Title: ISYS123 week 6 lecture 2 Strategic Information Systems
1ISYS123 week 6 lecture 2 Strategic Information
Systems
2The opportunities for strategic application of
information systems are being limited by your
imagination rather than by computing power
3Strategic Management
- Strategic systems are one of organisations key
responses to business pressures. - Provides the organisation with a focus - this
should be communicated to staff, suppliers and
customers. - Enables organisation to identify its strengths.
- Strategic Management Way an organisation maps
the strategy of its future operations. - Involves long range planning.
- Supports response systems and Innovation.
4Strategic Information Systems (SIS)
- SIS Support or shape a business units
competitive strategy. - SIS has ability to change significantly the
manner in which business is done. - Contribution to strategic goals.
- Increase performance and productivity Delivery,
shipment, dealer services etc. - SIS helps to form Strategic Alliances.
- Creation of application that provide direct
strategic advantage.
5Strategy and Information Systems
- Strategy works at different levels in the
organisation - There should be a corporate strategy
- There should be an information systems strategy
- The IS strategy should be aligned with the
corporate strategy - Much of this section may seem to focus on general
strategy but suitable examples are illustrated to
show the role of IT to help meet strategic goals.
6Strategic Analysis Approaches
- Strategic Analysis Takes into account the
competition in business environment and potential
of using IS and technology to gain competitive
advantage over other companies. - Several Versions of strategic Analysis
- SWOT Analysis.
- Porters Competitive Forces Model.
- Environmental Scanning Using the Web.
A context
7SWOT Analysis
- SWOT Analysis A form of competitive analysis
- Strengths (S) of the organisation
- Weaknesses (W) of the organisation
- Opportunities (O) in the environment
- Threats (T) in the environment
- Yields different results for each business
examined. - S and W are internal whereas O and T are
external.
8Example SWOT Analysis
9SWOT Analysis Toyz2Pleez
10SWOT Analysis Mervs Gardening
Internal to Organisation
External to Organisation
Strengths
Weaknesses
Opportunities
Threats
Poor administrative
Growth market
procedures
Low technology usage
Market image
Recession in
economy
Take advantage of
new technology
Develop new services
Increasing
competition
11Porters Competitive Forces Model
- Porters competitive forces
- Another form of competitive analysis
- Never intended for IS use but often applicable in
a general sense - Porters 5 competitive forces are
- New entrants
- Increased bargaining power of buyers
- Increased bargaining power of suppliers
- Threat of other industries offering substitutes
- Rivalry between competing sellers
12Porters Competitive Forces Model
New Entrants
Substitutes
13Data Mining
- Analysis of large pool of data for decision
making and predicting future. - Find patterns for decision making.
- Example If potato chips are purchased, 65 of
time soda is also purchased. - Better sales promotion
- Identifying individual customers.
- Identifying product combinations purchased.
- Predicting customer loyalty.
- Customer characteristics identification
14Using IT for Porters Competitive Forces Model
Value chain
- Use of Extranets and EDI
- Proper supplier interface.
- Shrinks order time and costs.
- Supplier can also be involved in design phase.
- Extranet Secure network that allows business
partners to access portions of each others
networks. - Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
Computer-to-computer direct communication of
standard business transactions among business
partners.
15Value Chain Analysis
- Value Chain Analysis A powerful tool for
analysing activities within an organisation that
bring product and services to market. - Determines profit margin.
- Note Value chain primarily deals with internal
factors unlike competitive forces model which
deals with external factors. - Key Questions
- Specific activities to create new
products/services - Specific activities to enhance market penetration
-
16Value Chain Analysis
- Resources (inputs) are brought into the
organisation, processed and then sold (outputs) - Improvements can be made in the each of the
primary secondary activities in the value chain
17Value Chain Analysis
- Primary activities Activities most directly
related to the production and distribution of a
firms products and services. - Inbound logistics,
- Operations,
- Outbound logistics,
- Marketing, Service
18Value Chain Analysis
- Secondary/Support activities Activities that
make the delivery of the primary activities of a
firm possible. - Administration,
- Research and development,
- Human resource management and
- Information systems development
19Strategic Analysis of Dell using Value Chain
- Assembles computers on customer request.
