Title: IT Applications Theory Slideshows
1IT Applications Theory Slideshows
Systems in organisations
- By Mark Kelly
- McKinnon Secondary College
- Vceit.com
2Remember this management hierarchy?
STRATEGIC
STRATEGIC
TACTICAL
OPERATIONAL
3You dont?
- Look at the Organisational Decisions slideshow
before starting this one!
4Orders flow down the hierarchy
STRATEGIC
STRATEGIC
TACTICAL
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
5Decisions need data
- Good decisions cant be made in a vacuum
- Managers need to know whats happening in the
organisation - Data need to flow upward to inform managerial
decisions
6BTW
- Data is plural
- Datum is singular.
- The data are
- The datum is
- The data flow not The data flows
- Similar to The elephants is
7Data flow up the hierarchy
STRATEGIC
STRATEGIC
TACTICAL
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
8Different needs
- Different levels of decision-making need
different amounts and types of data and
information.
9Information Needs
- The General Manager of Safeway Australia does not
want to know how many unsold cooked chickens are
left at the end of each day in each store. A
store manager does.
10Information Needs
- The manager of the Manangatang Safeway does not
want to know the average sales of roast chickens
across the country for the previous 6 months. The
general manager does.
11Types of information systems
- Different information systems are used at
different levels of management, depending on
their needs.
12Reminder
- A system consists of
- Equipment (hardware and software)
- People
- Procedures
- Data
13Different information needs
Need information that is highly summarised,
sorted, categorised
STRATEGIC
STRATEGIC
Need more detail than strategic level.
TACTICAL
Need lots of detail.
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
14Different information systems
STRATEGIC
TACTICAL
Transaction Processing System (TPS)
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
15Different information systems
STRATEGIC
Management Information System (MIS) and Decision
Support System (DSS)
TACTICAL
Transaction Processing System (TPS)
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
16Different information systems
Executive Information System (EIS)
STRATEGIC
Management Information System (MIS) and Decision
Support System (DSS)
TACTICAL
Transaction Processing System (TPS)
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
17TPS
- Transaction Processing System
- Used by non-management staff
- e.g. electronic cash register, POS
(point-of-sale) terminal - It Processes Transactions! (derrr!)
18TPS in action
- Cheryl buys a tube of toothpaste at the
Manangatang Safeway. - Kylie, checkout operative, scans the toothpastes
bar code with a bar code reader.
19TPS in action
- Cheryl buys a tube of toothpaste at the
Manangatang Safeway. - Kylie, checkout operative, scans the toothpastes
bar code with a bar code reader.
20TPS in action
- The TPS looks up the barcode in the inventory and
fetches the items cost and whether it attracts
GST. - It adds the cost of the toothpaste to the
shoppers total bill. - It calculates GST, if applicable.
- It determines discounts, if applicable
- (e.g. buy 2, get 10 off)
21TPS in action
- The TPS looks up the barcode in the inventory and
fetches the items cost and whether it attracts
GST. - It adds the cost of the toothpaste to the
shoppers total bill. - It calculates GST, if applicable.
- It determines discounts, if applicable
- (e.g. buy 2, get 10 off)
22TPS in action
- The TPS prints the docket for the customer.
- It notifies the stores inventory system that the
tube of toothpaste has been sold. - The inventory system may re-order more toothpaste
if stocks get below the re-order level. - The TPS stores the details of the transaction in
a database.
23Different information systems
EIS
STRATEGIC
Management Information System (MIS) and Decision
Support System (DSS)
TACTICAL
TPS
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
24MIS
- The data from the TPS is used by the tactical
managers in their Management Information Systems. - The TPS data is summarised, sorted, categorised
generally processed to let the managers see
the big picture related to sales.
25BTW
- Data are raw, unprocessed, separate facts and
figures. They have potential value, but are not
of much direct use to anyone. Think of raw corn
hard, inedible, tasteless.
26BTW
- Information comes from processing data, e.g.
averaging, totalling, categorising into groups
(e.g. cosmetics, fresh fruit, hardware),
converting (e.g. from numbers to graphs). - Information makes data useful to humans.
27- Think of it this way
- raw corn (data) is
- steamed, rolled, toasted (processed) to make
- cornflakes (information)
28DSS
- Decision Support System
- Helps middle-managers make tactical decisions by
letting them - Play What if gamese.g. using a spreadsheet as
a DSS to change a value (e.g. profit margin) and
see what happens to a related value (e.g. sales) - Do modelling
29DSS
- Helps middle-managers make tactical decisions by
letting them - Do modellingCreating an artificial computerised
model of the real world so they can simulate
actions that are slow, impractical, expensive,
dangerous. (e.g. nuclear explosions,
test-crashing cars, reducing government interest
rates)
30DSS
- Helps middle-managers make tactical decisions by
letting them - Do forecastingPredicting future events based on
current trends.
31MIS Example
- Clint, purchasing officer, needs to see whether
peppermint or spearmint toothpaste is selling
better. - The MIS can produce total sales of both flavour
toothpastes over the past 6 weeks in each state. - Spearmint is especially popular in Victoria, so
Clint increases spearmint toothpaste deliveries
by 5. - What a clever Clint.
32Different information systems
Executive Information System (EIS)
STRATEGIC
(MIS) (DSS)
TACTICAL
(TPS)
OPERATIONAL
Non-management workers
33Strategic information needs
- Top-level managers would be unable to cope with
massive amounts of raw data coming from thousands
of transactions. - Need summarised information to better see trends
and overall shapes.
34EIS
- Executive Information System
- More powerful leather-bound version of MIS
- Lets top managers zoom out to see the whole
organisation, or drill down to see interesting
details from specific regions, times, stores etc. - Expensive to maintain.
35(No Transcript)
36Other types of information systemsused in
organisations
- Office Automation System - Automates manual
processes
37Other types of information systems used in
organisations
- Expert system compiles the knowledge of expert
humans to let non-experts make expert decisions. - Useful when real experts cant be found.
- Diagnose diseases, identify rocks, trouble-shoot
faults in complex systems - Uses simple question answer format to narrow
down possibilities.
38IT APPLICATIONS SLIDESHOWS
- By Mark Kelly
- McKinnon Secondary College
- vceit.com
These slideshows may be freely used, modified or
distributed by teachers and students anywhere on
the planet (but not elsewhere). They may NOT be
sold. They must NOT be redistributed if you
modify them.