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INFORMATION

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Data are streams of raw facts representing events occurring in organizations or ... Michael Vizard, Info World, June 8, 1998. What is an Information System? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INFORMATION


1
INFORMATION
  • What is it?

2
Information???
  • Data that have been shaped into a form that is
    meaningful and useful to human beings.

3
What comes first--the Chicken or the Egg?
  • Information vs. data
  • Data are streams of raw facts representing events
    occurring in organizations or the physical
    environment before they have been organized and
    arranged into a form that people can understand
    or use.

4
Data
  • Data are (Ex names and vital info of CSULA
    students)
  • Stored Facts
  • Inactive (they exist)
  • Technology-based
  • Gathered from various sources

5
Information
  • Information is (Students with 4.0 GPA)
  • Presented facts
  • Active (it enables doing)
  • Business-based
  • Transformed from data

6
The War is Over!
  • During the next three to five years, data traffic
    on telecommunications networks is going to easily
    outstrip voice traffic.
  • Michael Vizard, Info World, June 8, 1998

7
What is an Information System?
  • Any system that provides people with either data
    or information relating to an organizations
    operations.
  • An information system contains information about
    an organization (internal) and its surrounding
    environment (external).
  • The internal environment is the organization.
  • The external environment are the customers,
    suppliers, regulatory agencies, stockholders,
    competitors.

8
Three Basic Activities of an Information System
  • Input--Raw data collected/captured from internal
    or external environments. (raw materials, energy,
    people, money)
  • Processing--Conversion of raw input into a
    meaningful form.
  • Output--Transfers the processed information to
    the people or activities where it will be used.
    (products and services)
  • And then theres the feedback process--this is a
    necessary output activity which is used to
    evaluate/refine the input.

9
MIS FIELD IS EVOLVING RAPIDLY DUE TO
  • Changing Technologies
  • Changing Management Priorities

10
Class Activity
  • Input--Teacher-provided description
  • Processing--Student arranging/classifying/calculat
    ing information
  • Output--Student hands output to student seated on
    their right
  • Feedback--Student evaluates the information based
    on teacher input, owner of the information
    refines their information

11
DATA
  • Types of Transformations
  • Retrieval
  • Analysis
  • Capture
  • Presentations
  • Types of Information
  • Reports
  • New Files
  • Graphical displays

12
The Powerful Changes in Managing Information
  • Emergence/Strength of Global Economy
  • Global Corporations
  • Worldwide Marketplace--Internet--I-Commerce,
    E-commerce, E-Business
  • Is your chair comfortable? Old saying Dont
    leave home without it. New saying No need
    to leave home.
  • Transformation of Economies from industrial to
    knowledge/information based
  • Instant service--credit card usage, smart card
    usage, quick delivery, immediate on-line
    reservations, instant access/retrieval of
    information.
  • Transformation of Business Enterprise
  • Project Workgroups, Temp workforce

13
WHAT CAN BE DONE TO PREPARE FOR THESE CHANGES?
  • Basic skill core preparation
  • Communication skills
  • Computational skills
  • Critical-thinking/Problem-solving skills
  • People skills
  • Lifelong learning approach
  • Adaptability Flexibility-- Attitude

14
MIS IS COMPRISED OF DISSIMILAR SKILL BASES
  • Technical skills vs. Business Skills
  • Hard Science skills vs. Soft Science skills
  • Practical, contingency-based perspective skills
    vs. theoretical perspective skills

15
Technical Approach
  • Emphasizes mathematically-based model
  • Contributing disciplines
  • Computer science--
  • Established Computability theories
  • Computational methods
  • Efficient data storage and access methods
  • Management science
  • Development of models for decision-making and
    management practices
  • Operations research
  • Mathematical techniques for organizational
    optimal effectiveness and efficiency inventory
    control, transportation, transaction costs

