Title: CHAPTER 9 FUNCTIONAL AND ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS
1CHAPTER 9FUNCTIONAL AND ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS
2Learning Objectives
- Describe the role and characteristics of
functional information systems - State the objective and operations of transaction
processing and how it is supported by IT - Discuss the managerial and strategic applications
in the accounting and finance areas that are
supported by IT - Understand the marketing and sales applications
provided by IT
3Learning Objectives(continued )
- List the various production and operations
management activities and describe how they are
supported by IT - Discuss the human resources management activities
and how they can be improved by IT - Discuss the need for integrating functional
information systems and describe the role of ERP
and supported software such as SAP
4Chapter Overview
5Chapter Overview (continued )
6Case Colonial Building Supply
- Needed a technology
- to monitor inventory and support-related
decisions - to provide it with current information about
inventory levels and customer buying trends - to show the price of the lumber fluctuates daily
- integrated system
- Point-of-sales (POS) terminals with hand-held
automatic identification and data collection
devices
7Case (continued)
- Lower costs for data entry labor
- Reduction in inventory and storage space
- Fast access to information
- Better customer service
- Higher employee satisfaction
- Stay competitive
- Increase its market share and profitability
- What have we learned from this case??
- The systems major applications are in logistics
- IT can be beneficial to a relatively small
company - An integration includes connection to business
partners using the Internet
8Characteristics ofFunctional Information Systems
- Comprises of several smaller information system
- Specific IS applications
- can be integrated to form a coherent departmental
function system - can be completely independent
- can be integrated across departmental lines
- Interface with each other to form the
organization wide information system - Interface with the environment
9Management Information Systems
- Provide routine information to managers in the
functional areas - Provide information in exception reports and ad
hoc (demand) reports
A Management Information System
10Transaction Processing Information Systems
- Transaction Processing
- major business processes
- provide the mission-critical activities
- transaction may generate additional transaction
- simple transactions
- large volume and repetitive transactions
- Transaction Processing System (TPS)
- computerized information system
- supports the transaction processes
11Characteristics of TPS
- Large amounts of data are processed
- The sources of data are mostly internal, and the
output is intended mainly for an internal
audience - The TPS processes information on a regular basis
- Large storage (database) capacity is required
- High processing speed is needed due to the high
volume - Input and output data are structured
- High level of detail is usually observable
- Low computation complexity is usually evident
- High level of accuracy, data integrity, and
security is needed - High processing reliability is required
- Inquiry processing is a must
12Overview of typical transaction processing
TPS (continued)
13The Process of TPS
Data are collected and entered automatically
- Modernized TPS from OLTP to the Internet
- Online Transaction Processing (OLTP)
- created on a client/server architecture can save
money - Internet (Intranet) transaction Processing
- allow multimedia data transfer, fast response
time, and storage of large databases of graphics
and videos
14Accounting Finance Systems
- Financial Planning and Budgeting
- Financial and Economic Forecasting
- much of the interrelated indicators are available
on the Internet - many software packages conducting forecasting and
planning - Planning for Cash Management
- build a decision support model
- make decisions about when and how much to
refinance - Budgeting
- Budget 2000 and Comshare BudgetPlus are available
to support budgeting and to facilitate
communication among all participants in the
preparation process
15Accounting Finance Systems (continued )
16Accounting Finance Systems(continued )
- Access to financial and economic reports
- hundreds of sources for the financial and
economic reports and news - Financial analysis
- is executed with a spreadsheet program, or with
commercially available, ready-made decision
support software
17Accounting Finance Systems(continued )
- Financial Controls
- Budgetary Controls
- more sophisticated software attempts to tie
expenditures to program accomplishment - Auditing
- auditing software is especially suitable when
computerized information systems are audited - Financial Health Analysis
- supported by expert systems
- Profitability Analysis and Cost Control
- profitability analysis software allows accurate
computation of profitability for individual
products and for entire organizations
18Marketing Sales Systems
- Distribution Channel
- provide the goods or services to the customer,
and may extend through various intermediaries
such as wholesalers and retailers - Channel Systems
- support all marketing linkages, such as
after-sales customer support
19Marketing Sales Systems (continued ...)
20Marketing Sales (continued ...)
- Customer Service
- Customer Profiles and Preference Analysis
- IT creates customer database and merges
computerized lists - Mass Customization
- Dell computers assembles computers according to
the specifications of the buyers - J.C. Penny measures you and transfers the data
directly to the production floor - Targeted Advertisement on the Web
- match appropriate ads with specific groups of
customers - Customer Inquiry Systems and Automated Help Desk
- expert systems and intelligent agents
21Marketing Sales (continued ...)
- Five major activities which are supported by IT
- advertisement and reaching customers
- order processing ? customer service
- sales support ? account management
- Delivery management
- DSS models are used to support decisions like use
own outlets or distributors, and transportation
mode - Improving sales at retail stores
- IT reduces the long lines in stores by
reengineering the checkout process
22Marketing Sales (continued ...)
- Pricing of Products or Services - online
analytical processing is supporting pricing
decisions - Salesperson Productivity - sales-force automation
provides salespeople in the field with portable
computers, access to databases, and to the web - Product-Customer Profitability Analysis - a
cost-accounting system identifies profitable
customers and frequency - Sales Analysis and Trends - geographical
information system (GIS) analyzes customers and
competitors and examines potential strategies - New Products, Services, and Market Planning - IT
evaluates large number of factors and
uncertainties and conducts survey
23Marketing Sales (continued ...)
- Ethical and Social Issues in IT-supported Sales
Activities
- Example of Privacy Policy 3M Corp.
