Title: Information Systems Analysis and Design
1Information Systems Analysis and Design
Information Systems
Section A
CHAPTER 9
PARSONS/OJA
Page 442
2Information Systems Analysis and Design
Chapter 9
Chapter PREVIEW
- Describe how information systems help
organizations fulfill their missions, deal with
threats, and take advantage of opportunities - Contrast and compare the characteristics of
office automation systems, transaction processing
systems, management information systems, decision
support systems, and expert systems - Describe various models for the system
development life cycle (SDLC)
Page 443
3Information Systems Analysis and Design
Chapter 9
Chapter PREVIEW
- List the activities that take place in each phase
of the system development life cycle - Apply the PIECES framework to classify problems
that reduce the effectiveness of an information
system - Describe alternative hardware and software
solutions that a project team might typically
consider - Explain the differences between unit testing,
integration testing, system testing, and
acceptance testing
Page 443
4Information Systems Analysis and Design
Chapter 9
Chapter PREVIEW
- Describe the advantages and disadvantages of
direct conversion, parallel conversion, phased
conversion, and pilot conversion - Explain the feedback mechanism that helps system
operators identify and fix bugs
Page 443
5Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Information Systems in Organizations What is
an information system?
- An information system collects, stores, and
processes data to provide useful, accurate, and
timely information, typically within the context
of an organization - The term information system always refers to a
system that uses computers, and usually includes
communications networks
Page 444
6Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Whats the official definition of
organization?
- An organization is a group of people working
together to accomplish a goal - Any organization that seeks profit by providing
goods and services is called a business - Some organizations are formed to accomplish
political, social, or charitable goals that do
not include amassing profit - These organizations are known as nonprofit
organizations
Page 444
7Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Whats the official definition of
organization?
- Every organization has a goal or plan thats
often referred to as its mission - A mission statement describes not only an
organizations goals, but also the way in which
those goals will be accomplished
Page 444
8Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Whats the official definition of
organization?
Page 444
9Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Who uses information systems?
- An information system is used by the people in an
organization and its customers - Not everyone in an organization uses an
information system in the same way - An organizational chart depicts the hierarchy of
employees in a typical organization - Workers are the people who carry out the
organizations mission - Managers determine organizational goals and plan
how to achieve those goals
Page 445
10Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Who uses information systems?
- This emphasis on long-range and future goals is
referred to as strategic planning - Mid-level managers set incremental goals that can
be achieved in a year or lessa process referred
to as tactical planning - Low-level managers are responsible for scheduling
employees, ordering supplies, and other
activities that make day-to-day operations run
smoothlya process referred to as operational
planning
Page 445
11Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Who uses information systems?
Page 445
12Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How do information systems help the people in
an organization?
- An information system can help the people in an
organization perform their jobs more quickly and
effectively by automating routine tasks - One of the major functions of an information
system is to help people make decisions in
response to problems - All problems are not alike, but they can be
classified into three types structured,
semi-structured, and unstructured
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13Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How do information systems help the people in
an organization?
- An everyday, run-of-the-mill, routine problem is
called a structured problem - A semi-structured problem is less routine than a
structured problem - An unstructured problem requires human intuition
as the basis for finding a solution - An information systems ability to assist with
problem solving and decision making depends on
the data that it collects and then makes available
Page 446
14Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How do information systems help organizations
carry out their missions?
- Most organizations exist in a rapidly changing
and competitive environment, where many
opportunities and threats can be effectively
handled only by using computers - To be successful in its mission, an organization
must respond effectively to opportunities and
threats. - An organization has a choice of three
fundamental responses
Page 447
15Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How do information systems help organizations
carry out their missions?
Click to start
Page 447
16Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How do information systems help organizations
carry out their missions?
- First, it can become better at what it does by
cutting costs, lowering prices, improving its
products, offering better customer service, and
so on - A second response is to change the structure of
an industry - As a third response, an organization can create a
new product - As organizations respond to opportunities and
threats, they change. It can be important to
understand the nature of coming changes
Page 447
17Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How do information systems help organizations
carry out their missions?
Page 448
18Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Do organizations require different kinds of
information systems?
- Because organizations have different missions,
face different threats, and encounter different
opportunities, they require different kinds of
information systems
Page 448
19Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Office Automation Systems Can an information
system automate routine office tasks?
- An office automation system automates, or
computerizes, routine office tasks - Office automation systems can be used by workers
and managers at all levels of the organizational
hierarchy
Page 448
20Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Transaction Processing Systems Whats a
transaction?
