Information Portals

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Information Portals

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Title: Information Portals


1
Information Portals
2
Objectives
  • Define Information Portal
  • Describe the types of portals
  • Describe portal architecture and components
  • Demo a portal

3
Definition
  • Interestingly, definition most commonly used was
    developed by industry analysts working at Merrill
    Lynch
  • They were observing trends in the knowledge
    management sector.

4
Definition
  • "Enterprise Information Portals are applications
    that enable companies to unlock internally and
    externally stored information, and provide users
    a single gateway to personalized information
    needed to make informed business decisions. "
    They are ". . . an amalgamation of software
    applications that consolidate, manage, analyze
    and distribute information across and outside of
    an enterprise (including Business Intelligence,
    Content Management, Data Warehouse Mart and
    Data Management applications.)"
  • Christopher C. Shilakes and Julie Tylman,
    "Enterprise Information Portals," Merrill Lynch,
    Inc., New York, NY, November 16, 1998

5
Key Characteristics
  • EIPs use both "push" and "pull" technologies to
    transmit information to users
  • Push the system can automatically distribute
    (broadcast) information to users on a regular
    basis
  • Pull users can subscribe to information
    available from the portal, which can then be
    distributed to the user on a regular basis.
    Additionally, users can search for information on
    an ad hoc basis
  • EIPs provide "interactivity" the ability to "
    question and share information on" user
    desktops
  • EIPs provide the ability for individuals to
    collaborate

6
Key Characteristics
  • EIPs integrate disparate sources of data,
    including
  • Web pages,
  • data warehouse/data marts
  • Unstructured information from documents, emails,
    spreadsheets, etc.
  • An EIP allows users to to access both external
    and internal sources of data and information.
  • It is able to support a bi-directional exchange
    of information with these sources. And it is able
    to use the data and information it acquires for
    further processing and analysis.

7
Key Characteristics
  • EIPs provide access to all of these data sources
    through a single user interface (the web). This
    interface allows users to share, manage and
    maintain information.
  • It has been growth of the web that has
    accelerated the adoption of the EIP concept
  • Example Lexis/Nexis portal for law firms
  • http//www.lexisnexis.com/eSolutions/portal/demo/o
    verview5.shtml

8
Example Phillips Electronics
  • European company with 33 Billion sales, 200,000
    employees
  • By 1998, had developed a 800 intranet sites to
    allow users to perform a wide variety of tasks
  • Issues
  • Users required to have multiple user names and
    passwords
  • User interfaces, though web based, were different
  • Sites viewed as confusing a difficult to use

9
Example Philips Electronics
  • In 1999, Philips introduced an EIP, which
    provided
  • Single log on to all intranet applications
  • Single user interface
  • Access to multiple databases from single
    interface
  • Search engine that allows all intranet sites,
    documents and databases to be browsed from common
    interface
  • Provided tools that allows new content to be
    added easily

10
Types of Portals - EIP
  • Enterprise Information (Intranet) Portals
  • These are portals that are designed to provide
    employees in an organization tools and
    information that allow them to make better
    decisions and do their jobs more efficiently.
  • An organization can implement all or some of the
    following types of portals.

11
Types of Portals - EIP
  • Business intelligence portals - A business
    intelligence portal is a corporate portal that
    enables users to access and produce reports for
    decision-making purposes on enterprise-wide
    databases. Information Advantage and Brio were
    the first companies to combine business
    intelligence software with a corporate portal.

12
Types of Portals - EIP
  • Business area (Intranet) portals - Business area
    portals support specific functions or processes
    and applications within the enterprise. Examples
    of business area portals include HR (e.g.,
    Authoria, PeopleSoft) ERP (e.g., SAP Portals,
    Oracle) Sales and Marketing e.g., (Siebel) and
    Supply Chain Management (e.g., i2). These
    business area portals are emerging to provide
    greater employee access to information stored in
    enterprise specific applications.

