Title: Information Systems, Organizations, Management, and Strategy
1Information Systems, Organizations,Management,
and Strategy
Chapter 3
2The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
Information technology services
Figure 3-5
3- Programmers Highly trained technical specialists
who write software instructions for computers. - System analysts The principal liaisons between
the information system groups and the rest of the
organization. - IS managers Leaders of IS specialists and
external specialists to vendors, manufacturers,
consultants, and other managers of the
organization.
4- CIO Senior manager in charge of the IS functions
in the firm. - End users Representatives of departments outside
the IS group for whom applications are developed.
5The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
Information Technology Infrastructure and
Information Technology Services
- Information Services Department
- Past Consisted primarily of programmers,
building own software and managing own computing
facilities - Today A growing proportion of specialists, with
department acting as powerful change agent in the
organization
6The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
Information Technology Infrastructure and
Information Technology Services
- Information Services Department
- The IS department suggests new business
strategies and new information-based products and
services, and coordinates both the development of
the technology and the planned changes in the
organization.
7The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
How Information Systems Affect Organizations
- Economic Theories
- Information system technology is a factor of
production, freely substituted for capital and
labor - Decreasing cost of IT substitutes the rising cost
of labor. - Result in a decline in the number of middle
managers and clerical workers.
8The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
How Information Systems Affect Organizations
- Economic Theories
- Transaction cost theory Information technology
can help lower the cost of market participation. - Traditionally, firms have tried to reduce
transaction costs by getting bigger, hiring more
employees, or buying suppliers and distributors,
as GM used to do. - It is now worthwhile for firms to contract with
external suppliers. - Firm size can stay constant or contract even if
revenue increases.
9The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
The transaction cost theory of the impact of
information technology on the organization
Figure 3-6
10The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
How Information Systems Affect Organizations
- Economic Theories The Agency Theory
- A principal (owner) employees agents
(employees) to perform work on his or her behalf.
However, agents need constant supervision and
management otherwise, they will tend to pursue
their own interests rather than those of owners. - As firm grows, agency and coordination costs rise
- Information technology reduces agency costs
because it becomes easier for managers to oversee
more employees
11The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
The agency cost theory of the impact of
information technology on the organization
Figure 3-7
12The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
How Information Systems Affect Organizations
- Behavioral Theories
- IT could change hierarchy of decision making by
lowering costs of information acquisition and
distribution. - Organization shape could flatten as
professional workers become self-managing and
decision making becomes more decentralized - Growth of virtual organizations, networking of
people, group, and companies to complete a task. - Information systems seen as outcome of political
competition between subgroups due to their
influence access to a key resource ---
information.
13The Changing Role of Information Systems in
Organizations
The Internet and Organizations
- The Internet is capable of dramatically reducing
transaction and agency costs - Businesses are rapidly rebuilding some key
business processes based on Internet technology - Internet technology becoming a key component of
IT infrastructure
14Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
- Examine what managers do and what information
they need for decision making and other
functions. - Understand how decisions are made and what kinds
of decisions can be supported by IS. - Determine how IS can benefit managers.
15Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
The Role of Managers in Organizations
- Classical Model
- Five Functions of Managers
- Planning
- Organizing
- Coordinating
- Deciding
- Controlling
16Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
The Role of Managers in Organizations
- Behavioral Models
- Five Attributes of Managers
- Perform much work at non-stop pace
- Fragmented activities
- Prefer speculation, hearsay, current and ad-hoc
information - Prefer oral communication
- Maintain diverse web of contacts as informal
information system.
17Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
The Role of Managers in Organizations
- Managerial Role Categories
- Interpersonal Figurehead, leader, liaison
- Informational Nerve center, disseminator,
spokesperson - Decisional Entrepreneur, disturbance handler,
resource allocator, negotiator
18- Manager roles supported by IS Table 3-4, page 90.
19Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
Managers and Decision Making
- Decision Making
- Classified by Organizational Level
- Strategic determines long-term objectives,
resources, policies - Management control monitors effective usage of
resources, performance - Operational control determines how to perform
tasks and ways to distribute information
20Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
Managers and Decision Making
- Decisions are classified as
- Unstructured Nonroutine, decision maker provides
judgment, evaluation, and insights into problem
definition, no agreed-upon procedure for decision
making - Structured Repetitive, routine, handled using a
definite procedure
21Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
Information systems and levels of decision making
Figure 3-9
22Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
Managers and Decision Making
- Stages of Decision Making
- Intelligence Collect information, identify
problem - Design Conceive alternative solution to a
problem - Choice Select among the alternative solutions
- Implementation Put decision into effect and
provide report on the progress of solution
23Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
The decision-making process
Figure 3-10
24Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
Window on Management
- Why War Games Cant Always
- Simulate the Battlefield
- How useful are war games in simulating combat
scenarios and predicting outcomes? - How would the models of decision making described
here explain how they are designed and performed?
25Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems
Implications for the Design and Understanding of
Information Systems
- Optimal Information Systems
- Flexible provide many options for handling and
evaluating data - Support a variety of styles, skills, knowledge
keep track of many alternatives - Sensitive to organizations bureaucratic and
political requirements
26Information Systems and Business Strategy
What Is a Strategic Information System?
