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CHAPER 13 STRATEGIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND REORGANIZAITON

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Title: CHAPER 13 STRATEGIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND REORGANIZAITON


1
CHAPER 13STRATEGICINFORMATION SYSTEMS AND
REORGANIZAITON
2
Learning Objectives
  • Describe strategic information systems and
    explain their advantages
  • Describe Porters competitive forces model and
    how IT helps improve competitiveness
  • Describe representative strategic information
    systems and the advantage they provide with the
    support of IT
  • Understand the role of business processes in
    organizations and the reasons why reengineering
    is necessary
  • Demonstrate the role of IT in supporting BPR and
    especially mass customization, cycle time
    reduction, self-directed teams, and empowerment
  • Describe virtual corporations and their IT support

3
Chapter Overview
4
Case Dells Reengineering Efforts Supported
by Strategic Information Systems made IT
Worlds Champion
  • The Problem
  • As a result of price war with Compaq, it had a
    loss from inventory write downs
  • The Solution
  • IT-supported innovations
  • emergence of electronic commerce
  • The Results
  • its stock price zoomed more than 2000 percent
  • increases its market share and profitability
    simultaneously consistently
  • be considered to be one of the most well managed
    and profitable corporations in the world by the
    21st century

5
Case (continued)
  • What have we learned from this case??
  • competition on price, quality, speed, and
    customer service can be very intense,
  • especially when large corporations are involved
  • providing quality products at a low prices is
    necessary, but may not be sufficient
  • using conventional strategies may not be
    sufficient
  • fundamental change may be the only way to
    succeed, or even to survive
  • using IT, a company can gain a significant
    competitive advantage

6
Strategic Advantage and Information Technology
  • Strategic Information Systems (SISs)
  • support or shape an organizations competitive
    strategy
  • outward aiming at direct competition in an
    industry
  • inwardly they are focused on enhancing the
    competitive position of the firm by increasing
    employees productivity, improving teamwork, and
    enhancing communication
  • strategic alliances two or more companies share
    an inter-organizational system
  • strategic systems one of the organizations
    critical responses to business pressures

7
Strategic Advantage and Information Technology
(continued )
  • The Role of Information Technology
  • IT creates applications that provide direct
    strategic advantage to organizations
  • IT supports strategic changes such as
    reengineering
  • IT provides for technological innovations or acts
    as an enabler of innovation
  • IT provides competitive intelligence by
    collecting and analyzing information about
    innovations, markets, competitors, and
    environmental changes
  • Competitive Intelligence (Industrial espionage)
  • drives business performance by increasing market
    knowledge, improving internal relationships, and
    raising the quality of strategic planning

8
Competitive Intelligenceon the Internet
Intelligence Search Strategy
Description
9
Porters Competitive Forces Model and IT
  • Porters Competitive Forces Model
  • competition - at the core of a firms success or
    failure
  • be used to develop strategies for companies to
    increase their competitive edge
  • demonstrates how IT can enhances the
    competitiveness of corporations
  • 5 major forces

Threat of entry of new competitors
Threat of substitute products or services
Bargaining power of suppliers
Bargaining power of customers (buyers)
Rivalry among existing firms in the industry
10
Porters Five Forces Model
11
Porters Competitive Forces Model and IT
(continued )
  • Response Strategies (Per Porter and Others)
  • Response strategies to competitive forces
  • Cost leadership strategy - producing at lowest
    cost
  • Differentiation strategy - being unique
  • Focus strategy - selecting a narrow-scope segment
  • Growth strategy - increasing market share
  • Alliances strategy - working with business
    partners
  • Innovation strategy - developing new products
  • Internal efficiency strategy - improving the
    manner in which business processes are executed
  • Customer-oriented strategy - concentrating on
    making customers happy

12
Porters Competitive Forces Model and IT
(continued )
  • How the Model is Used

The Players in each force are listed
13
Impact of Competitive Forces and the Role of IT
Key Forces Affecting the Industry
Business Implications
Potential IT Responses
14
14
Key Forces Affecting the Industry
Business Implications
Potential IT Responses
15
Impact of Competitive Forces and the Role of IT
(continued )
  • Sustaining a Competitive Advantage
  • When SISs are combined with structural changes in
    the organization, they can provide a sustainable
    strategic advantage
  • Example comprehensive strategic information
    system used by Federal Express provides a
    strategic advantage by building and maintaining a
    first-class personnel system

16
Ineffective Organizations in the Information Age
  • Principles and Methods that enhance the
    development of the Industrial Revolution
  • Specialization of labor
  • Mass production (producing large quantities,
    storing them, selling them at a later time)
  • Hierarchical organizational structure following
    functional specialties with top-down lines of
    authority
  • Assembly lines that bring the work to the worker
    whenever possible
  • Complex support systems for planning and
    budgeting, resource allocation, coordination, and
    control

17
Ineffective Organizations in the Information Age
(continued )
Business processes across functional areas and
organizational boundaries
18
Ineffective Organizations in the Information Age
(continued )
  • The Need for Integration
  • Integration should cross not only departmental
    boundaries, but also organizational ones,
    reaching suppliers and customers
  • Account numbers in an information systems
    developed along departmental lines may not be
    logically related and so cannot be used for
    cross-referencing a customers accounts
  • Managers want to send letters to specific
    customers