16
Behavioral Approach
  • Concerned with behavioral problems
  • Creative design, system utilization,
    implementation
  • (What can I do/cannot do? I have a tude! This
    policy stinks! I am not going to do it that
    way!)
  • Contributing disciplines
  • Sociology--focus on impact of information systems
    on people
  • Political science--investigates the political
    impacts/uses of information systems (legal
    issues)
  • Psychology--concerned individual responses to
    info systems and cognitive models of human
    reasoning. (Techno-stress, adapto-stress,
    work-related stress issues)

17
SocioTechnical Systems
  • Change is necessary in todays environment.
  • Change is inevitable in todays environment.
  • Change is an ongoing process.
  • Change impacts both the internal and external
    environments.
  • Imagine the changes that will occur in the
    environment with ethical issues, security issues,
    robotic body parts, machine cloning?

18
Organizational Design Options-A flexible
Workplace/Marketplace
  • Virtual Organizations free workers to live and
    work anywhere
  • Custom Manufacturing, preferred customer plans,
    one-to-one marketing, individualized products
    services
  • Electronic markets which operate as electronic
    middle men between buyer and seller
  • Restructure of workflow
  • Empowerment of employees
  • Information Architecture challenge
  • Hierarchical Organizational Levels

19
SIX TYPES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • TPS- Transaction Processing Systems
  • OAS- Office Automation Systems
  • KWS-Knowledge Work Systems
  • DSS-Decision Support Systems
  • MIS-Management Information Systems
  • ESS-Executive Support Systems

20
But wait! These systems serve four distinct
levels in an organization.
  • TPS--an operational level
  • KWS and OAS-- a knowledge level
  • DSS and MIS--a management level
  • ESS--a strategic level

21
SPECIFIC PURPOSES SERVED BY INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • TPS Routine data processing and accounting
    procedures
  • OAS The use of technologies to produce an end
    product
  • KWS Promote the creation and design of new
    knowledge/information, technical/engineering
    expertise
  • DSS An information gathering and reporting
    tool for management, a prototype, a model
  • MIS Generation of preplanned, printed reports
    to assist in decision-making
  • ESSDesigned to be used by senior managers who
    have little direct contact/expertise with CBIS.
    Easy-to-use, seductive software, Not designed
    specifically to solve specific problems.

22
WHAT IS A CBIS?
  • Consists of hardware, software, data, procedures,
    and people
  • People are defined as users, systems analysts,
    and programmers

23
WHAT ARE THE ELEMENTS OF CBIS?
  • Input, processing, output, and storage

24
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN COMPANY COMPETITIVE
APPROACHES
  • Knowledge is Power

25
WHAT CHALLENGES FACE THOSE WHO DESIGN, USE, OR
APPROVE INFORMATION SYSTEMS?
  • Rapid Changes in Technology
  • A Movement toward a Global Society
  • The Processing Speed of Information

26
INFORMATION-INTENSIVE SOCIETY
  • 1950s ushered in the age of information-intensive
    jobs in the U.S. labor force
  • Blending of communications and computing
    technologies continues (i.e. computer networks)
  • A movement toward a global society created for a
    global telecommunications network
  • Information is now recognized as the central
    organizational resource in todays economy

27
WHAT IS MIS?
  • Any system that provides people with either data
    or information relating to an organizations
    operations.

28
MIS SUPPORTS THE ACTIVITIES OF ORGANIZATIONAL
PEOPLES BY
  • Processing data to assist with transaction
    workload (in an effective manner)
  • Supplying information to authorized people in a
    timely manner

29
INFORMATION SYSTEMS HAVE EVOLVED AS FOLLOWS
  • 1950s Transaction Processing Systems
  • 1960s Management Information Systems
  • 1970s Decision Support Systems
  • 1980s, 1990s Knowledge-based Systems used for
    strategic organizational competitive
    knowledge/information advantages
  • New Century Wireless technologies

