Title: 1. Strategy and Strategic Information Systems
11. Strategy and Strategic Information Systems
Chapter 2Strategic Uses of Information Systems
- Strategy
- A plan designed to help an organization
outperform its competitors. - Strategic Information Systems
- Information systems that changes goals,
operations, products, services, or environmental
relationships to help the firm gain a competitive
advantage - Can be developed from scratch, or they can evolve
from existing ISs.
22. Achieving a Competitive Advantage for
aFor-Profit Company
- Strategies for this type of company involve
increasing profits - Reduce costs
- Increase revenue through a larger market share
- Do both
- The essence of strategy is innovation, so
competitive advantage often occurs when an
organization initiates a strategy that no one has
tried before. - Dells use of the Web to take customer orders
- Citibanks use of ATMs
- Airlines use of computerized reservation systems
3Eight Ways to Achieve aCompetitive Advantage
4Achieving aCompetitive Advantage
- Initiative 1 Reduce Costs
- Lower Costs enable you to lower your prices
- Competitors may not be able to follow your lead
thus you gain market share - Examples
- Dells ability to continually lower cost of PCs
- On-line services (FAQ, package tracking)
5Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 2 Raise Barriers to Entrants
- Patenting
- Microsoft's programs
- Lotuss 1-2-3
- Patented features of Apples IPod sell music
from big labels on Apples web site - Priceline.coms reverse auction
- Amazon.coms one-click shopping
- High expense of entering industry
- State Street, Inc. (Pension fund management
business) money required to build systems keeps
competitors out of this market rents its
software to others
6Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 3 Establish High Switching Costs
- Explicit switching costs are fixed and
nonrecurring - Penalties for canceling cell phone provider
- Use of proprietary products (operating
systemstape formatsDVD formats) - Implicit Switching Costs
- Indirect costs in time and money of adjusting to
a new product - Changing application software (MS Office to Suns
StarOffice)
7Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 4 Create New Products and Services
- This advantage lasts only until other
organizations in the industry start offering an
identical or similar product or service for a
comparable or lower price. - Examples
- FedExs package tracking
- eBay
- Fleeting advantage (Netscape and Internet
Explorer) - First mover success critical mass
8Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 5 Differentiate Products and
Services - Persuade customers that your product is better
than your competitors - Brand recognition such as Levis, Chanel, or
Calvin Klein - Use of the Internet
- Email
- Answering questions online
- Purchasing advice online
- Personalize the Web page (Amazon.com)
- Easy to use Web site
- IBMs transformation to a consulting company
9Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 6 Enhance Products and Services
(similar to 5) - Examples
- Auto manufacturers enticing customers with a
longer warranty - Real estate agents providing useful financing
information to potential buyers - Charles Schwab moving stock trading services
on-line before Merrill Lynch
10Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 7 Establish Alliances
- Combined service may attract customers
- Lower cost
- Convenience
- Examples
- Travel industry
- HP and FedEx
- Affiliate programs
- Amazons relationship with Target and other
retailers
11Achieving a Competitive Advantage
- Initiative 8 Lock in Suppliers or Buyers
(similar to 3) - Lock in suppliers
- Bargaining power of buyer is determined by
purchase volume - Wal-Mart
- Lock in buyers
- Create impression of product superiority
- High switching costs
- Create a standard (software industry)
- Microsoft
- Adobe (gave away the reader but sells the
writer) Macromedia
123. Creation of a Strategic Information System
- Top management involvement
- From initial consideration through development
and implementation - Must be a part of the overall organizational
strategic plan
13Reengineering and Organizational Change
- Reengineering is the process of eliminating one
set of operations and building another from the
ground up to achieve hundreds of percentage
points in improvement rates - Implementation of an SIS often results in
organizational change (sometimes unplanned) - Planned organizational change is often referred
to as reengineering - Actively seek ways to employ IT to gain large
leaps in efficiencies - Different from continuous improvement
- Often associated with large job losses.
- Reengineering projects have high failure rates
144. The Bleeding Edge
- Business owners must develop new features to keep
the system on the leading edge. - Adopting a new technology involves great risk.
- No experience from which to learn
- No guarantee technology will work or customers
and employees will welcome it - Some organizations let competitors assume the
risk associated with being on the leading edge. - Risk losing initial rewards.
- Can quickly adopt and even improve pioneer
organizations successful technology (Microsoft) - Home Depots use of a data warehouse
15Success and Failure on the Web
- Just being first on the Web is not enough to be
successful business ideas must be sound. - eBay versus Amazon.com
- Success criteria
- New product/service at a competitive price
- Master the retail fulfillment challenge
- Create barriers to entrants (difficult to do)
- Create high-switching costs (difficult to do)
- Create strategic alliances (many companies have
been successful at this)
16Selected Ideas About Strategic Use of Information
Systems
- Competitive advantage is difficult to sustain
- In some industries, companies must continually
contemplate new ways of utilizing IS/IT for
competitive advantage - Many strategic systems have been unplanned and
often come from transaction processing systems - You cannot depend on your IS/IT department as
your sole source of ideas for strategic use of
IS/IT - Strategic systems often become standard business
procedures (e.g., ATMs, bank by phone) - Personal competitive advantage