19
Business Process Reengineering - The Solution
  • Traditional solutions may not be effective

BPR copy the definition BPR overcomes the
problems cited earlier
20
BPR (continued )
  • Principles of BPR
  • several jobs are combined into one
  • employees make decision
  • steps in the business process are performed in a
    natural order, and several jobs get done
    simultaneously
  • processes may have multiple versions
  • work is performed where it makes the most sense
  • controls and checks are minimized
  • reconciliation is minimized
  • a hybrid centralized/decentralized operation is
    used
  • a single point of contact is provided to customers

21
BPR (continued )
  • BPR, continuous improvement programs, and IT
    support

22
BPR (continued )
  • The Enabling Role of Information Technology
  • The IT tools for BPR
  • Simulation and visual simulation tools - to
    support the modeling activities of BPR
  • Flow diagrams - made by specialized BPR tools
    that are usually integrated with other tools
  • Work analysis - accomplished with tools that
    conduct forecasting, risk analysis, and
    optimization
  • Workflow software - places system controls in the
    hands of end-user departments

23
Changes in Work Rules Brought by IT
24
Changes in Work Rules Brought by IT
25
Major Reengineering Activities
  • Redesign of processes
  • From mass production to mass customization
  • mass production
  • produces a large quantity of an identical,
    standard product
  • mass customization
  • produces large volumes, yet customizes the
    products to the specifications of individual
    customers
  • increases with the spread of electronic commerce,
    which transforms the supply chain from a
    traditional push model to a pull model

26
Major Reengineering Activities (continued )
  • Cycle time reduction
  • IT makes a major contribution in shortening cycle
    times by allowing companies to combine or
    eliminate steps, and to expedite various
    activities in the business process
  • Cycle time reduction can result in gain a
    substantial market share

27
Restructuring Entire Organizations
Reengineered bank with integrated system
28
Restructuring Entire Organizations (continued )
  • Networked organization
  • resemble computer networks and are supported by
    computerized systems
  • away from the hierarchical organization toward
    the networked organization due to the evolution
    from an industrial-based economy to an
    information-based economy

29
Hierarchical vs. Networked Organization
30
The Roles of Managers and Subordinates
31
Restructuring Entire Organizations (continued )
  • Empowerment - the vesting of decision-making or
    approval authority in employees in instances
    where such authority traditionally was a
    managerial prerogative
  • Empowerments relationship to information
    technology
  • the provision of right information, at the right
    time allows employees to make decisions
  • enhances the creativity and productivity of
    employees, as well as the quality of their work
  • training can be enhanced by IT
  • enables non-managers to make decisions

32
Ethical and Societal Issues
  • Unethical tactics
  • pressuring competitors employees to reveal
    information
  • using software that is the intellectual property
    of other companies without permission
  • using IT to monitor the activities of their
    employees and customers, and in so doing they may
    invade the privacy of individuals
  • Societal Issues
  • Reengineering efforts involve dramatic changes in
    peoples jobs and working relationships
  • Jobs are eliminated

33
Virtual Corporations
  • Characteristics of Virtual Corporations (VC)
  • Excellence. Each partner brings its core
    competence (area of excellence) so an all-star
    winning team is created. No single company can
    match what the virtual corporation can achieve.
  • Full utilization of resources. Some resources of
    the business partners are sometimes underutilized
    when not in a VC.
  • Opportunism. The partnership is opportunistic. A
    VC is organized to seize market opportunities.
  • Lack of borders. It redefines traditional
    boundaries.
  • Trust. Business partners in a VC must be far more
    reliant on each other and more trusting than ever
    before.
  • Adaptability to change. The VC can adapt quickly
    to environmental changes because its structure is
    relatively simple.
  • Technology. IT makes the VC effective and
    efficient.

34
Virtual Corporations (continued )
  • How IT Supports Virtual Corporations
  • IT allows communication and collaboration among
    the dispersed business partners
  • Standard transactions are supported by electronic
    data interchange and EFT
  • Modern database technologies and networking
    permit business partners to access each others
    databases
  • Lotus Notes and other groupware tools permit
    diversified interorganizational collaboration

35
Whats in IT for Me?
  • For Accounting
  • The accountant must understand these technologies
    and the role of IT to collect the data for
    justification of the investment
  • For Finance
  • Finance people must understand the nature of
    these technologies and the manner in which they
    enable organizations to seize opportunities and
    solve problems

36
Whats in IT for Me? (continued )
  • For Marketing
  • SIS and/or BPR are likely to change distribution
    channels, order fulfillment, customer service,
    and many tasks that are under the control of
    marketing and sales
  • For Production/Operations Management
  • BPRs are most likely to completely change
    existing business processes including production
    lines, materials handling, design, and inventory
    systems

37
Whats in IT for Me? (continued )
  • For Human Resource Management
  • What makes SIS and BPR different is the magnitude
    of the organizational changes that could disrupt
    the operation of the organization if not handled
    properly by management and HRM
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