- A transaction is an exchange between two parties
that is recorded and stored in a computer system
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21Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is a transaction processing system?
- A transaction processing system (TPS) provides a
way to collect, process, store, display, modify,
or cancel transactions - Early transaction processing systems used batch
processing to collect and hold a group of
transactions for processing until the end of a
day or pay period - Most modern transaction processing systems use
online processing. Such systems are often
referred to as OLTPS (online transaction
processing systems)
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22Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is a transaction processing system?
- A TPS can commit to a transaction and permanently
update database records only if every step of the
transaction can be successfully processed - If even one step fails, however, the entire
transaction fails and the records must roll back
to their original state
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23Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is a transaction processing system?
Click to start
Page 449
24Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What are common examples of transaction
processing systems?
- A point-of-sale (POS) system records items
purchased at each cash register, and calculates
the total amount due for each sale - An order-entry/invoice system provides a way to
input, view, modify, and delete customer orders - A general accounting system records the financial
status of a business by keeping track of income,
expenses, and assets - An e-commerce system collects orders and
processes credit card payments
Page 450
25Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What are the limitations of transaction
processing systems?
- Most transaction processing systems reporting
capabilities are limited - Managers need more sophisticated reports to help
them understand and analyze data
Page 450
26Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Management Information Systems What is a
management information system?
- A management information system (MIS, pronounced
EM EYE ESS) refers to a type of information
system that uses the data collected by a
transaction processing system, but manipulates
that data to create reports that managers can use
to make routine business decisions in response to
structured problems
Page 450
27Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is a management information system?
Click to start
Page 450
28Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is a management information system?
- One of the major goals of an MIS is to increase
the efficiency of managerial activity - A summary report combines or groups data and
often shows totals - An exception report contains information that is
outside of normal or acceptable ranges - Scheduled reports follow a fixed format and are
produced according to a preset timetable - An ad hoc report is a customized report,
generated to supply specific information not
available in scheduled reports
Page 451
29Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is a management information system?
Page 451
30Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How does an MIS differ from a TPS?
- Whereas a TPS simply records data, an MIS can
consolidate data by grouping and summarizing it
Page 451
31Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What are the limitations of a management
information system?
- A traditional MIS is based on the data collected
by a transaction processing system - The reports generated by an MIS are limited by
the processing capabilities of the database
software. - The MIS cannot typically be used to create models
or projections
Page 451
32Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Decision Support Systems Whats a decision
support system?
- A decision support system (DSS) helps people make
decisions by directly manipulating data,
analyzing data from external sources, generating
statistical projections, and creating data models
of various scenarios - A special type of decision support system, called
an executive information system (EIS), is
designed to provide senior managers with
information relevant to strategic management
activities based on information provided by the
organizations database
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33Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Whats a decision support system?
- A DSS does not make decisions, however. That
task remains the responsibility of the human
decision maker - A decision model is a numerical representation of
a realistic situation - A decision query is a question or set of
instructions describing data that must be
gathered to make a decision - A DSS typically includes modeling tools so
managers can create a numerical representation of
a situation and explore what-if alternatives
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34Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Whats a decision support system?
Click to start
Page 452
35Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What kinds of decisions can a DSS handle?
- A DSS can be used to tackle diverse problems
because it contains a good selection of decision
support tools
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36Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What are the limitations of a DSS?
- A DSS helps people manipulate the data necessary
to make a decision, but does not actually make a
decision - A DSS is appropriate in situations where it is
used by trained professionals
Page 453
37Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Expert Systems and Neural Networks What is an
expert system?
- An expert system, sometimes referred to as a
knowledge-based system, is a computer system
designed to analyze data and produce a
recommendation, diagnosis, or decision based on a
set of facts and rules - The facts and rules for an expert system are
typically derived by interviewing one or more
experts, and then incorporated into a knowledge
base - The knowledge base is stored in a computer file
and can be manipulated by software called an
inference engine
Page 453
38Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is an expert system?
Page 453
39Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What is an expert system?
Click to start
Page 454
40Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
What kinds of decisions can an expert system
make?
- An expert system is not a general-purpose problem
solver or decision maker - Each expert system is designed to make decisions
in a particular area or domain.
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41Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
How are expert systems built?
- Expert systems can be created with a computer
programming language or an expert system shell - An expert system shell is a software tool that
contains an inference engine and a user interface
that provides a way to enter facts and rules
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42Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Can an expert system deal with uncertainty?
