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Week 5 Monday, February 20

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Title: Week 5 Monday, February 20


1
Week 5Monday, February 20
  • Networked Organizations
  • IT Infrastructure and Operations
  • Strategic Alignment
  • IT Adoption

2
Leveraging IT
Business
IT
Alignment
Vision
Strategy
Strategy
Business networks (Competitive Advantage)
Process Reengineering (Control, enhancing,
leveraging)
Capabilities
Capabilities
IT infrastructure
Alignment
Value
3
Management Challenge Issues
  • IT infrastructure as a strategic resource
  • Types of infrastructures
  • Independent - without regard to strategies
  • Reactive - development in reaction to a
    particular thrust
  • Interdependent - coalignment with the strategic
    context
  • Modifications to the IT infrastructure signal
    implications for possible changes and
    improvements in strategy, while modifications to
    strategic thrusts trigger appropriate changes in
    the IT infrastructure

4
Move to Networked Organizations
IT-Enabled Networks
Need to Effectively Manage Organizational
Interdependence
Need to Increase Organizational Performance
Competitive Business Environment
5
Move to Networked Organizations
IT-Enabled Networks
Need to Effectively Manage Organizational
Interdependence
  • Global marketplace
  • New and powerful strategies of globalization
  • Advances and diffusion of IT into businesses

Need to Increase Organizational Performance
Competitive Business Environment
6
Move to Networked Organizations
  • Compressed time to market
  • Organizational service to the customer
  • Product and process quality
  • Managing risk obsolesce, inadequacy,
    misunderstanding
  • Managing costs
  • Partnerships with other organizations

IT-Enabled Networks
Need to Effectively Manage Organizational
Interdependence
Need to Increase Organizational Performance
Competitive Business Environment
7
Move to Networked Organizations
IT-Enabled Networks
  • Improve coordination and cooperation
  • Shared decision making
  • Moving from silos to enterprise

Need to Effectively Manage Organizational
Interdependence
Need to Increase Organizational Performance
Competitive Business Environment
8
Move to Networked Organizations
  • Integration to coordinate across functional
    boundaries, yet along organizational structure
  • Managements reach to all levels of the
    organization
  • Exchange of information

IT-Enabled Networks
Need to Effectively Manage Organizational
Interdependence
Need to Increase Organizational Performance
Competitive Business Environment
9
Leveraging IT
Business
IT
Alignment
Vision
Strategy
Strategy
Business networks (Competitive Advantage)
Process Reengineering (Control, enhancing,
leveraging)
Capabilities
Capabilities
IT infrastructure
Alignment
Value
10
Business Opportunities and Market Potentials
  • By 2008, half of the US population (approx. 250
    million) will purchase its goods and services
    online through the Internet (vs. 30 percent in
    2004)
  • Estimated spending per buyer will average 780
    (vs. 585 in 2004)
  • Translates to 117 billion in retail sales
  • B2C e-business poses several new challenges
  • Trend toward selling micro-segmented, tailored
    products and services
  • Requires businesses to establish and build closer
    learning relationships with their customers

11
Investments
  • For example
  • Worldwide investments in CRM technology (software
    and technology services) in 2002 estimated at
    USD2.3 billion
  • Investments were predicted to quadruple to 10.8
    billion in 2004

12
Emerging IT Strategic Role
  • IT offers the capability to redefine the
    boundaries of markets and structural
    characteristics, alter the fundamental rules and
    basis of competition, define business scope, and
    provide a new set of competitive weapons.
  • N. Venkatraman, 1991
  • (from Corporations of the 1990s)

13
New technologies open new opportunities
How does a business benefit from new technologies?
14
MIT90 FrameworkFive Inter-Related Components
Organization and coordination
Structure
Information Technology
Vision and direction
Planning and control
Strategy
Management Processes
Technology
Individuals and Roles
Human resources
Dynamic Equilibrium Any change to a component
requires an adjustment to the others
15
Architecture vs. Infrastructure
  • Architecture a blueprint that shows
    interrelationships of the components of a system
  • Emphasis on the whats
  • Based on the business model
  • IT Infrastructure implementation of the
    architecturePurpose To deliver the right
    information to the right people at the right time

16
Architecture
  • Defines guidelines and standards
  • Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)
  • Emphases on accessibility of others systems to
    data and functions, and reusability of
    programming code
  • Supports the organization's agility
  • Four attributes Distributed vs. Centralized
  • Location of processing
  • Connectivity among processors
  • Location of data repository (data storage)
  • Systemwide rules (information security,
    accessibility, etc.)

