Title: Deel 2: Organisatie van de informatievoorziening
1Deel 2 Organisatie van de informatievoorziening
Prof. dr. Jan Vanthienen
2Deel 2 Organisatie van de informatievoorziening
- Hoofdstuk 3 Bedrijfsaspecten van ICT
- Effectiviteit, Efficiëntie en productiviteit van
informatiesystemen. Flexibiliteit, Kosten-baten,
TCO - Hoofdstuk 4 Beslissingsprocessen
- MIS, OLTP versus DSS, Group DSS, OLAP, Corporate
Performance Management, data warehousing,
Business Intelligence, digital dashboards,
Knowledge Discovery in Data, Belang van externe
informatie, waarde van externe informatie - Hoofdstuk 5 Informatie- en Kennismanagement
- Organizational learning en knowledge management,
portals, content management, text mining,
beslissingstabellen - Hoofdstuk 6 Organisatie van controleprocessen
- Interne versus externe controle, audit, controle
op beslissingen, Six-Sigma, Fraude en
fraudedetectie, controle op informatiesysteemontwi
kkeling, Virussen en Malware
3Hoofdstuk 3 Bedrijfsaspecten van ICT
- Effectiviteit, Efficiëntie, Flexibiliteit en
Productiviteit van informatiesystemen en het
omgaan met informatie
4Soorten Informatiesystemen
- Volgens niveau van leidinggeven
- Volgens functioneel gebied
5De belangrijkste soorten IS
6Additionele types IS
7ERP Systems
- Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems
8Value of Information Systems
Reasons why IT matters to the business
- Capital management (IT investment decisions)
- Foundation of doing business (high-quality,
low-cost) - Productivity (increase productivity and
efficiency ) - Strategic opportunity and advantage
9Strategic Opportunity and Advantage
- Create competitive advantage IT makes it
possible to develop competitive advantages. - New Business Models Dell Computer IT enabled
build-to-order business model. - Create new services eBay has developed the
largest auction trading platform for millions of
individuals and businesses. - Differentiate yourself from your competitors
Amazon has become the largest book retailer in
the United States on the strength of its huge
online inventory and recommender system.
10Information Systems and Organizational Change
Four Kinds of Structural Change
- Automation Mechanizing procedures to speed up
the performance of existing tasks -
- Rationalization of procedures The streamlining
of standard operating procedures - Business process reengineering Analysis and
redesign of business processes to reorganize
workflows and reduce waste and repetitive tasks - Paradigm shift Radical reconceptualization of
the nature of the business and the nature of the
organization
11Organizational Change risks and rewards
12Cost of Information Systems
- Total cost of ownership includes
- Hardware
- Software
- Installation
- Integration
- Training
- Support
- Maintenance
- Infrastructure requirements
- Downtime
- Space and energy
- End-user cost (time, fuzz-factor)
13THE INTRANET COST ASPECTS
14Relative costs of lifecycle phases
15Informatie en bedrijfsvoering aandachtspunten!!
- Operationele systemen
- Verlopen de operaties efficiënt, flexibel?
- Bruikbaarheid, aanvaarding
- Is voldaan aan de regels?
- Knowledge Work systemen
- Worden de werkzaamheden ondersteund?
- Information Knowledge management
- Ondersteuning van managementbeslissingen
- Is de informatie voorhanden?
- Hoe kunnen betere beslissingen genomen worden?
- Algemeen ook kosten en baten, TCO
16- Information systems literacy Broad-based
understanding of information systems that
includes behavioral knowledge about
organizations, management and individuals using
information systems as well as technical
knowledge about computers - Computer literacy Knowledge about information
technology, focusing on understanding how
computer technologies work -
17Information Systems Problem Areas
18Causes of Implementation Success and Failure
Information Systems Success or Failure Factors
19Een aantal voorbeelden
- Information overload
- Informatie-integratie
- Kwaliteit van informatieverwerking
- De totale keten
- Kwaliteit van het proces
- Effectiviteit en efficiëntie
20The Information Tsunami
Who wants some more data?
