Systems)

11
Evolution of IT Management
  • 1980s Widespread telecommunications and data
    networking moved computing from the mainframe to
    the desktop
  • 1990s Internet technologies and applications
    extended the boundaries of the enterprise. New
    business models took hold with e-business and ASPs

12
Types of Information Systems
  • Transaction Processing Systems
  • Management Information Systems
  • Decision Support Systems
  • Office Automation Systems
  • Expert Systems

13
Internet-Based Business Systems
  • Prior to 1990, IT systems focused on supporting
    the value chains within an organization
  • With widespread Internet technology, value chain
    management could extend outside an organization
    becoming much more complex and responsive

14
Enterprise Resource Planning
  • With digital value chain data, organizations
  • Improve responsiveness to customer needs
  • Accomplish just-in-time inventory management
  • Increase operational efficiency
  • Decrease internal costs
  • Increase service and product quality

15
IT Management Challenges
  • Organizations have high expectations for the
    benefit they will derive from technology and
    software purchases
  • Technology brings structural changes to the
    organization
  • Unmanaged expectations and ongoing change test
    the personnel management skills of IT managers
  • IT managers must be technological leaders and
    superb generalists

16
Controls and Environmental Factors
  • Knowledge based organizations must have rigorous
    control mechanisms in place
  • Loss of control in highly automated operations
    can give rise to rapid error propagation
  • Intra and extranets linking different
    organizations make effective control even more
    challenging

17
Competitive Considerations
  • Firms expect Information Technology managers to
    deliver the tools necessary to capture and
    maintain competitive advantage
  • IT organizations are directly on their firms
    critical path to success
  • Ineffective IT management can hinder the
    performance of the entire organization

18
People and Organizations
  • Information Technology changes organizations
  • These changes are perceived by many as a threat
    to power, position, or influence
  • IT managers must develop good people management
    skills and be attuned to these issues

19
IT Management Issues
  • Even though Information Technology is evolving at
    a phenomenal pace, critical issues facing IT
    managers have remained largely unchanged for
    years
  • Aligning IT and corporate goals
  • Re-engineering business processes
  • Defining ITs role and contribution
  • Developing an information architecture

20
IT Management Issues
  • Three newer issues have arisen as IT has entered
    the Internet age
  • Using IT to improve productivity, quality, and
    effectiveness
  • Creating or maintaining competitive advantage
    through IT
  • Redesigning business processes to better support
    corporate strategy

21
Maturation of IT Management
  • IT has moved over the past 4 decades from
    supporting accounting to enabling fully
    integrated data based management systems
  • Managers have grown from technical experts to
    sophisticated generalists

22
Managing Mature IT Organizations
  • Paul Strassmann has written extensively about
    mature models of IT management. Their elements
    include
  • Governance
  • Business Plan Alignment
  • Process Improvement
  • Resource Optimization
  • Operating Excellence

23
Information Technology Assimilation
  • Over the past several decades, IT has spread from
    isolated, single-dimensioned functions to
    sophisticated, multi-faceted and integrated
    systems
  • Shifts have occurred in application development,
    transitioning from largely in-house creations to
    more off the shelf products

24
Critical Success Factors
  • Concept developed by John Rockart to help
    executives define their information needs
  • Two types monitoring type and building type
  • Defined four areas where executives need to
    search for critical success factors
  • The industry their firm operates in
  • The company itself
  • The environment
  • Time-dependent organizational areas

25
Critical Success Factors for IT Managers
  • Managers need to answer two questions
  • What conditions are necessary for IT managers
    success today?
  • What tasks must be carried out very well in order
    for managers to succeed?
  • The answers to these questions can be grouped
    into four classes

26
Critical Areas for IT Managers
  • Business Management Issues
  • Strategic and Competitive Issues
  • Planning and Implementation Concerns
  • Operational Items

27
Business Management Issues
  • Obtain agreement with the firms executives on
    how IT will be managed within the firm
  • Operate the IT function within the parent
    organizations cultural norms
  • Attract and retain highly skilled people
  • Practice good people-management skills
  • Use IT to improve productivity and financial
    returns

28
Strategic and Competitive Issues
  • Develop IT strategies supporting the firms
    strategic goals and objectives
  • Provide leadership in technology applications to
    attain competitive advantage for the firm
  • Educate the management team about the
    opportunities and challenges involved in
    technology introduction
  • Ensure realism in long term expectations

29
Planning and Implementation Concerns
  • Develop plans supporting the firms goals and
    objectives
  • Provide effective communication channels so that
    plans and variances are widely understood
  • Establish partnerships with client IT
    organizations during planning and implementation
  • Maintain realism within the organization
    regarding intermediate-term expectations

30
Operational Items
  • Provide customer service with high reliability
    and availability
  • Deliver service of all kinds on schedule and
    within planned costs
  • Respond to unusual customer demands and to
    emergencies
  • Maintain management processes that align
    operational expectations with IT capabilities

31
Expectations
  • IT managers should supply their firms executives
    with their technical and business input so that
    executives can anticipate and prepare for future
    structural changes well in advance
  • They must keep the firms financial and strategic
    goals firmly in mind and champion a realistic,
    practical, and innovative view of the future

32
Expectations
  • Expectations held by the firms senior executives
    constitute a yardstick by which its IT managers
    will ultimately be measured
  • Superior managers understand the importance of
    expectations and manage them effectively by being
    proactive
  • Unskilled managers over promise and raise
    expectations that they are ultimately unable to
    fulfill

33
A Model for Studying IT Management
  • The study of information technology management
    concentrates on
  • Accomplishing business results
  • Attaining efficiency and effectiveness
  • Achieving and maintaining competitiveness
  • Each of these elements is essential to the firms
    success

34
(No Transcript)
35
Summary
  • IT is a powerful force in todays global society
  • These technologies are enabling important
    transformations that profoundly affect people,
    organizations, industries, and nations
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com