17
IT ArchitectureAnother View
  • defines the technical computing, information
    management, and communications platform.
    provides an overall picture of the range of
    technical options available to a firm, and as
    such, it also implies the range of business
    options.

Enables Opportunities
Coordination (information flow and linkages)
Vision
Control
What design gives the organization the best use
of its information? What technology
configurations will best support the business?
18
InfrastructureDelivering the right information
to the right people at the right time
  • Delivering IT resources to support users
    throughout the organization
  • Four layer infrastructure (Weill and Broadbent)
  • IT components
  • Human IT infrastructure
  • Shared IT services services that users can draw
    upon and share to conduct business
  • Shared and standard IT applications stable
    applications that change less frequently

19
IT Infrastructure
  • Three categories
  • Network technologies that permit exchange of
    information between processing units and
    organizations
  • Processing systems encompass hardware and
    software that provide an organizations ability
    to handle business transactions
  • Facilities physical systems that house and
    protecting computing and network devices

20
IT Infrastructure Network
  • Management issues
  • Selecting technologies and standards
  • Selecting partners and managing their
    relationships
  • Assuring reliability
  • Maintaining security

21
IT Infrastructure Network
  • Technological Elements
  • Local area networks (LANs)
  • Hubs, switches, wireless access points and
    network adapters
  • Wide area networks (WANs)
  • Routers
  • Firewalls and other security systems and devices
  • Caching, content acceleration and other
    specialized network devices

22
IT Infrastructure Processing Systems
  • Management issues
  • Deciding what to keep in-house vs. out-sourced
  • Deploying, growing an modifying
  • Enterprise system vs. best of breed hybrid
  • Managing incidents
  • Recovering from disasters

23
IT Infrastructure Processing Systems
  • Technological elements
  • Client devices and systems
  • Server devices and systems
  • Mainframe devices and systems
  • Middleware
  • Infrastructure management systems
  • Business applications

24
IT Infrastructure Facilities
  • Management issues
  • Governance Internal vs. external management
  • Aligning the facilities and business models
  • Assuring reliability
  • Maintaining security

25
IT Infrastructure Facilities
  • Technological elements
  • Building and physical spaces
  • Network conduits and connections
  • Power
  • Environmental controls
  • Security

26
Potential Benefits of a Real-time Infrastructure
  • Better data, better decisions synchronizing
    data to ensure their quality and reliability
  • Consistency throughout the enterprise
  • Improved process visibility open standards,
    open interconnectivity between business partners
  • Improved process efficiency enhanced process
    visibility and quicker response to changes in the
    environment
  • Sense and respond sensing actual events (e.g.,
    customer demand) vs. forecasting outcomes

27
Infrastructure Another View
  • IT infrastructure as a strategic resource
  • Types of infrastructures
  • Independent - without regard to strategies
  • Reactive - development in reaction to a
    particular thrust
  • Interdependent - coalignment with the strategic
    context
  • Modifications to the IT infrastructure signal
    implications for possible changes and
    improvements in strategy, while modifications to
    strategic thrusts trigger appropriate changes in
    the IT infrastructure

28
Five Levels of IT-Induced Reconfigurations
Greater degree of business transformation Greater
range of potential benefits
Radical
Business Process Redesign
Business Network Redesign
Business Scope Redefinition
Maximum exploitation of available IT capabilities
Alignment between technology and the organization
Internal Integration
Evolutionary
Local exploitation
29
1. Local Exploitation
  • Exploitation of IT within a business function
  • Development of applications that improve task
    efficiency
  • Target functional-specific goals without
    influencing related areas of operations