- Data explosion problem
- Automated data collection tools and mature
database technology lead to tremendous amounts of
data stored in databases (legacy data, ERP,
scanner data, web data, documents, mobile,
multimedia, RFID, ) -
- Traditional techniques
- Paper, Query and reporting, Spreadsheet analysis,
- But information overload
21The Information Tsunami
- Megabyte 1,000,000 or 106 bytes
- 2 megabytes Hi-res photo
- 5 megabytes Complete works of Shakespeare
- Gigabyte 1,000,000,000 or 109 bytes
- 1 gigabyte Pickup truck filled with paper
- 2 gigabytes Movie on a DVD
- Terabyte 1,000,000,000,000 bytes OR 1012 bytes
- all the X-ray films in a large technological
hospital - 2 Terabytes An academic research library
- 10 Terabytes The printed collection of the US
Library of Congress - 50 Terabytes The contents of a large Mass
Storage System - 200 Terabytes Worldwide production of office
documents (printer/copier) 400 million trees
(annually) - 900 Terabytes The required storage space for
email (annual) - Petabyte 1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes OR 1015
bytes - 1 Petabyte 3 years of EOS data (2001)
- 2 Petabytes All US academic research libraries
- 8 Petabytes All information available on the Web
- 20 Petabytes Production of hard-disk drives in
1995 - 200 Petabytes All printed material
(www.sims.berkeley.edu/research/projects/how-much-
info-2003/)
22Structured/Unstructured Information
23Growth Trends
- Moores law
- Computer speed doubles every 18 months
- Stored data
- total storage doubles every 9 months
- Consequence
- very little data will ever be looked at by a
human - More intelligent use is NEEDED to make sense and
use of data.
(Gregory Piatetsky-Shapiro)
24Todays Information Systems Islands of
Information
(P. Hinssen)
25Portals
OrderEntry
CRM
WebContent
Support
ProductLiterature
ERP
KnowledgeBase
TrainingSchedules
(P. Hinssen)
26Knowledge work systems
- A recent Slashdot posting reports that, according
to both PricewaterhouseCoopers and KPMG, more
than 90 of corporate spreadsheets contain
material errors. With each error costing between
10K and 100K per month, one expert estimates
corporate America loses in excess of 10B
annually through the misuse and abuse of
spreadsheets.
27Organizational Capital
Source E. Brynjolfsson, keynote at MIT Sloan, 19
April 2002 Annual Conference
28Operationele bedrijfsprocessen
- informatie?
- flexibiliteit?
- compliance?
- effectiviteit?
- efficiëntie?
29The Information Value Chain
30(No Transcript)
31Resultaten van investeringen in informatiesystemen
32Email
- Symptoms
- Volume
- Time
- Broadcasts
- Lost Knowledge
- Spam
- Attachments
- Viruses
- Security
- The real problems
- Content management
- Expertise
- Document management
- Routing
- Workflow
- Attitude
Spam is a problem, a big problem, but the
solution is easy Delete. The real problem is the
rest of the emails
33Advantages of email
- Fast
- Inexpensive
- Electronic,
- Stored, provides a record
- Independent of time and place
- Great for sharing and distributing documents
- Can eliminate telephone tag
- Reduces hierarchy
- Supports collaboration
- Supports virtual teams and teleworking
- Has changed the way we do business!!
- Advantages for the sender, or the receiver?
34The Dark side
- Growing at 40 each year
- 30 messages per day in 2007 is 82 messages per
day in 2010 - Cost of time wasted is huge
- Often 3 to 4 hours per day spent on e-mail
without any offsetting reductions in other work - Taking over our lives
- 40 of people take computers on vacation with
them to avoid e-mail backlog when they return to
their offices - E-mail is upsetting both organizations and people
- The cost of time wasted by poor e-mail habits is
estimated to be 20 million per year in an
organization of 10,000 employees - Much, perhaps most, of the e-mail we receive each
day is just time-wasting, mind-numbing noise
35Zachman Framework
Why
Who
When
Where
What
How
1
Contextual/ Scope
2
Conceptual/ Enterprise
3
Logical/ IS Functionality
4
Physical/ Design
5
As Built/ Subcontractor
6
Functioning/ Code
Objective Precedent Objective
Organization Reporting Organization
Event Cycle Event
Node Line Node
Entity Relationship Entity
Input Process Output