Title: Chapter 9 Managers and Their Information Needs
1Chapter 9Managers and TheirInformation Needs
2The Organizational Pyramid
- Many organizations follow pyramid model
- CEO at top
- Small group of senior managers
- Many more lower-level managers
- Clerical and Shop Floor Workers
- No management-level decisions required
- Operational Management
- Comply with general policies
- handed down
3The Organizational Pyramid
- Tactical Management
- Wide-ranging decisions within general directions
handed down how to do it decisions - Strategic Management
- Decisions affect entire or large parts of the
organization what to do decisions
4Characteristics of Information at Different
Managerial Levels
- Data Range
- Amount of data from which information is
extracted - Time Span
- How long a period the data covers
- Level of Detail
- Degree to which information is specific
5- Source Internal vs. External
- Internal data collected within the organization
- External data collected from outside sources
- Media, newsletters, government agencies, Internet
6- Structured and Unstructured Data
- Structured data numbers and facts easily stored
and retrieved - Unstructured data drawn from meetings,
conversations, documents, presentations, etc. - Valuable in managerial decision making
7The Web The Great Equalizer
- Outside information now easier to get
- More free information
- Information available in easy-to-manipulate
format
8The Nature of Managerial Work
- Planning
- Planning at different levels
- Long-term mission and vision
- Strategic goals
- Tactical objectives
- Most important planning
- activities
- Scheduling
- Budgeting
- Resource allocation
9The Nature of Managerial Work
10The Nature of Managerial Work
- Control
- Managers control activities by comparing plans to
results.
11The Nature of Managerial Work
- Decision Making
- Both planning and control call for decision
making - The higher the level of management
- The less routine the managers activities
- The more decision-making involved
12The Nature of Managerial Work
- Management by Exception
- Managers review only exceptions from expected
results that are of a certain size or type to
save time.
13The Nature of Managerial Work
- Leadership
- Managers expected to lead, which requires
- Having a vision and creating confidence in others
- Encouraging and inspiring subordinates
- Initiating activities to make work efficient and
effective - Creating new techniques to achieve corporate
goals - Presenting a role model for desired behavior
- Taking responsibility for undesired consequences
- Delegating authority
14Organizational Structure
- IT Flattens the Organization
- Eliminates middle managers
15Organizational Structure
- The Matrix Structure
- People report to different supervisors, depending
on project, product, or location of work - IT supports matrix structure
- Easier access to cross-functional information
16Characteristics of Effective Information
- Tabular and Graphical Representation
- Certain information better
- presented graphically
- Trends as lines
- Distributions as pie charts
- Performance comparisons
- as bar charts
- Many people prefer tabular
- data for complex problem solving
17Managers and Their Information Systems
18Managers and Their Information Systems
- Transaction-Processing Systems (TPS)
- Capture and process raw materials for information
- Interfaced with applications to provide
up-to-date information - Clerical workers use TPS for routine
responsibilities - Operation managers use TPS
- for ad-hoc reports
19Managers and Their Information Systems
- Decision Support Systems (DSS) and Expert Systems
(ES) - DSS and ES support more complex and nonroutine
decision-making and problem-solving activities - Used by middle managers
- as well as senior managers
20Managers and Their Information Systems
- Executive Information Systems (EIS)
- Provide timely, concise information about
organization to top managers - Provide internal as well as external information
- Economic indices
- Stock and commodity prices
- Industry trends