Title: MIS Case Presentation Group 3 July 23, 2001
1MIS Case PresentationGroup 3 July 23, 2001
- Brian Buckham
- Xiangrong Cheng
- Muriel Furtado
- Ryan McNeice
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3Part 1 The Set-Up
Frito Lays Mission Statement To become the
worlds favorite convenience fun foods
company.
4Frito-Lay, Inc. Facts
- 30,000 employees nationwide.
- 12,000 person sales force.
- 750,000 sales calls weekly.
- 41 manufacturing plants / 26 states.
- 30,000 packages of snacks per minute.
- 2.3 Billion lbs. of potatoes a year.
- 775 million pounds of corn.
5Problems
- William Korn resigns Dec. 1986 when profits
plummet. - What led to Korns resignation?
- Micromarketing strategy brought Frito-Lay to a
halt. - New strategies, but no management,
organizational processes or information
systems to support changes. - Old decision making processes, even though
they had implemented new strategies. - -Paper based processes.
- -Hierarchical management control systems.
-
6Procedural Problems
- New products went stale when salespeople realized
products werent selling. - Promotional information hit salespeople long
after warehouse inventories were increase. - However, promotions would also come and go and
inventories were never increased. - The problem was not with the strategy, but lack
of new mind-sets, process controls, and
information systems necessary to enable the
success of micromarketing.
7Solutions at Frito-Lay, Inc.
- January 1987 Michael Jordan, CEO of Pepsi
Worldwide Foods, takes over. - Returned Frito-Lay to a national pattern of
decision making strategy. - Reinstated tight control of strategy execution.
- Immediately abandoned the micromarketing
strategy. - Returned decision rights, promotions,
- product mix to corporate headquarters.
8Key Accounts/Small Customers
- Jordan understood the necessity of understanding
the key accounts and small customers. - Jordan maintained the segmentation of the work
force. - Proceeded with the implementation of the HHC
(Hand Held Computers) and information systems. - Reaffirmed Frito-Lays need for change the
correctness of the original micromarketing
strategy.
9New Strategy, Refocus, Lessons Learned
- Vision for change had to be corporate wide.
- Hybrid of Centralization Decentralization
- IT would need to support centralized control
decentralized decision-making, but would need to
come before organizational re-engineering.
101987-1989Jordan Senior Management Implement
Initiatives
- Improved productivity gained control of
operations. - Targeted at understanding the business,
redesigning work, productivity quality within
these areas. - End of 1989, shifted towards integrating,
streamlining time synchronizing operating
processes. - Integrated the IS to allow line employees and
managers to access timely relevant information
for micromarketing strategy.
11Functional Redesign
- Early 1987 Jordan divides domestic corp. into 32
geographic areas called Frito-Lay Market Areas
(FLMA). - Memos developed, issuing approximate costs,
revenues, contribution to profit. - Memos allow Jordan to focus on the 10 worst
FLMAs. - Refocus in Manufacturing Logistics from
1985-1989 leads to additional 500m to bottom
line. - HHC (Hand Held Computer) were a large part of
this overall success.
12HHC Rollout, 1987
- Los Angeles was prototype site.
- 1986 Best Sales Organization (BSO) Award.
- July 1988 rollout was complete (6 months ahead of
schedule). - Jordan asks for 1 sales commitment.
13Part 2 Infrastructure Development
- The Business Cycle
- Organizational Redesign
- Fine Tuning and the Information
- Infrastructure
- Affects of IT
- Where to next?
14A Framework for Organization Design Assessing
Organization Effectiveness
Defining Direction and building infrastructure
Executing and Adapting
Creating and Sustaining Value
Value creation
Environmental Context and Resources
Units, groupings
Society and government loyalty
Partnter loyalty
Incentives
Coordinating mechanisms
Authority
Formal and informal power
Decisions and actions
Customer loyalty
Employee loyalty
Purpose Core Values, Core Competencies
Boundary systems
Strategy
People
Values and Behavior
operation, processes
Control
Work
Management processes
Organizational capabilities, resources, and
leadership
Technology
Shareholder loyalty
Information and communication infrastructure
15- Defining Direction
- How should the organization be designed to
satisfy our core values, utilize competencies,
and build on our information capabilities? - Executing and Adapting
- -How do we build control mechanisms, authority
structures (org. design), and culture in our
organization? - Sustaining Value
- -In what ways can we utilize our infrastructure
and capabilities to grow in the marketplace?
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17Building the Infrastructure
- Two types of information would be needed to
support the organizations new strategy - Improved information was needed to enable the
company to streamline, integrate, and
time-synchronize operating processes - Redesign management processes
- structures,
- systems,
- decisions,
- that controlled and coordinated operations.
18This resulted in the creation of the Pipeline
Project and Management Support System Projects
- These projects were initiated to support the
activities that contributed to redesign
activities within and across functional units. - The major goal
- To redesign operations (and the information
supporting them) across the business rather than
attempting to optimize each function.
19Linking the Organization
The goal was to use information technology to
link each area of the company.
In effect, they were removing traditional
departmental barriers and improving
cross-functional information exchange.
20So, what would be the goal of the reorganization?
STRATEGIES
POLICIES
ORGANIZATION
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATION!
Dr. Chen, Information, Organization and Control
21- Streamlining the business cycle involved
simultaneous redesign of both organizational and
management processes - Core Operating Processes the primary activities
through which the organization designs, produces,
markets, sells, distributes, and supports its
products. - Management Processes set of activities through
which an organization manages core operating
processes.