13
Types of Portals - EIP
  • Horizontal portals - Horizontal portals are
    generic in nature and cut across the
    organization. Examples of horizontal portals
    include the following
  • Collaboration -Enterprise Collaborative Portals
    (ECP) - which provide virtual places for people
    to work together
  • Expertise - Enterprise Expertise Portals (EEP) -
    which provide connections between people based on
    their abilities
  • Knowledge Management - Enterprise Knowledge
    Portals (EKP) - which provide all of the above
    and proactively deliver links to content and
    people that are directly relevant to user's tasks
    in real time.

14
Types of Portals - EIP
  • Role portals - support the access and
    availability of personalized information for
    employees, as well as employee self-service.
    Examples
  • Allow employees to manage their RRSP
    contributions and to view their accounts
  • Allow employees to submit dental claims to HR

15
Types of Portals - ebusiness
  • eBusiness Portals facilitate the interaction of
    an organization with customers, suppliers and
    partners
  • Extended enterprise portals - Examples of
    extended enterprise portals are
  • business to customer (B2C) which extend the
    enterprise to its customers for the purpose of
    ordering, billing, customer service,
    self-service, etc.
  • business to business (B2B) which extends the
    enterprise to its suppliers and partners. B2B
    portals are transforming the supplier and value
    chain process and relationships.

16
Types of Portals - ebusiness
  • e-Marketplace portals Provide a set of services
    to a marketplace
  • An example of an e-marketplace portal is
    CommerceOne.net. Commerce One.net focuses on the
    North American Maintenance, Repair and Operations
    (MRO) market. Commerce One.net provides commerce
    related services to its community of buyers,
    sellers and net market makers.
  • http//www.commerceone.net/

17
Types of Portals - ebusiness
  • VerticalNet.
  • VerticalNet Marketplaces portal connects buyers
    and sellers online by providing industry-specific
    news and related product and service information.
  • Buyers can find the information they need to
    quickly locate, source and purchase products and
    services online.
  • Suppliers are able to generate sales leads by
    showcasing their products and services across
    multiple marketplaces to reach highly qualified
    buyers.

18
Types of Portals - eBusiness
  • ASP portals - ASP portals are B2B portals to
    allow business customers the ability to rent both
    products and services. Examples
  • ServicePort is both an application and web
    information portal for the professional services
    industry.
  • Salesforce.com manages the sales and reporting
    process for a distributed mobile sales team.
  • MySAP.com and oraclesmallbusiness.com are
    examples of complete enterprise systems offered
    through a portal framework via the web.

19
Types of Portals - Personal
  • Pervasive portals or mobility portals - These are
    portals that are embedded in web phones, cellular
    phones, wireless PDAs, pagers, etc.
  • Personal or mobility portals are becoming
    increasingly popular and important for consumers
    and employees to obtain product and services
    information, prices, discounts, availability,
    order status, payment status, shipping status,
    scheduling and installation information, etc.
  • Appliance portals - These are portals that are
    embedded in TVs (WebTV), automobiles (OnStar),
    etc.

20
Types of Portals - Public
  • Public or Mega (Internet) portals - Organizations
    that fit into this category are becoming "new
    media" companies and are focused on building
    large on-line audiences with large demographics
    or professional orientation. There are two major
    types of public portals
  • General public portals or mega portals address
    the entire Internet versus a specific community
    of interest and include Yahoo, Google, Overture,
    AltraVista, AOL, MSN, Excite, etc. General public
    portals or mega portals will become fewer and
    consolidate over time.

21
Types of Portals - Public
  • Industrial portals, vertical portals or vortals.
  • Vertical portals or vortals are rapidly growing
    and they are focused on specific narrow audiences
    or communities such as consumer goods, computers,
    retail, banking, insurance, etc.
  • Examples of vertical portals include iVillage,
    which focuses on families The Thomas Register of
    American Manufacturers for products and services
    and Bitpipe, that is a syndicator of information
    technology content etc.

22
User communities
  • Portals serve 4 distinct communities
  • Employees
  • Customers
  • Suppliers
  • Trading Partners
  • Each community has distinct business
    requirements to be met by a portal

23
Portal Functions
  • Taxonomy defines how content is categorized
    within the portal. Each organization defines its
    own taxonomy based on its requirements
  • Directory - The portal's directory is its
    organization of content into a structure and
    hierarchy of categories. The directory is the
    implementation within the portal of the
    enterprise's taxonomy.