30
Local Exploitation Managerial implications
  • Identification of high-leverage activities
  • Effective systems must be within the context of
    competitive and organizational conditions, and
    strategic thrusts
  • Rejection of generic strategic information
    systems
  • Specifically designed systems that provide
    maximal benefits
  • Recognition of the scope of transformation
  • Other areas of operation should be aware of the
    localized system benefits

31
Enablers and Inhibitors
Enablers
Inhibitors
Local Exploitation
  • Technological
  • Favorable cost-performance trends
  • Vendor push - system solutions
  • Organizational
  • Localized impact
  • Ease of assessing efficiency benefits
  • Minimal disturbance to operations
  • Technological
  • Obsolescence
  • Further reduction in cost-performance
  • Organizational
  • Lack of strategic vision
  • Unwillingness to recognize the strategic role of
    IT and IS

IT-Induced Reconfiguration
32
2. Internal Integration
  • The deployment of a common IT platform serves to
    integrate the organizations business processes,
    potentially enhancing efficiency and
    effectiveness
  • IT capabilities are exploited in all the possible
    activities within the business process
  • Technical integration
  • Integrating systems and applications using a
    common IT platform
  • Organizational integration
  • Integration of roles and responsibilities that
    exploits the technical integration capabilities

33
Internal IntegrationBenefits
  • Efficiency
  • Compression of time and distance leading to cost
    savings
  • Effectiveness
  • Opportunities to develop new competitive weapons
    or value-added services

34
Internal Integration Managerial Implications
  • Articulation of the logic and rationale for
    internal integration
  • Serves as the basis for developing detailed
    technological and organizational decisions to
    achieve integration
  • Recognition of the dynamics of integration
  • Constant review and reassessment of the business
    integration requirements through the IT platform
    are necessary as business conditions and
    technological developments evolve over time

35
Enablers and Inhibitors
Enablers
Inhibitors
Internal Integration
  • Technological
  • Increasing connectivity
  • Favorable cost-performance trends
  • Vendor push-system solutions
  • Organizational
  • Strategic vision for integration
  • Centrality of IT to the strategic context
  • Technological
  • Uncertainty
  • Integration costs
  • Organizational
  • Lack of strategic vision
  • Organizational inertia and resistance to change
  • Centralization-decentralization conflict

IT-Induced Reconfiguration
Idiosyncratic
36
3. Business Process Redesign
  • Revolutionary changes in the design of
    organizational processes are necessary to best
    exploit the emerging technological capabilities
  • Reconfiguration of the business using IT as a
    central lever
  • Business processes are redesigned to maximally
    exploit the available IT capabilities
  • Redesign of relevant processes
  • Respecification of organizational roles,
    reporting relationships, and managerial
    responsibilities

37
Business Process RedesignManagerial Implications
  • Recognition of the nature and impact of business
    process redesign
  • Recognizing and understanding the scope and
    impact of potential IT-enabled process redesign
  • The role of strategy in business process redesign
  • Balance between technological and organizational
    capabilities
  • Dependent on the goals and strategies of the
    organization

38
Enablers and Inhibitors
Business Process Redesign
Enablers
Inhibitors
  • Technological
  • Favorable cost-performance trends
  • Organizational
  • Awareness of the power of IT
  • Willingness to make quantum changes
  • Marketplace
  • Competitive pressure
  • Technological
  • Uncertainty
  • Redesign costs
  • Organizational
  • Lack of strategic vision
  • Organizational inertia and resistance to change
  • Cost of transforming the organization

IT-Induced Reconfiguration
39
4. Business Network RedesignElectronic
Integration
  • Redesigning the nature of exchange among multiple
    participants in a business network through
    electronic integration
  • Reconfiguration of the scope and tasks of the
    business network involved in the creation and
    delivery of products and services
  • Includes business tasks within and outside the
    organization
  • Electronic integration across key partners
    becomes the dominant strategy
  • Business issues involving the relative authority
    and responsibilities of the participants

40
Strategic Options
  • Strategies for business governance
  • Relationships with key participants
  • Loose vs. tight
  • Depends on the partnership and what is expected
    from it
  • Strategies for IT governance
  • Govern IT network across all participants
  • Common vs. unique role