- Direct interface to customer.
- Inbound Logistics critical for Dell.
- Handled by Just in Time Inventory SystemStocking
of small amount of raw material. - Marketing/sales deal directly with customers.
20IS and Value Chain
- Primary activities are key tasks that return most
value, secondary activities are support tasks
(e.g. admin) here Web applications add value to
both.
21Frito Lay uses IT and Value Chain
- Frito Lay Worlds largest snack food producer.
- Centralised SIS.
- Sales information collected store by store
- Information on competing products/new product
launches. - Fed electronically into the central system.
- Field data data from chain improves product
development/placement strategies.
22Environmental Scanning Using Web
- Companies must have effective methods for
obtaining information about changing Business
Environment. - Market research /analysis via third party
expensive. - Web Cost effective tool for gathering
competitive intelligence. - Note Environmental scanning not a form of
competitive analysis in its own right. - University Example Information about
competitors courses, pricing strategy etc.
23Outsourcing as a Strategy
- Outsourcing The practice of contracting computer
centre operations, telecommunication networks, or
application development to external vendors. - For cost savings.
- Benefits
- Savings on IS/IT
- Better planning.
- Better decision making.
- Access better skills.
- Access better hardware/software.
- Knowledge transfer
24When to Use Outsourcing
- To reduce costs or offload some of the work of IS
department. - When the firms existing IS capabilities are
- Limited.
- Ineffective.
- Technically inferior.
- To improve the contribution of IT to business
performance. - To create new sources of revenue and profit.
25Aligning IS With Business Goals
- The IS strategic plan must be conformant with the
business plan (top down). For some organisations,
the IS is the business plan. - Care must be taken to avoid developing systems
which - Time consuming/ High Cost.
- No significant returns to Organisation.
- Displacing more worthwhile projects
- Poorly perceived by the customers and/or
employees.
26Using IS to Enable Change
- Business Process Improvement (BPI) Improvement
of existing Business Processes. - Business Process Reengineering (BPR) Fundamental
rethinking and redesign of business processes to
achieve dramatic improvements in critical,
contemporary measures of performance. - Eliminate Wastes, repetition
- Improve cost, quality, service.
27Process of making Peanut Butter
BPI Introducing Automation
28Sustainable Competitive Advantage
- IT leading to competitive advantage often not
sustainable - Competitors implement the same technologies.
- For sustainable advantage
- Create barriers to entry through patents,
monopoly. - Be the first to develop systems with high
switching costs. - Develop technologies that change underlying
nature of industry. - Cultivate/hire people with excellent IS
management skills. - Knowledge management
29Knowledge Management and Competitive Advantage
- Knowledge asset
- Exists in employee minds as well as in tangible
form. - Knowledge Management Extracting value from
knowledge assets. - Knowledge has 2 forms
- Explicit Formalised
- Tacit Informal.
- Extracting value from tacit challenging for an
organisation. Why?? - Aim of IS To convert tacit knowledge to Explicit
knowledge
30Knowledge Management using IS
- Northrup Grumman Air Combat Systems (ACS)
Primary contractor for designing combat
aircrafts. - Losing experts frequently Skilled engineers
leaving the organisation. - ACS identified 200 subject matter experts in 100
knowledge cells Armaments, software,
Manufacturing. - Created a web site for each cell identifying the
expert and relevant information (FAQs) - Central repository to gather and disseminate
useful files in particular area of expertise.
31Knowledge Management Systems (KMS)
- KMS Information technologies that enable
exchange of knowledge among employees and storage
of knowledge in directories called Knowledge
repositories. - Sharing of knowledge Web based discussion
boards. - Knowledge repository Databases with Web
interfaces. - Knowledge representation Expert Systems.
32The Learning Organisation
- Peter Senge (1990) coined the term to describe
companies whose ability to learn will provide
them with a competitive advantage. - Learning Organisation An organisation that
learns and encourages learning among its people. - Promotes exchange of information
- Produces a very flexible organisation
33The Learning Organisation
- A company which creates new knowledge may not
manage it effectively - The learning organisation and knowledge
management should go hand in hand. - How many companies can you think of which have a
feedback mechanism in the systems and processes
for learning?