24
Portal Functional Components
  • Browse / Navigate Documents - This feature
    enables portal users to manually locate content
    by navigating the directory structure.
  • http//www.znow.com/portaldemo.htm
  • Search all portals provide a robust search
    capability based on keywords, phrases and themes
  • Search typically done against an index built by
    by the portal
  • Portals allow searches across different types of
    structured and unstructured content.

25
Portal Components
  • Content management - Content management is the
    process of authoring, contributing, reviewing,
    approving, publishing, delivering, and
    maintaining content integrated with or accessed
    from a portal or other web site.
  • Content management usually refers to text and
    graphical content that is viewed in a web browser

26
Portal Components
  • Document management - Document management is
    similar to content management, although it
    typically refers to the control and management of
    an enterprise's documents (other than web pages)
    stored in electronic files, including scanned
    images of paper documents.
  • It also often includes check in and check out of
    documents to ensure version control.

27
Portal Functions
  • End User Customization - Customization refers to
    the capability of portals to allow users to
    specify their own preferences for the user
    interface look-and-feel attributes.
  • Personalization -Each individual user can have
    settings for each of the portal functions that
    they use. A portal provides the framework for
    users to store the settings and tailor the
    content that they are interested in seeing.

28
Portal Functional Components
  • Expert Locator - In addition to helping users
    locate information that is important to them, a
    portal can be very useful in finding "experts"
    within the organization.
  • Portal may provide an index (yellow pages) by
    expertise type and means for contacting/interactin
    g with the expert.

29
Portal Functions
  • Collaboration -Collaboration functions enable a
    group of users to work together to share ideas
    and complete work as a team.
  • Collaboration includes electronic interactions
    among users in different physical locations in
    real time ("synchronous") and at different times
    ("asynchronous").
  • Forms of collaboration are instant messaging
    ("chat") systems, team workspace, and discussion
    forums, document sharing, electronic white
    boarding, virtual conferencing, and video
    conferencing.
  • http//market-srv.webex.com/dailydemo_randp/

30
Portal Functional Components
  • Business Intelligence - Most enterprise portals
    can act as a universal front end to the different
    components of a BI solution, helping its users
    make better business decisions. BI includes
    enterprise reporting, ad hoc reporting, OLAP and
    multidimensional analysis, and exception
    reporting.
  • Business Objects Portal

31
Portal Functional Components
  • Alerts - An alert is a notification of an event
    or change based on one or more conditions
    involving single or multiple information or
    application sources.
  • These notifications can be delivered within a
    portal as well as by other mechanisms such as
    e-mail or wireless device.
  • Alerts usually accommodate individual user
    preferences, such as the delivery mechanism and
    format, the conditions that should trigger an
    alert, and the frequency of notification.

32
Portal Functional Components
  • Subscribe / What's new - Many portals (and other
    web sites and applications) allow individuals to
    register an interest in or "subscribe" to a
    particular component or category of content.
    Portals will then notify the subscribers when the
    content changes or new content is added.

33
Portal Functional Components
  • Workflow - Workflow refers to the efficient
    electronic management of a business process,
    including roles, tasks, templates, checkpoints,
    approvals, and escalation procedures.
  • Within a portal, workflow systems are
    administered and integrated to achieve the
    interaction between different component modules
    of the portal through which the business process
    flows.
  • In addition, notification alerts that a workflow
    step or task have been assigned are typically
    delivered through the portal to its users

34
Work Flow Example create a new web page
Workflow system notes that based rules for web
pages created by user A, user B must review and
approve. Workflow system routes page to User B
and sends an email indicating a page awaiting
review
User B reviews and approves
Web page is published on site
User A Creates, edits and publishes a new web
page
Once User A publishes, workflow system notified
Once User B approves, workflow system notifies
operations group that new page available to be
placed on site
  • Work Flow System
  • Rules
  • Roles
  • Routing

35
Portal Functional Components
  • Single sign-on - The ability to see information
    from multiple systems, in multiple formats, all
    presented on a single page view is perhaps the
    largest benefit to a portal's user community.
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