30
INFORMATION RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
  • Data vs. Information
  • Data are facts
  • Data filtering is processed to apply meaning and
    value, resulting in information (Example
    O.J./DNA testing)
  • Data is useful for everyday transaction
    processing
  • Information is more useful for managerial
    decision-making

31
INFORMATION RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
  • IRM REFERS TO
  • Properly managing data and information as key
    organizational resources
  • Seeing information as a desirable investment used
    to strategically provide a competitive advantage
  • Recognizing the role of CIO and the importance of
    this rank
  • Goals of information Systems
  • Leveraging Investment in Information Technology
  • Selling MIS Products (i.e. Microsoft)
  • Providing services/outsourcing (i.e. Novell)

32
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY FUNDAMENTALS
  • We live in an INFORMATION AGE most people have
    INFORMATION-INTENSIVE JOBS.
  • We are entering a KNOWLEDGE AGE where information
    technology has greater intelligence
  • The blending of communications and computing
    technologies continues computer networks are
    becoming increasingly common
  • A need has arisen for global telecommunications
    networks due to global financing, global
    outsourcing, and international joint ventures.
  • Information is now recognized as a central
    organizational resource in todays economy.

33
KEY ISSUES IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • ISSUE 1 The Development of an information
    Architecture
  • ISSUE 2 The Management of data as an
    organizational resource
  • ISSUE 3 Strategic Planning of data and
    information
  • Management enterprise-wide problems are often
    viewed as more important than technical and
    application-related problems
  • The same issues have been highly ranked since the
    1980s however, recently global systems have
    taken on much importance

34
WHAT IS MEANT BY STRATEGIC PLANNING?
  • A Long-range planning process, the strategic use
    of information refers to using information
    technologies for competitive advantage.

35
Now, Lets get serious!
  • Strategic is only about achieving strategic
    direction, ignoring the practicalities of
    day-to-day operations that absorb all of your
    resources and more.
  • SO
  • An Integrated plan is needed because it includes
    strategic components with the realities of the
    current operating environment. An integrated
    plan is a roadmap for where you are going and how
    to survive until the future gets here.
  • Source Bob Lewis, Info World, June 8, 1998

36
CHALLENGES FOR THE STUDY OF MIS
  • MIS incorporates an unusually wide variety of
    knowledge areas
  • Both technology technology-related products are
    evolving at an extremely fast and unpredictable
    rate.
  • Many MIS terms are imprecise controversial
  • MIS problems are not easy to define or structure
  • The body of MIS knowledge is recent and scarce
  • Often, a lack of rapport exists between MIS
    personnel management and between MIS personnel
    users.
  • Knowing how much money to spend on information
    systems is still a guessing game. (Can you
    afford to make million dollar mistakes in your
    organization?)

37
MIS IS A GREY AREA OF STUDY
  • A soft field A field where there are few
    universally correct answers that work for every
    situation situational actions are dependent on a
    number of variables.

38
MISs Involve
  • The processing of data and the supply of timely
    information for managerial decision-making
  • Both people inside and outside the organization
    with electronic data interchange (EDI) and other
    interorganizational systems some users of an
    organizations information system may be
    employees of other organizations
  • The process of making the organization both more
    efficient and more effective

39
READ, READ, READ!
  • Business Week and Fortune carry articles on new
    technologies that may change the way business is
    conducted, the state of MIS in a particular
    company, the revolutionary products emerging,
    etc.
  • Read Info World, Computer World, MIS
  • Quarterly, Information Week, FirstMover, CIO,
    Journal of Management Information Systems

40
QUESTION HOW CAN INFORMATION SYSTEMS BE USED AS
COMPETITIVE WEAPONS?
  • Assignment Research a company which has made
    effective use of technology to expand their
    customer base without forgoing quality to gain a
    lions share of the marketplace. Next week
    submit your article and one-page paper (typed,
    double-spaced summary)
  • Example Use Mercantile Mutual on page 45 as a
    guide. Do not use the examples given in your
    textbook as your final assignment.
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