- Using a technique called fuzzy logic, an expert
system can deal with imprecise data by asking for
a level of confidence
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43Information Systems
Section A
Chapter 9
Is it possible to build an expert system
without an expert?
- An expert system begins with a set of facts and
rules. But if the rules are not known, an
computer can learn how to make decisions based
on hundreds or thousands of lightning-fast trial
and error attempts - A neural network uses computer circuitry to
simulate the way a brain might process
information, learn, and remember
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44Information Systems Analysis and Design
Systems Analysis
Section B
CHAPTER 9
PARSONS/OJA
Page 456
45Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Planning Phase How does an information system
project begin?
- An information system project begins with a
planning phase - The goal of these activities is to create a
Project Development Plan - This planning document includes
- A short description of the project, including its
scope - A justification for the project
- A list of project team participants
- A schedule for the project, including an outline
of its phases
Page 456
46Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
How does an information system project begin?
Page 456
47Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Assemble Project Team Who supervises the
development project?
- An Information Systems department, or IS
department, is the wing of a business or
organization responsible for developing and
maintaining the computers, data, and programs for
an information system - Some organizations refer to the IS department as
the IT (Information Technology) department or MIS
(Management Information Systems) department
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48Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Who supervises the development project?
- Most IS departments are headed by a chief
information officer (CIO) - A computer professional called a systems analyst
is responsible for analyzing information
requirements, designing new information systems,
and supervising their implementation
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49Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Who participates in the process of building an
information system?
- A system development project team is a group of
people who are assigned to analyze and develop an
information system - In addition to the project team, other members of
the organization might be asked to participate - A widely accepted technique called joint
application design (JAD) is based on the idea
that the best information systems are designed
when end users and systems analysts work together
on a project as equal partners
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50Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Justify Project Why are new information
systems developed?
- The justification for a new information system
usually emerges from a serious problem with the
current system, or from an opportunity to improve
an organizations products or services using
technology
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51Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Why are new information systems developed?
Page 458
52Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
System Development Life Cycle How does the
project team know what to do?
- The project team typically proceeds according to
a system development methodology chosen by the IS
department
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53Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
What is a system development life cycle?
Page 458
54Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
What is a system development life cycle?
- A system development life cycle (SDLC) an outline
of a process that helps develop successful
information systems - The original waterfall SDLC approaches each phase
as a discrete step in the development process - A modified waterfall SDLC allows overlap between
SDLC phases. - An iterative SDLC allows phases to repeat, if
necessary, as the project progresses
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55Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
What is a system development life cycle?
Page 459
56Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
How do different SDLCs affect project
development?
- The structured methodology focuses on the
processes that take place within an information
system - The information engineering methodology focuses
on the data that an information system collects
before working out ways to process that data - The object-oriented methodology treats an
information system as a collection of objects
that interact with each other to accomplish tasks
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57Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
How do different SDLCs affect project
development?
- A methodology called rapid application
development (RAD) proceeds with the project team
creating a series of prototypes that users can
evaluate - Different SDLCs also affect the project schedule
- The tools for analyzing and designing an
information system are directly related to the
methodology
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58Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Analysis Phase What happens in the analysis
phase?
- The goal of the analysis phase is to produce a
list of requirements for a new or revised
information system
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59Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Study the Current System Is it really
important to understand the current system before
planning a new system?
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60Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Is it really important to understand the
current system before planning a new system?
- Typically, a new information system is designed
to replace a system or process that is already in
place - It is important to study the current system to
understand its strengths and weaknesses before
planning a new system
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61Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
How does the project team discover what happens
in the current system?
- Some members of the project team might have
first-hand experience with the current system - They can often provide an overview of the system
- To obtain additional information about the
current system, the project team members can
interview the people who use the system, or
observe the system in action
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62Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
Determine System Requirements How does the
project team determine what the new system should
do?
- System requirements are the criteria for
successfully solving the problem or problems
identified in an information system - They also serve as an evaluation checklist at the
end of the development project, so they are
sometimes called success factors
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63Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
How does the project team document system
requirements?
- The project team can use a variety of tools to
diagram the current system and specify what it
does - It can be difficult, however, to maintain this
documentation as the project progresses - A CASE tool (computer-aided software engineering
tool) is a software application that is designed
for documenting system requirements, diagramming
current and proposed information systems,
scheduling development tasks, and developing
computer programs
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64Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
How does the project team document system
requirements?
Click to start
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65Systems Analysis
Section B
Chapter 9
What marks the end of the analysis phase of the
SDLC?
