Title: The Case for IT
1The Case for IT
2Announcements
- Quiz return after class
- Three people still need to form project team
- See me after class
3Todays Outline
- Economic Measures
- Justifying expenditure on IT
- As infrastructure cost
- As profit driver
- As proprietary advantage
- Three examples
- SABRE
- IBM
- MedCo
- Building a Business Case
4Important Financial Measures
- Return on Investment / Rate of Return
- Return on Equity
- Return on Assets
- Internal Rate of Return
5Return on Investment
- Also known as rate of return
- ratio of money gained/lost to investment amount
- Eg.
- Invest 1,000 at start,
- end with 1,075
- Return on investment 75/1000 7.5
- Often annualized ROI is used
6Return on Equity
- Return on net worth
- Measures the return to common stockholders
- ROE
- Net Income / Average stockholders equity
- (net income/sales) (sales/total assets)
(total assets/avg stockholders equity) - (known as DuPont Formula)
7Return on Assets
- ROA Net Income / Total Assets
- (Net Income / Sales) (Sales / Assets )
8Time Value of Money
- The present value of something its value in
todays dollars - Eg. Having 110 a year from now is equivalent to
having 100 if the bank is giving 10 return
9Net Present Value
- Value of cash flows in todays dollars
Where t - the time of the cash flow n - the
total time of the project r - the discount
rate Ct - the net cash flow (the amount of cash)
at time t. C0 - the capital outlay at the
beginning of the investment time ( t 0 )
10Internal Rate of Return
- Annualized effective compounded return rate
- Discount rate that results in net present value
of zero from series of cash flows
11Comparison with financial options
- Security option
- The right to buy a security at a fixed,
predetermined price (called the exercise price)
on or before a fixed date (called the maturity
date) - Eg. The right to buy (up to) ten Google Stock,
one year from today for 450 each
12This weeks caseIT Doesnt matter
13Main Ideas
- Competitive Advantage from IT is possible, but
challenging - IT Doesnt matter responses
14Chapter 4 Making the Case for IT
15Table 4.1 IT Investment Categories
16Business Case for IT
- Investments in reusable, value-enabling
infrastructure lower costs, improve asset
efficiency and create strategic options for
future growth - Investments in value-creating IT applications
drive profitable growth through further cost
reductions and revenue generation - Value-sustaining IT applications and
infrastructure provide strategic differentiation
and proprietary advantage
17SABRE
- 1957
- IBM and American Airlines team up to form SABRE,
the Semi-Automatic Business Research Environment.
It's based on SAGE, the Semi-Automatic Ground
Environment -- the first major system to use
interactive, real-time computing -- which IBM
helped develop for the military. - 1960
- The first Sabre reservation system is installed
in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., on two IBM 7090
computers. It processes 84,000 telephone calls
per day. - 1964
- The Sabre system, and its nationwide network, is
completed at a cost of 40 million and becomes
the largest commercial real-time data-processing
system in the world. It saves American Airlines
30 on labor costs.
18SABRE
- 1972
- The Sabre system is upgraded to IBM S/360 and
moved to a new consolidated computer center in
Tulsa, Okla. It is used for all of American
Airlines' data processing facilities. - 1976
- The Sabre system is installed in a travel agency
for the first time, triggering a wave of travel
automation. By the end of the year, 130 locations
have the system. - 1984
- Sabre introduces BargainFinder, the industry's
first automated low-fare search capability.
Competitors sue American Airlines, saying its
Sabre system unfairly gives its flights priority
on the displays seen by travel agents. American
agrees to discontinue any preferential treatment
of its flights.
19SABRE
- 1985
- Sabre introduces easySabre, allowing consumers
with PCs to tap into the Sabre system to make
airline, hotel and car rental reservations. - 1989
- On May 12, the ultrareliable Sabre system goes
down for 12 hours. The cause a latent bug in
disk-drive software that destroys file addresses.
- 1996
- Sabre launches Travelocity.com.
- 2000
- AMR Corp., the parent of American Airlines, spins
off The Sabre Group as an independent company. - 2001
- Sabre Holdings Corp. begins migrating its
massive, 25-year-old mainframe system for
air-travel shopping and pricing to HP NonStop
servers and Linux servers.
