Study Guide Enterprise Systems
Study Guide Enterprise Systems
Study Guide Enterprise Systems
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3. What is supply chain management? What is the most
important metric in supply chain management? What
does it measure? What are examples of supply chain
management software? How is each used to support
supply chain processes?
2
A supply chain. This figure illustrates the major entities in the supply chain
and the flow of information upstream and downstream to coordinate the
activities involved in buying, making, and moving a product. Suppliers
transform raw materials into intermediate products or components, and
then manufacturers turn them into finished products. The products are
shipped to distribution centers and from there to retailers and customers.
3
return. Information systems that provide online self-service
applications and improved customer access to information serve to
reduce the cost of serving each customer, thereby improving
profitability. Information systems used by marketing and sales
departments help companies find new leads, identify marketing
segments, manage campaigns, and build the customer base, thereby
growing revenue. Information systems such as social networking
applications and sentiment analysis systems are used by companies to
capture and analyze what customer say.
The three basic categories of CRM technology are marketing,
sales force automation, and customer service and
support.
Information systems support marketing activities such as loyalty
programs and customized e-mail programs.
Sales force automation systems help sales reps track and
manage accounts, contacts, and leads.
Information systems such as online knowledge bases and
support sites, and social networking tools such as Twitter,
support activities in customer service and support.
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Traditional view of systems. In most organizations, separate systems built
over a long period of time support discrete business processes and discrete
business functions. The organizations systems rarely included vendors and
customers.
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Enterprise systems purport to replace legacy systems based on
out-dated information technology. But the legacy systems that must be
replaced are the primary control systems of the corporation, containing
millions of lines of software instructions. Thousands of employees use
and rely on these systems everyday, as well as customers and
vendors. The prospect of successfully and rapidly transforming the
corporate nervous system, re-training thousands of workers, while also
redesigning the fundamental business processes, all at once, while
carrying on business as usual is daunting.
Enterprise systems are built with software programs that are just
as difficult to understand, complex, poorly documented, and yet
intertwined with corporate business processes as the legacy
systems they will replace. There is every prospect that the new
enterprise systems will be as brittle and hard to change as old
legacy systems as the organizations environment and
information requirements change over time.
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Sentiment analysis uses software to scan the text in blogs or other
user-generated content and classify the opinions as pro, con, or
neutral. Organizations use sentiment analysis to monitor
customers online chatter.