- The analysis phase concludes when the project
team produces a written report that documents its
findings - The System Requirements Report typically contains
diagrams that illustrate what the new information
system should do
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66Information Systems Analysis and Design
Systems Design
Section C
CHAPTER 9
PARSONS/OJA
Page 464
67System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Design Phase What happens in the design phase?
- In the design phase of the SDLC, the project team
must figure out HOW the new system will fulfill
the requirements specified in the System
Requirements Report
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68System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Identify Potential Solutions How does the
project team come up with solutions?
- There might be more than one way to solve the
problems and meet the requirements identified in
the analysis phase of the SDLC - The project team should identify several
potential hardware and software solutions by
brainstorming and researching case studies on
Web sites and in computer magazines
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69System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What kinds of hardware alternatives are
available?
- A myriad of hardware options are available for
information systems - Mainframes, servers, and personal computers are
the most commonly used components, but in some
information systems, handhelds, or even
supercomputers, play a role
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70System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What level of automation and computerization
will be required?
- The project team should consider the pros and
cons of different levels - Centralized or distributed processing
- Centralized processing is when data is processed
on a centrally located computer - Distributed processing is when processing tasks
are distributed to servers and workstations - Network technology
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71System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What level of automation and computerization
will be required?
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72System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What kinds of software alternatives are
available?
- The project team might consider software
alternatives, such as whether to construct the
system from scratch, use an application
development tool, or commercial software - Creating an information system from scratch
using a programming language can take many months
or years - An application development tool is essentially a
type of software construction kit containing
building blocks that can be assembled into a
software product
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73System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What kinds of software alternatives are
available?
- Commercial software for an information system is
usually a series of pre-programmed software
modules, supplied by a software developer,
consulting company, or value-added reseller (VAR) - A turnkey system is essentially an information
system in a box which consists of hardware and
commercial software designed to offer a complete
information system solution - A turnkey system must be extensively evaluated to
determine whether it can satisfy system
requirements
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74System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Evaluate Solutions and Select the Best How
does the team choose the best solution?
- To determine the best solution the project team
devises a list of criteria for comparing each of
the potential solutions - Each criterion is assigned a weight to indicate
its importance. The project team then evaluates
the criteria for each solution and assigns raw
scores - Sound complicated? It isnt, especially if the
project team uses a decision support worksheet
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75System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
How does the team choose the best solution?
Raw scores indicate how well each solution meets
each criterion.
The highest weights indicate the most important
criteria.
A list of criteria includes features and factors
that are important to the success of the
information system.
A weighted score is obtained by multiplying the
weight by the raw score.
The solution with the highest total is the best
choice.
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76System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Select Hardware and Software How does the
project team find the right hardware and software
for the new information system?
- Once the project team selects a solution, the
next task is to select the hardware and software
needed to implement the solution - The method for selecting the hardware, software,
and vendor depends on the project teams
understanding of what is required for the solution
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77System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Whats an RFP?
- A request for proposal (RFP) is a document that
describes the information system problem and the
requirements for the solution
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78System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Whats an RFQ?
- A request for quotation (RFQ) is a request for a
formal price quotation on a list of hardware and
software
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79System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
How does the project team evaluate an RFP or
RFQ?
- The project team can evaluate RFPs or RFQs by
constructing a decision table similar to the one
used for evaluating solutions
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80System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Develop Application Specifications What
happens after the project team selects a solution?
- Exactly what happens next in the system design
phase depends on the type of solution selected - If the project team selected a solution that
requires custom programming, the teams systems
analysts will create a set of application
specifications
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81System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What happens after the project team selects a
solution?
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82System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Why werent the specifications developed as
part of the requirements report?
- Detailed application specifications can be
developed only after the hardware and software
for an information system are selected
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83System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
What happens to the completed specifications?
- Application specifications are similar to the
pages of an architectural blueprint that show the
detailed plan for electrical wiring or plumbing - In a large information systems project, the
specifications are given to a programming team or
application developer who creates the software - In a small information systems project, you as
the user might develop your own specifications
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84System Design
Section C
Chapter 9
Obtain Approval to Implement the New System
When can the project team actually begin to build
the new information system?
- In the design phase of the SDLC, the project team
chooses a solution, selects hardware and
software, and designs detailed application
specifications - Before the solution is implemented, the project
team typically must seek approval from management
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85Information Systems Analysis and Design
Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
CHAPTER 9
PARSONS/OJA
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86Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Implementation Phase What happens during the
implementation phase?