- Computer system at any level of an organization
- Changes goals, operations, products, services, or
environmental relationships - Helps organization gain a competitive advantage
27Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Business Competitive Strategies Questions
- How can we compete effectively in this particular
market?
28Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Business Competitive Strategies
- Become the low-cost producer
- Differentiate product or service
- Change scope of competition by enlarging or
narrowing market
29Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Value Chain Model
- Firm seen as series or chain of activities that
add a margin of value to firms products or
services - Highlights activities in business where
competitive strategies are best applied - Primary or support activities
- Firms value chain linked to value chains of
other partners
30Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Primary activities Activities directly related
to the production and distribution of the firms
products and services that create value for the
customers. - Supporting activities Make the delivery of the
primary activities possible and consist of
organizational infrastructure, human resources,
technology, and procurement.
31Information Systems and Business Strategy
The firm value chain and the industry value chain
Figure 3-11
32Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Value Web
- Value chain extended by Internet technology that
connects all the firms suppliers, partners, and
customers - Collection of independent firms using IT to
coordinate value chains to collectively produce a
product or service - More customer-driven, less linear than value
chain - Flexible, adaptive to changes in supply and
demand
33Information Systems and Business Strategy
The value web
Figure 3-12
34Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Product Differentiation
- Strategy for creating brand loyalty by developing
new and unique products and services not easily
duplicated by competitors - Information systems used to create new
information technology-based products and
services
35Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Product Differentiation
- Citibank ATMs, Debit Cards
- CitiBank, Wells Fargo On-Line Banking, One
Statement - NetBank Virtual Banking
- SABRE On-Line Ticketing, Booking, Reservation,
Tour Package - Dell Assemble to Order
- Lands End Make to Order
36Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Focused Differentiation
- Strategy for developing new market niches for
specialized products and services - Information systems used to produce data for
sales and marketing analyze customer behavior
37Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Focused Differentiation
- Sears Roebuck Target appliance buyers, gardening
enthusiasts, and mothers-to-be. - Stein Roe Investors Personalized ad. and
services. - Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC)
Personalized services to most profitable
customers. - Transfer of non-profitable customers to on-line
services.
38Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Efficient Customer Response Systems
- Links consumer behavior back to distribution,
production, and supply chains - Information systems used to link customers value
chain to firms value chain - Reduce inventory costs deliver product or
service more quickly to customer
39Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Switching Costs
- Cost of switching to competitive product higher
switching costs discourage customers going to
competitors - Information systems offer convenience, ease of
use, raise switching costs
40Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model
- Efficient Customer Response Systems
- Wal-Mart Continuous replenishment system,
efficient customer response. - Dell Assemble to order.
- Baxter International stockless inventory.
- Sales overhead for operating cost Wal-Mart 16.6
(Retail average is 20.7, Sears 24.9)
41Information Systems and Business Strategy
Stockless inventory compared to traditional and
just-in-time supply methods
Figure 3-13
42Information Systems and Business Strategy
Business-level strategy
Figure 3-14
43Information Systems and Business Strategy
Firm-Level Strategy and Information Technology
- At firm level, information technology can
- Promote synergies between business units, pool
resources - Tie together operations of disparate business
units - Improve core competencies
44Information Systems and Business Strategy
Firm-Level Strategy and Information Technology
- Bank merger Chemical and Chase Manhattan, Wells
Fargo and Norwest, Deutsche and Bankers, Citicorp
and Travelers Insurance. - Provide cross-marketing, pool market and
expertise, lower retail cost, increase customer
access to products, tie operations together. - American Airline World-One Alliance.
45Information Systems and Business Strategy
Industry-Level Strategy and Information Technology
- Industry-Level Strategies
- Information partnerships
- Competitive forces model e.g., developing
industry standards, customer awareness, lower
supplier cost - Network economics cost of adding new participant
negligible, but adds great marginal gain
46Information Systems and Business Strategy
Industry-Level Strategy and Information Technology
- Information Partnerships
- AA and Citibank, Northwest and MCI frequent
flier program - Increased customer loyalty
- New credit card subscribers
- Cross marketing
- Baxter International and Staple
47Information Systems and Business Strategy
Porters competitive forces model
Figure 3-15
48Information Systems and Business Strategy
Industry-Level Strategy and Information Technology
- Competitive Forces Model
- Making standards for exchanging information and
business transactions (make product substitution
difficult and raise entry cost) - Coordinate policies and regulations.
- Example Covisint for auto industry.
49Information Systems and Business Strategy
Industry-Level Strategy and Information Technology
- Impact of Internet on Competitive Forces
- Reduces barriers to entry
- Enables new substitute products and services
- Shifts bargaining power to customer
- Raises firms bargaining power over suppliers
- Suppliers benefit from reduced barriers to entry
and from elimination of intermediaries - Widens geographic market, increases number of
competitors, reduces differentiation among
competitors
50Information Systems and Business Strategy
The new competitive forces model
Figure 3-16
51Information Systems and Business Strategy
Using Systems for Competitive Advantage
Management Issues
- Network Economics
- The marginal gain of adding another participant
is much larger than its marginal cost. - Build communities of users
- Customer loyalty and enjoyment
- Examples eBay, iVillage, Nepster