22Redesigning the Organization
- Reorganized into four regional offices known as
Area Business Teams (ABTs). - Passed responsibility onto the area managers,
effectively creating a more horizontal
organization with greater control of its
activities. This allowed better information
exchange among the organization. - Corporate structure was significantly altered.
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24- The traditional annual planning cycle was
eliminated in favor of a trimester planning
cycle. -
- The annual operating plan was formulated in the
third trimester.
25Frito Lays Planning Cycle
26Performance Evaluation
- Traditional
- Functional expenses
- Sales revenue
- New Systems
- Area-wide congruent profit objectives
- Encouraged free-thinking and innovation
- Focus on dollar volume AND budgeted expense
targets. - Highlighted the use of IT for cost-tracking and
reporting.
27- Performance monitoring was also altered to focus
on districts and ABTs. The reports were
generated electronically and sent directly to the
off-site headquarters. - This allowed for weekly meetings at all levels
(ABTs, Districts, and Headquarters) for better
decision-making. - Each ABT had an area manager with the authority
to develop systems relevant to his or her area to
control the transition, and these systems fed
directly into the networked system.
28Product Delivery
- Traditional methods required 7 days out of a 35
day product life-cycle. - New systems (PDD and TDD) resulted in one to
two-day delivery. This was accomplished by
bypassing warehouses, and relied on accurate,
real-time information transmission through the
distribution channels.
29Finance Repercussions
- The restructuring and reorganization resulted in
new needs for information. - What good is a PL statement when you can
observe it as an outcome but not understand its
causes? - The finance system changed from giving profit
summaries to providing information on profit
tradeoff decisions. - This was a transformation from reporting outcomes
to building a path from early warning symptoms to
causes to response.
30Tuning the Information Infrastructure
- One of our biggest assets was our information,
and one of our biggest liabilities was our
information. - Area Information Managers (AIM) moved out from
central offices to ABTs to assist managers with
data-related concerns. - Managers were being taught how to use the
information they were gathering to make
decisions. After all, this is the ultimate goal
of information.
31The 1991 Restructuring
1
- What was the most appropriate structure for Frito
Lay? - Business teams increased from 4 to 22.
- Four segments with respective decision rights
(down from 6). - Decision rights were moved once again, resulting
in a more decentralized organization. What were
the advantages?
32The Primary Lesson
- RATHER THAN FOCUSING ON INDIVIDUAL BUSINESS
UNITS, LOOK AT THE ENTIRE MARKETPLACE AND THE WAY
IT INTERACTS WITH THE COMPANY.
33Where to from here?
- Restructuring alone will not solve problems.
Once Frito Lay had developed an organization
built around information sharing and cooperation,
and learned how to use information at the right
level to make decisions, it was time to further
fine-tune the MIS programs. This included the
launch of new and more timely information
gathering, analyzing, and reporting systems.
34Creating and Sustaining Value
35Frito Lays Marketing Strategies
-
- Aggressive advertising
- Diversifying into new markets
- Product differentiation
- Packaging
- Innovative tactics
- Entering new market niches
36Global Market Penetration
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37MIS Tools
- Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
-
- Direct Exchange (DEX)
-
- Management Reporting Systems (MRS)
-
- Executive Support System (ESS)
-
- Decision Support System (DSS)
-
- Packaging Application Expert (PAX)
-
- Consumer Community Portal (CCP)
38What is EDI ?
39EDI Process Model
40EDI's Unique Attributes
- EDI is independent of trading partners'
internal computerized application systems. -
- EDI interfaces with internal application
systems rather than being integrated with them.
- EDI is not limited by differences in computer
or communications equipment of trading
companies.
41EDI Benefits
- Reduction of Paper Work
- One-time data entry
- Reduced errors, improved error detection
- On-line data storage
- Faster management reporting
- Reduced clerical workload and phone chatter
- Higher productivity without increasing staff
42EDI Benefits
- More timely communications
- Rapid exchange of business data
- Elimination of mail charges, courier services
- Reduced inventory safety stocks
- Improved production cycle
- Standard communications
- Customers
- Suppliers
- Banks and financial institutions
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45What is DEX ?
46DEX Process Model
47DEX Benefits
- Retailer
- Capitalizes on the use of the DSD system
- Closes the loop for inventory management
- Provides opportunities for administrative cost
savings - Joint
- Reduces check-in time
- Enables electronic billing and remittance
- Reduces charge-backs for unauthorized items, Pas
- Supplier
- Reduces sales ticket errors
- Avoids manual entry into DSD system
48Additional MIS Tools
- Management Reporting Systems (MRS)
-
- Executive Support System (ESS)
-
- Decision Support System (DSS)
-
- Packaging Application Expert (PAX)
-
- Consumer Community Portal (CCP)
-
49Frito Lays Financial Performance
50Recommendations
- Continue fine-tuning information systems for
better decision-making. - Develop new information/decision-making systems,
ensuring they can be integrated into current
systems. - Continue building systems that can process the
unique database Frito Lay has created must be
value-added. - Develop and implement training programs (both
employees and suppliers) - shared incentive programs
- shared purpose
- top-to-bottom implementation programs
- Continue to focus on value-chain activities and
buyer-supplier relationships. - Industry acquisitions for further top-line
growth. - Finally, modification of strategic initiatives to
form a fit between front-line employees and
customers and information dissemination.
51Questions or Comments?
THE VISION
THE RESULT