20Table 4.2 Leveraging Infrastructure at IBM IT
Operations
21Table 4.3 IBM Enterprise Support Processes
22Arguments for IT
- New applications give competitive advantages
- Open standards, reliable infrastructure give rise
to more innovation - IT can give both operating efficiencies and
business insight - Reusable modules, shared middleware, common
interfaces get around traditional pitfalls
23Role of infrastructure
- Examples of traditional infrastructure
- What value do they create?
- How do businesses account for them?
24Role of infrastructure
- IT infrastructure
- Specific IT operations (data center, network,
call centers) - Support for enterprise processes (procurement,
ERP, finance, HR) - Value creation
- Efficiency
- Speed to market
- Flexibility
25Proprietary Advantage
- More than just cost-cutting!
- Must change competitive positioning
- Successful entry into growing market or exit from
shrinking one - Achieving top position in attractive industry and
sustaining it - Attracting loyal investors
- Very few competitive advantages are sustainable!
26Table 4.4 Driving Profitable Growth at IBM
27Table 4.5 Creating Proprietary Advantage at IBM
28Differences of IT vs. other infrastructure costs
29Questions, Break, Presentation
30MedCo IT option
- Business plan to launch internet-enabled remote
patient monitoring business - Patients with pacemakers place device over
pacemaker to collect data on rhythm, blood
pressure, etc. - Data sent from patients home by internet to
physician, family, health care providers - Cash flow expectations suggest
- 300 million investment over 5 years to develop
- Positive cash flow in 5 years
- 2 billion in revenues by year 10
- but there are risks
- See curve in fig 4.3(a)
31Figure 4.3(a) Three Cash flow scenarios for MedCo
Patient Monitoring Investments
32Alternative investment strategies
- MedCo A
- 2 years and 150 million spent developing
databases, networks, call centers - Next 18 months, proprietary remote monitoring
business applications and user interface built
for 25 million - Final 18 months 125 million custom
installations, networking patients etc. - What if this leads to 600 million cash flow from
year 13 - MedCo B
- Leverage existing IT infrastructure (databases,
networks, call centers in 2 years for 25 million - Minimizes custom integration, rollout time
- Proprietary advantage only lasts 3 years
- Cash flow approach 1.5billion
33Figure 4.3(b) MedCo A and MedCo B Patient
Monitoring Investments
34MedCo B options
- MedCo B can also use existing infrastructure for
other income generating products - Other diseases
- Charging family members for service
- These options are available because of initial
investment - They do not have to be exercised if the market
changes - Therefore give a lower risk
35Figure 4.3(c) MedCo B Leverages Infrastructure
and Exercises Options
36Figure 4.3(d) the Value of Leveraging
Infrastructure and Exercising Options
37Writing a Business Plan
- Two different scenarios
- A plan written for the purpose of attaining
venture capital funds - A plan for reorganizing the financial structure
within a company - Both require excellent writing, clear objectives
and positive projections
38Business Plan Success
- Personal Introduction, visit
- Find out objectives of VC
- Tell story
- Negotiate
- Treat all interactions as part of proposal
- Executive summary is key
- Be careful with writing, formatting, packaging
- Maintain momentum
- Dont count cash till you have it
- Expect mostly no answers and move on!
39What Investors look for
- People/management that can get the job done
- Innovative technology that can be commercialized
- Large, rapidly expanding market
- Strategy to gain unfair advantage
- Attractive per price share
40Business Plan Components
- Executive Summary
- Customer Need and Business Opportunity
- Business Strategy and Key Milestones
- Marketing Plan
- Operations Plan
- Management and Key Personnel
- Financial Projections
- Appendices
41Business Plan Components
- Executive Summary
- Business opportunity, technology, product,
market, management - Proposed financing
- Amount
- Use of proceeds
- Five-year income summary and requirements
- Customer Need and Business Opportunity
- Product and technology description, uses
- Business Strategy and Key Milestones
- Cumulative cash need and head count at each
milestone
42Business Plan Components
- Marketing Plan
- Customer need
- Market segmentation
- Channels of distribution
- Sales strategy and plans
- Five-year sales forecast
- Competition and positioning
- Operations Plan
- Engineering plan
- Manufacturing plan
- Facilities and administration plan
43Business Plan Components
- Management and Key Personnel
- Incentive compensation program
- Detailed resumes
- Organization
- Staffing plan and headcount projections
- Financial Projections
- Assumptions
- Five-year pro forma forecasts
- Income statement
- Balance sheet
- Cash flow statement
- Appendices
- (If needed)
44Reminder
- Project Team
- after class if you dont have team yet