Title: CM51111 Structured Systems Analysis Techniques
1IT PlanningandInformation Strategy
CSM - Week 4
2This week
- Session 1
- Organisations Ideal and Real
- Where are we now?
- Approaches to IT planning
- SPIT
- Session 2
- Porter - Competitive Advantage
- Earl Models and Frameworks
- Essential reading
3The Ideal Organisation
- A defined business strategy
- Total commitment of employees
- Effective organisation
- Lateral, vertical, open and reliable
communication - Effective training and development
- Individual self awareness
- Job satisfaction amongst the employees
4The Real Organisation
- Have difficulties with their information base
- departmental systems, poor corporate standards,
duplication, no easy access to data - There is a resistance to change because power
(knowledge) shifts with IT/IS - IT opponents views are strengthened because of
past experiences of costs running out of control,
system failures etc.
5Overcoming the change barrier
- The provision of effective, quality, and value
for money IT facilities - Provide benefit to the organisation in the
pursuit of its strategic objectives - Support the business needs of the business
overall and the individual organisational units - Enhance the productivity of individual members of
staff
6Stages of DP growth in Organisations
- Where are we in terms of IS/IT development?
- Planning for IT may depend on the stage that the
organisation has reached given the organisations
type and size. - Many tools for analysis
7SIX STAGES OF DP GROWTH
( Nolan )
Transition Point
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Stage 4
Stage 5
Stage 6
INITIATION
CONTAGION
CONTROL
INTEGRATION
MATURITY
81. Initiation Stage
- First Introduction of Computers
- Offline Batch Processing Labour and Cost Saving
- Little Management Interest
- Centralised Information Systems Development
92. Contagion Stage
- Rapid Growth but still centralised
- Move to on-line systems
- Little Management Control, therefore
- IT expenses increase rapidly
103. Control
- Management seek control computing projects
subject to ROI - Planning, standards and methodologies imposed
through management control - Backlog of application development scarce
resources
114. Integration
- Integration via telecommunication and database
technology leads to heavy investment
networks, servers - User involvement and accountability in systems
development - ISD begins to provide service to users (as well
as solutions) - TRANSFORMATION POINT
- Data processing to
- Information and Knowledge processing
125. Data Administration
- Information not processing drives application
portfolio - Database capabilities aid sharing of data and
information - Information shared with other organisations
136. Maturity
- IT planning and development closely co-ordinated
with business development - Corporate system in place
- ISD and users share accountability for allocation
of computing resources - IT is a strategic partner within the organisation
14Nolans Work
- Nolan R. L., Managing the crises in Data
Processing, Harvard Business Review, Vol 16, No
3, March 1973, pp 81-91 - Nolan R. L., Managing Computer Resource a stage
hypothesis, Communications of the ACM, Vol 16, No
3, March 1973, pp 399 405.
15Approaches to I.T. planning
- NO planning
- TRADITIONAL information resource planning
- STRATEGIC information systems planning
- REACTIVE information resource planning
- LINKED information resource planning
16No Planning
- Speaks for itself more of this about than you
might think
17Inputs and Outputs for the Traditional
Information Resource Plan
18Linking Business and IS/IT Strategy
19IT Planning Issues
- Basic IT planning addresses the following four
general issues - 1. Aligning the IT plan with the organizational
business plan - 2. Designing an IT architecture for the
organization in such a way that users,
applications, and databases can be integrated
and networked together. - 3. Efficiently allocating information systems
development and operational resources among
competing applications. - 4. Planning information systems projects so that
they are completed on time and within budget and
include the specified functions
20IT Planning
- A Strategic information systems plan identifies a
set of computer-based applications that will help
a company reach its business goals. - IT planning identifies the applications
portfolio, a list of major, approved IS projects
that are consistent with the long-range plan. - Initial mechanisms addressed operational
planning, and eventually shifted to managerial
planning.
21A Generic/General Approach to SPIT
22Two views
- Four stage modelComponents of an IS/IT
Strategy PlanThere are other views
23Four-Stage Model of IT Planning
24IT Planning Stages
25Stage 1 Strategic Information Planning
- SIP must be aligned with overall organizational
planning and with e-business - To accomplish this alignment, the organization
must execute the following - Set the IT mission.
- Assess the environment.
- Assess existing systems availabilities and
capabilities. - Assess organizational objectives and strategies.
- Set IT objectives, strategies, and policies.
- Assess the potential impacts of IT.
- An organization would conduct the same six steps
for e-business
26Stage 2 Information Requirements Analysis
- Step 1 Define underlying organizational
subsystems. - Step 2 Develop subsystem matrix.
- Step 3 Define and evaluate information
requirements for organizational subsystems. - Step 4 Define major information categories and
map interview results into them - Step 5 Develop information/subsystem matrix.
27Stage 3 Resource Allocation
- Resource allocation consists of developing the
hardware, software, data communications,
facilities, personnel, and financial plans needed
to execute the master development plan defined in
Stage 2. - This stage provides the framework for technology
and labor procurement, and identifies the
financial resources needed to provide appropriate
service levels to users. - Funding requests from the ISD fall into two
categories - Those necessary to stay in business
- Those for improving the information architecture
28Stage 4 Project Planning
- Project Planning provides an overall framework
within which specific applications can be
planned, scheduled, and controlled. - Project Management is covered in another module
29Components of an IS/IT Strategy Plan
- INVESTMENT STRATEGY
- What do we invest in, when and at what cost?
- INFORMATION STRATEGY
- How do we manage and share information?
- ARCHITECTURE STRATEGY
- What technologies do we use and how?
- ORGANISATION STRATEGY
- How do we organise the I.T. function?
30The Investment Strategy
- Must be linked to overall organisational strategy
- Statement of how investment will be made in IS/IT
over a given time period - Arriving at this statement is a difficult process
31The Information Strategy
- Should provide long term benefit by
- creating a stable integrated information
framework - providing a rapid response to dynamic business
needs - improving efficiency and effectiveness in
processing information - improving the overall quality of information
32The Architecture Strategy
- Defines the I.T. infrastructure.
- - The hardware
- - The network structures
- - The operating systems
- - The applications
- Must meet both current and future needs,
- Must be aligned with the organisations overall
strategies
33The Organisational Strategy
- Comprises of many sub-strategies
- Staffing
- Training
- Documentation
- Procurement
- Operations
- Security
- Recovery arrangements
- Development
- Performance monitoring
- Is / it planning
34Benefits of SPIT to Managers
- Effective communication with top management
- Top management support and interest in
systems - Better planning of systems that respond to
business needs - Long-range planning base for data processing ,
resources funding - Agreed system priorities
- Higher probability of delivering systems that are
useful
35Strategy
- Without an understanding of competitive strategy
then all this is gibberish - Take a break