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Information Technology for Managers

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Undergraduate degree was in Business & Economics (Georgetown College, KY) ... Not even with a guest book. Money must change hands--goods must be purchased ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Information Technology for Managers


1
Information Technology for Managers
  • Dr. Michael L. Gibson

2
Information Technology is IT and Thats that
  • We will refer to information technology as IT

3
Gibson Profile
  • Undergraduate degree was in Business Economics
    (Georgetown College, KY)
  • MBA degree (University of Kentucky)
  • DBA degree (University of Kentucky)
  • Close to 30 years experience in information
    systems as a practitioner and educator

4
Objectives of Course
  • Learn the extensive substance of IT
  • How IT has impacted organizations
  • IT and Networks
  • Relation of IT to marketing, management,
    accounting and finance
  • Using and managing IT

5
Organizations, Environments, and Information
Technology
  • Chapter 1 TURBAN et al.

6
The New World of Business
  • Business pressures
  • What are the three dimensions of competition???
  • Environmental, organization, and technological
    factors
  • Who is king???
  • What can we say about competition???
  • Organizational responses
  • Reaction to existing pressure or initiative to
    defend against future pressure
  • Information Systems (IS) and Information
    Technology (IT)

7
Business Pressures
  • Market pressures
  • Technological pressures
  • Societal and governmental pressures

8
Market Pressures
  • Global economy - strong competition
  • Because some people believe that trade without
    tariffs is best for everybody
  • Because the iron curtain came down and Russia and
    China moved to market economies
  • Why else?
  • Leveling of playing field
  • Changing nature of the workforce
  • Diversification of the work-force
  • IBM, GM, FORD, DEC have undergone major
    restructuring--eliminated hundreds of thousands
    of jobs
  • Powerful customers

9
Technological Pressures
  • Technological innovation and obsolescence
  • to lower cost
  • to increase quality
  • to lower time to market
  • Information overload
  • The core of todays IT is real-time interaction

10
Societal Pressures
  • Social responsibility
  • Government regulations
  • Health, safety, environmental control, equal
    opportunity, etc.
  • Government deregulation
  • Typically intensifies competition
  • Shrinking budgets and subsidies
  • Ethical issues
  • Much more harsh in industry than in academia
  • Business requires far more discipline than
    academia
  • Avoid damage to organizational image
  • Ethics change from one country to another
  • E-mail surveillance

11
Relationships between business drivers, critical
response activities and information technology
Business Drivers
Critical Response Activities
Information Technology
12
Framework for Organization/Societal IT Impact
IT
Organizational Strategy
13
Organizational Responses
  • Strategic systems
  • Continuous improvement efforts
  • Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
  • Business alliances
  • Electronic commerce

14
Critical Response Activities
Business Drivers Pressures
15
Electronic Commerce--what is it?
  • Computers communicating via telecommunications
    networks to accomplish business transactions
  • Not just an electronic store front
  • Not even with a guest book
  • Money must change hands--goods must be purchased
  • Dynamic creation of customer files

16
Strategic Systems
  • Strategic systems provide organizations with
    strategic advantages, thus enabling them to
    increase their market share, to better negotiate
    with their suppliers, or to prevent competitors
    from entering their territory.
  • The difficulty is maintaining competitive
    advantage (American Hospital Supply)

17
Continuous Improvement Efforts
  • Improved productivity
  • Just-in-time
  • Total Quality Management (TQM)
  • Improved decision making
  • Managing information and knowledge
  • Innovation and creativity
  • Change management
  • Customer service

18
TQM and IT
  • IT increases the speed of inspection
  • IT improves the quality of testing
  • IT reduces the cost of performing various quality
    control activities

19
Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
  • Continuous improvement vs. BPR
  • Reducing Cycle Time (Business Process Time)
    Costs, while improving quality
  • Empowerment of employees (Decisions pushed down
    in organizations)
  • Customer-focused approach
  • Restructuring and team-based structure
    (Organizational structure fits the process)

