Title: Business and ICT
1Business and ICT
2Core Business Systems
- Basic business systems
- serve the most elementary day-to-day activities
of an organisation - support all operations of the business
- supply data for higher-level management decisions
(Management Information Systems -MIS)
3Main Areas
- Manufacturing and production
- Sales and marketing
- Accounting and finance
- Human resources
4Manufacturing and production
- Systems that supply data to operate, monitor and
control the production process. - procurement management
- purchasing, receiving, inventory systems
shipping, - manufacturing systems
- process control, CAD, CAM, robotics,
5Impact of ICT on Manufacturing and Production1.
Procurement Management
- Traditionally in-house and paper based
- Now suppliers linked to manufacturer
electronically - Orders placed and processed over network
- Stock control database(s) tracks all items
- Funds transferred using EDI
- Much quicker and cheaper than paper based
- Many firm use just in time systems for
materials stock - No large warehouse for materials
- Materials delivered and used on same day
6Impact of ICT on Manufacturing and Production2.
Manufacturing systems
- Traditionally - manual systems, lots of workers,
long lead times etc. - CAD
- originally just drawing .
- now can test items before manufacture
(simulations). - Rapid prototyping systems can even build 3d
model of item. - Lasers scan tank of liquid resin to produce solid
resin/plastic model
7Impact of ICT on Manufacturing and Production2.
Manufacturing systems (continued)
- CAM
- originally basic CNC machines
- Now integrated with CAD system (and others)
- CIM (computer integrated manufacturing)
- Integration of CAD, CAM and all other systems
- including stock ordering, warehouse, delivery
systems - Highly flexible, can quickly produce new
products, much cheaper, fewer workers - Widely used in consumer electronics
8Impact of ICT on Manufacturing and Production2.
Manufacturing systems (continued)
- Robotics
- Widespread use
- basic
- pick and place
- intermediate
- welding/painting
- advanced
- integrated manufacturing cell
- robot(s) performs many functions from manufacture
to paint and finish
9Sales and marketing
- Systems that support the sales and marketing
function by facilitating the movement of goods
and services from producers to customers. - order processing - process orders, produce
invoices, supply data for sales analysis and
inventory control
- point-of-sale - capture sales data at cash
register of by scanner - sales support - customer records, follow-up
- marketing - advertising, telesales, mailing
- customer credit authorisation - advise on credit
to be allowed to customer.
10Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing1. Orders
and Sales
- Most ordering functions automated
- Linked directly to stock databases - E.G. Argos
stock check - Extensive use of data capture at POS
- Bar codes - on goods
- Magnetic stripe - on credit/debit cards
- Smart Card
- Biometric Security Systems
- Electronic Funds Transfer at Point of Sale
(EFTPOS) - Can be linked to customer database
- Provides real time sales information
- Can be used to monitor employee work rate
11Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing1. Orders
and Sales (cont)
- Typical Sales System
- When goods purchased
- in-store database updated
- money sent by EDI direct to stores bank
- At end of day -
- all files sent electronically to main office
- update of central stock database and stock orders
generated - goods shipped to stores by next day - just in
time system - customer record updated
12Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing1. Orders
and Sales (cont)
- E-commerce
- Major impact on selling of goods
- Low overheads -
- no stores e.g. Amazon books
- some companies do not hold any stock at all
- goods come direct from manufacturer
- fewer employees
- Threat to traditional high street stores
- Customers have concerns on security of data
13Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing2. Sales
Support and Marketing
- Businesses making increasing use of customer
records (esp. Retail). - Directed marketing
- In store customer specific marketing
- Promotions for regular customers - frequent
traveller schemes etc. - Value of many dot coms based on customer record
database. - E-mail marketing increasing
14Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing2. Sales
Support and Marketing (cont)
- Email
- Increasing use in all aspects of companies
- Typical Uses
- Basic in company communication - Intranet
- E-mail adverts - bulk mailing
- Sending attachments - photos, plans, diagrams,
catalogues - Communication with sales/work force off site.
- Communication with customers
- after sales support etc.
- pre-sales advice
- forwarding mail to relevant dept.
15Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing2. Sales
Support and Marketing (cont)
- Web Sites
- Most companies have at least point of presence
site - Used as marketing/advertising tool
- Some have full e-commerce
- Some offer incentives for ordering from site
- Small (UK) companies still reluctant to join in
- Cost, unsure of benefits, dot.com collapses
- Security of funds transfer etc.
- Some companies only exist on the web
- No physical site
- Many cost and other advantages
16Impact of ICT on Sales and Marketing3.
Electronic Funds and Credit
- Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) widely used
- Major benefits to businesses
- Funds transferred immediately to bank - unlike
check/cash - Fraud still a considerable problem
- Increasing use of IT to decide on credit
worthiness - From simple credit scoring to expert systems
- Most frequent use of Data Protection Act rights
17Accounting and Finance
- Systems that maintain records concerning the
flow of funds in the firm and produce financial
statements, such as balance sheets and income
statements. - Among the earliest systems to be computerised.
- Examples of accounting systems
- accounts receivable, accounts payable, general
ledger, payroll - Examples of financial systems
- cash management, loan management, check
processing, securities trading.
18Impact of ICT on Accounting Systems.
- Core use of IT in business.
- Large businesses use mainframe computers
- Vast storage required
- Fast processing e.g. payroll, invoicing
- Utility companies have some of the biggest
computer systems in the UK - millions of
customers - Increasingly used for financial modelling
19Human resources
- Systems that deal with recruitment, placement,
performance evaluation, compensation, and career
development of the firms employees.
- Examples
- personnel record keeping, applicant tracking,
positions, training and skills, employee
benefits, time keeping etc.
20Impact of ICT on Human Resources
- All systems make use of vast storage and fast
retrieval capabilities - Increasingly used for assessing training needs
- Often used when down sizing
- Can be linked to time keeping /productivity
systems - Many implications for Data Protection Act
- Especially security, sensitive data
21The End