- Information Collection
- personally identifiable information that you
voluntarily provide through 3Ms website or
e-mail correspondence - general information (such as the type of browser
you use, the files you request, and the domain
name and country from which you submit the
request for information) - Use of Information
- responding to your inquires
- tracking orders you place with 3M
- supplying you with requested information on 3M
products
24Production Operations Logistics
- Supply-Chain Management (SCM)
INFORMATION FLOW
- SCM plans and controls the flow of information
and cash
CASH FLOW
25Production Operations Logistics (continues )
- Logistics and Material Management
- Inventory Management
- determining how much inventory to keep
- what to order, from whom, when to order and how
much - inventory model economic order quantity (EOQ)
- many low cost commercial inventory software
packages - Quality Control
- providing information about the quality of
incoming material and parts, as well as the
quality of in-process semi-finished, and finished
products - standard quality control information systems and
expert systems
26Production Operations Logistics (continues )
- Planning Production/Operations
- Material Requirements Planning (MRP) -
facilitates the plan for acquiring parts,
subassemblies, or material - Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRPII) -
connects the regular MRP to other functional
areas - Just-in-Time Systems - minimizes waste of all
kinds, improves processes and systems, and
maintains respect for all workers - Project Management - Program Evaluation and
Review Technique (PERT) and Critical Path Method
(CPM) - Short-Term Schedules - schedule jobs and
employees on a daily or weekly basis
27Production Operations Logistics (Continues )
- Automatic Design Work and Manufacturing
- Computer-Aided Design (CAD)
- enables drawings to be constructed on a computer
screen and subsequently stored, manipulated, and
updated electronically - Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM)
- facilitates planning, operation, and control of
production jobs - Computer-Integrated Manufacturing (CIM)
- concept or philosophy about the implementation of
various integrated computer systems in factory
automation
28Human Resources Management Systems
- finding, testing, and deciding which employees to
hire - Positions inventory
- matching open positions with available personnel
- allowing data to be viewed by an employee over
the intranet - Employee Selection
- conducting interviews by video teleconferencing
- expediting the testing and evaluation process,
assuring consistency in selection by using expert
systems - Using the Internet
- advertising position openings on the Internet
29Human Resources Management Systems (continued )
- Human Resources Maintenance and Development
- Training and Human Resources Development
- digital video-editing system - produces training
videotapes
- Performance Evaluation
- online evaluations - supports many decisions,
ranging from rewards to transfer to layoffs - expert systems - provide an unbiased and
systematic interpretation of performance over
time - paperless wage system (PWS) - tracks employee
review dates and automatically initiates the wage
review process
- Turnover, Tardiness, and Absenteeism Analyses
- DSS models - identifies causes and patterns
30Human Resources Management Systems (continued )
- Human Resources Management and Planning
- Personal files and skills inventory -
computerized personnel files identify qualified
employees within the company for open positions,
promotion, transfer, special training programs,
and layoffs - Benefits administration - Networks and voice
technology, or the intranets, specifying the
value of each benefit and the available benefits
balance of each employee - Government reports - Availability of computerized
personnel records greatly eases the reporting
process - Personnel planning - IT is used to collect,
update, and process the information - Succession planning and implementation - expert
systems and personnel databases supporting and
implementing planning - Labor-Management Negotiations - DSS improve the
negotiation climate and considerably reduce the
time needed for reaching an agreement
31Human Resources Management Systems (continued )
- Intranet Applications in HRM
- Edify Corp.s employee service system
- Oracle Corp.s flexible benefits enrollment
program on the intranet - Aetna health Plans online directory of primary
care physicians, hospitals, medical services, and
health information - Apple Computers extensive education and
development activities on the intranet - Merck Inc.s intranet for HR transactions
32Integrated Information Systems
- using twentieth-century computer technology,
which is functionally oriented - cannot give employees all the information they
need - do not let different departments communicate
effectively with each other in the same language - crucial sales, inventory, and production data
often have to be painstakingly entered manually
into separate computer systems every time a
person who is not a member of a specific
department needs ac hoc information related to
the specific department
33How to Integrated Information Systems
- Connect existing systems
- maximize the use of existing systems and minimize
the changes in them - allows the addition of new applications to
existing ones and the connection of systems to
intranets and the Internet - Using supply chain management software
- use one integrated package in one or several
functional areas - overcomes the isolation of the traditional
departmental structure where the functional areas
are separated from one another
34How to Integrated Information Systems (continued
)
- Enterprise resource planning (ERP)
- control all major business processes with a
single software architecture in real time - increased efficiency to improved quality,
productivity, and profitability - SAP software (R3 my SAP.com)
- crosses functional departments and can be
extended along the supply chain to both suppliers
and customers - composed of four major parts accounting,
manufacturing, sales and human resources
35ERP
Central SAP Database Servers
36Whats in IT for Me?
- For Accounting
- Executing TPS effectively is a major concern of
any accountant - For Finance
- The use of IT helps financial analysts and
managers perform their difficult tasks better - For Marketing
- By understanding how ERP software operates,
marketing people can greatly improve the software
utilization by developing challenging corporate
applications
37Whats in IT for Me? (continued )
- For Production/Operations Management
- Supply chain management and ERP are critical
today for any medium and large manufacturing
company, and for service organizations such as
banks - For Human Resources Management
- IT can improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of the HRM activities - conducting training on the intranet
38Whats in IT for Me? (continued )
- For Human Resource Management
- Human resource managers utilize their corporate
networks extensively for posting job openings,
and use internal corporate networks to publish
corporate policies, company newsletters and job
openings