20
Change Management
  • BPR is in reality change management focused on
    business processes)
  • Change Management Principles
  • Investigation of change and readiness for change
  • Making the change
  • Institutionalize the change throughout the
    organization
  • Change Levers
  • People and culture
  • Policies and Procedures (Business processes)
  • Organizational Structure
  • Technology

21
Continuous improvement vs. BPR
  • IMPROVEMENT
    BPR
  • Level of change Incremental Radical
  • Starting point Existing process Clean slate
  • Freq. of change Continuous One-time
  • Time required Short Long
  • Participation Bottom-up Top-down
  • Typical scope Narrow Broad
  • Risk Moderate High
  • BPR IS NOT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
  • Both are applied to business processes, however

22
Time-to-market
  • Also called cycle time
  • Time from the inception of an idea until its
    implementation

23
Business Alliances
  • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
  • (and supply-chain management)
  • SAP/R3
  • Electronic Commerce

24
Information Systems and Information Technology
  • What is an information system?
  • What is a computer-based information system?
  • What is the difference between computers and
    information systems?
  • What is information technology?

25
What Is an Information System?
  • An information system (IS) collects, processes,
    stores, analyzes, and disseminates information
    for a specific purpose.
  • The data collected is on real-world people,
    place, things, concepts, and events.
  • The information system is designed to support the
    business system.

26
What Is a Computer-Based Information System?
  • Hardware
  • Software
  • Database
  • Network
  • Procedures (OR PROCESSES)
  • People

27
A Computer System
Output
Input
Processing
Primary
Storage
Secondary
28
Examples of Information Systems at Work Worldwide
  • Managing accounting information across Asia
    (Account information flowing to headquarters via
    electronic)
  • Russians live in Moscow and work in California
    (Commuting electronically)
  • Tracking UPS packages with pen computers
  • Mercy Hospital provides patient-focused care
    (Teams of multidisciplinary care-givers providing
    80 of the work)

29
Information Technology Developments and Trends
  • General trends
  • Processing speeds will go up
  • No. of instructions processed in a single machine
    clock cycle will increase
  • Storage technology will increase storage
    densities substantially
  • Increased integration of the phone, the Internet,
    cable TV, will continue
  • Networked computing
  • Bandwidths will go up by an order of magnitude

30
General Trends
  • Computers will be 50 times more powerful in ten
    years
  • GUI interfaces--ICONS, pull-down menus, but not
    command languages
  • Storage and memory will increase
  • Data warehouses
  • Multimedia and virtual reality
  • Intelligent systems

31
General Trends
  • Object-oriented environment will move toward
    components
  • Document management
  • Compactness

32
Networked Computing
  • Client/Server architecture
  • Portability (compact computers attached to many
    devices)
  • Integrated home computing (T.V., telephone,
    computers, home security, etc.)
  • The Internet and information superhighways
    (50million in 1997 750 million in 2007)
  • Intranets and Extranets

33
Client/Server Architecture
  • A form of distributed computing--the software
    application is distributed across the network
    (centralized storage of data and some systems and
    distributed execution of systems to process data)

34
Internet vs. Intranets vs. Extranets
  • The Internet is global
  • Intranets are local to the firm, private, but
    work just like the Internet
  • Extranets are collections of Intranets that
    connect an enterprise
  • An enterprise is a collection of firms that
    produce a product from beginning to end
  • The amount of information in the Internet more
    than doubles each year

35
Networked Computing
  • Electronic commerce
  • Intelligent agents (software to aid in
    interacting with the computer and computer
    systems e.g. aid Internet navigation, database
    access, etc.)
  • The Networked enterprise

36
Be able to define
  • kilobyte, megabyte, gigabyte, terrabyte
  • millisecond, microsecond, nanosecond, picosecond
  • mass customization
  • virtual corporation
  • information system
  • data warehouse

37
If you dont major in MIS
  • New job creation is all IT driven and related
  • Marketing? What is your exposure to database
    marketing?
  • Accounting? What is your exposure to ERP?
  • Management? What is your exposure to
    technological innovation and diffusion? To the
    management of technology?
  • Finance? What is your experience with web-based
    financial systems?
  • BECOME A TECHNOCRAT WITHIN YOUR DISCIPLINE
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