- During the implementation phase of the SDLC, the
project team supervises the tasks necessary to
construct the new information system
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87Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Purchase and Install Hardware and Software
Does a new information system typically require
new hardware?
- Most new information systems require new
hardware, which can either replace old equipment,
or be connected to existing equipment
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88Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
How about new software?
- Many information systems require new software,
such as a commercial application, a programming
language, an application development tool, or an
expert system shell
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89Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Create Applications After the project team
installs the new hardware and software, whats
the next step in the implementation phase?
- The next step in the implementation phase depends
on the software tools selected for the project - Software customization is the process of
modifying a commercial application to reflect the
needs of a particular organization - The process of designing, entering, and testing
the rules in an expert system is referred to as
knowledge engineering
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90Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Test Applications How can the team ensure that
a new information system works?
- A rigorous testing process is the only way to
make sure that a new information system works
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91Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
What is application testing?
- Application testing is the process of trying out
various sequences of input values and checking
the results to verify that the application works
correctly - As each application module is completed, it
undergoes unit testing to ensure that it operates
reliably and correctly - When all modules have been completed and tested,
integration testing is performed to ensure that
the modules operate together correctly
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92Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
What is application testing?
- A test area is a place where software testing can
occur without disrupting the organizations
regular information system - When a problem is discovered during unit testing
or integration testing, the team must track down
the source of the problem and correct it - System testing ensures that all hardware and
software components work together correctly
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93Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Finalize Documentation What is the
documentation for an information system?
- The documentation for an information system can
be roughly categorized as system or user
documentation - System documentation describes the feature of the
system - User documentation describes how to interact with
the system to accomplish specific tasks
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94Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Train Users How do employees learn how to use
the new information system?
- In preparation for using a new information
system, users need extensive training, which
might include software orientation, hardware
operation, data entry, and backup procedures - Training sessions can be conducted by members of
the team or professional trainers - A procedure handbook is a type of user
documentation that contains step-by-step
instructions for performing a specific task
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95Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Convert Data What happens to the data from the
old system?
- The data for a new information system might exist
in card files, file folders, or an old
information system - When converting data from a manual system to a
computer system, the data can be typed or scanned
electronically into the appropriate storage media - When converting data from an existing computer
system to a new system, a programmer typically
writes conversion software to read the old data
and convert it into a format that is usable by
the new system
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96Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Covert to New System How does a business
switch from the old information system to the new
system?
- System conversion refers to the process of
deactivating an old information system and
activating the new one - A direct conversion means that the old system is
completely deactivated and the new system is
immediately activated - A parallel conversion avoids some of the risk
because the old system remains in service while
some or all of the new system is activated - In a phased conversion, the new system is
activated one module at a time
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97Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
How does a business switch from the old system
to the new system?
- A pilot conversion works well in organizations
with several branches that have independent
information processing systems - The new information system is activated at one
branch - If the system works correctly at one branch, it
is activated at the next branch
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98Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
When is the new information system formally
live?
- A new or upgraded information system undergoes a
final test called acceptance testing - Acceptance testing is designed to verify that the
new information system works as required
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99Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Maintenance Phase What happens during the
maintenance phase?
- The maintenance phase of the SDLC involves
day-to-day operation of the system, making
modifications to improve performance, and
correcting problems - The maintenance phase of the SDLC is the most
expensive because it lasts until the system is
retired
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100Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
What happens during the maintenance phase?
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101Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Who is responsible for system maintenance?
- The system operator performs system backups and
data recovery, monitors system traffic, and
troubleshoots operational problems - The systems programmer is the operating system
guru - In an information system that is centered on a
microcomputer network, a network manager or
network specialist is typically responsible for
day-to-day operations and system maintenance
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102Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Why do maintenance activities include user
support?
- Even after-in-depth training, employees sometimes
forget procedures, or have difficulty when they
encounter a new set of circumstances - Many organizations establish a help desk to
handle end-user problems - The help desk is staffed by support specialists
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103Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Why do maintenance activities include user
support?
Page 476
104Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
Does an information system change during the
maintenance phase?
- The term maintenance phase is a bit misleading
- Changes during the maintenance phase typically
include the following - Upgrades to operating system and commercial
software - User interface revisions
- Application software revisions
- Hardware replacements
- Security upgrades
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105Implementation and Maintenance
Section D
Chapter 9
When does the maintenance phase end?
- The maintenance phase continues until an
information system is no longer cost effective,
or until changes in the organization make the
information system obsolete
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