41
Strategic Options
Tight
Collaborative advantage
Business network redesign
Improved efficiency
Electronic integration
Business governance
Electronic infrastructure
Competitive advantage
No strategic advantage
Short-term advantage
Loose
Common
Unique
IT governance
42
Electronic Integration
  • A quasi-firm or a quasi-market mechanism that is
    fundamentally designed and operated through the
    capabilities offered by IT
  • Emerging roles
  • Transactions - supports the exchange of data
  • Inventory - provides a means for determining
    status and triggering events (movement of goods)
  • Process - manages and coordinates processes over
    all parties
  • Expertise - provides intellectual support

43
Business Network RedesignBenefits
  • Operational efficiency
  • Savings in operating costs and time
  • Market positioning
  • Benefits gained by occupying certain positions in
    the marketplace
  • Partnership conditions
  • Scope of the business network in terms of the
    characteristics of the partners
  • Strategic capabilities
  • Extent to which innovative mechanisms can be
    deployed in each role

44
Business Network Redesign Managerial implications
  • Conceptualizing strategies for electronic
    integration in terms of the intersection of three
    key decisions
  • Business governance decisions
  • IT governance decisions
  • Scope of integration
  • Conceptualizing organizational boundary in
    virtual terms

45
Enablers and Inhibitors
Business Network Redesign
Enablers
Inhibitors
  • Ability to specify and/or create standards for
    integration
  • Identification of the value-added service
  • Recognition of mutual benefits
  • Lack of standards
  • Lack of vision and understanding
  • Lack of commitment to integration
  • Possible erosion of market positions

IT-Induced Reconfiguration
46
5. Business Scope Redefined
  • Explicate the logic underlying the portfolio of
    businesses
  • Identify differential strategic thrusts
  • Develop criteria for allocation of scarce
    resources among the businesses
  • Redefinition issues
  • Enlarging the business mission and scope
  • Shifting the business scope

47
Business Scope Redefined
  • Enlarging the business scope
  • Selling information as a new product
  • Offering value-added services related to the
    original business
  • Shifting the business scope
  • Redirecting core scope due to advances in
    technology

48
Management Challenge Issues
  • IT infrastructure as a strategic resource
  • Types of infrastructures
  • Independent - without regard to strategies
  • Reactive - development in reaction to a
    particular thrust
  • Interdependent - coalignment with the strategic
    context
  • Modifications to the IT infrastructure signal
    implications for possible changes and
    improvements in strategy, while modifications to
    strategic thrusts trigger appropriate changes in
    the IT infrastructure

49
Adoption ITAssimilating Emerging Technologies
  • Technology identification and investment
  • High impact, high profile
  • Technological learning and adaptation (light
    fires)
  • Introducing IT to end-user computing
  • Innovation
  • Realization management control (formalization)
  • Controls for the effective use and diffusion of
    IT
  • Maturity/widespread technology transfer
  • Sustained application and introduction of IT

50
Assimilating Emerging Technologies
Phase 1 - Infusion
  • Introduction of new IT
  • Expansion throughout the organization

Phase 2 - Diffusion
  • Setting policy of ITs use (application)

Phase 3 - Policy
Phase 4 - Acceptance
  • Maturation and further assimilation

51
Assimilating Emerging Technologies
Phase 1 - Infusion
  • Technology identification
  • Decision to invest in new IT
  • Complementary project implementations with high
    investment and benefits uncertainty

Phase 2 - Diffusion
Phase 3 - Policy
Phase 4 - Acceptance
52
Assimilating Emerging Technologies
Phase 1 - Infusion
  • Technological learning and adaptation
  • Apply new technology to new tasks

Phase 2 - Diffusion
Phase 3 - Policy
Phase 4 - Acceptance
53
Assimilating Emerging Technologies
Phase 1 - Infusion
Phase 2 - Diffusion
  • Rationalization/Management Control
  • Control for guiding the design and implementation
    of systems (i.e., institutionalizing)

Phase 3 - Policy
Phase 4 - Acceptance
54
Assimilating Emerging Technologies
Phase 1 - Infusion
Phase 2 - Diffusion
  • Maturity/Widespread Technology Transfer
  • Technology embraced throughout the organization
  • New technologies emerge

Phase 3 - Policy
Phase 4 - Acceptance
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