Module 1 Session 1 PDF
Module 1 Session 1 PDF
Systems
Management Information System
Personnel
Material Sub-sub-System
Etc. • Purchase
• Stores
• Trasportation
Keep on dividing till it is
logical to fragment the
subsystem
Subsytems and supersystems of IS
Business
Environment
Organization:
- business process
Information
I ITIT Information
IS
Technology - people
Systems
- data
- strategy
What is MIS?
An information system designed by an
organization to collect collect, manipulate,
and disseminate data or information on a
program
Includes hardware, software, people,
communications systems, and data
Allows managers to plan, monitor, and
evaluate operations and performance of an
activity
Designed and used for administrative
purposes
Role of MIS in business
Roles:
- support of business operations
- support of managerial decision making
- support of strategic competitive
advantage
‘In an organization, information is the
blood and MIS is the heart’.
Figure 1-1 Five Components of an Information System
13
Business Processes and Information Systems
• Business processes:
• Workflows of material, information, knowledge
• Sets of activities, steps (applying for a driving
license, Order a Burger)
• May be tied to functional area or be cross-
functional
• Businesses: Can be seen as collection of
business processes
• Business processes may be assets or liabilities
(Poorly Designed Processes become Liabilities)
Traditional View isolated IS
Non-integrated Functional IS
Problems of Fragmented
Systems
If Systems are compartmentalized for Functional Areas and
not Integrated
Departments will fail to fully communicate with all the other
departments about every process that is taking place in a
company. Lack of integration will lead to problems in
coordination. For Example.
Sales sends an order to Manufacturing with a shipment
date that can’t possibly be met.
Accounting and Finance raise bills for supplies that
Production never order.
Human Resources holds a training class that interferes
with a rush production job
Functions of Enterprise
Sales Engineering
Design
Shop Floor
execution
Finance Controlling
Quality Maintenance
Procurement
Integrating Functions and
Business Processes:
Cross-Functional Business Processes:
Check
Quote Commit Produce Deliver Bill Collect
Credit
Production
Planning
Financial
Materials
Mgmt
Accounting
ENTERPRISE APPLICATIONS: INTERLINKAGES
Outside
Outside Boundaries
Boundaries
Internal Systems
An Example: Modular & Integration - Procurement Cycle
Invoice
Verification Billing
Accounting
Financial Accounting
Middleware Supply
Procurement Chain
Management Management
Enterprise
Resource Knowledge
Planning Management
Selling Customer
Chain Relationship
Management Management
Operations, Tactics,Strategy
Progress in MIS
IN AT
Information can be created in multimedia
Information can be stored
Information can be retrieved VERY
REAL Information can be shared
Information can be distributed
LOW
Information can be processed
TIME Information can be transmitted
COST
Enabling Role of Information
Technology
Old Business Rule Technology intervention New Business Rule
Information can appear Shared databases Information appears
only at one place simultaneously
Only experts can perform Expert Systems Generalists can act as
complex jobs experts.
Businesses must choose Telecommunication Centralization and
between centralization and networks decentralization
decentralization possible
Managers make all the Software tools Decision making is
decisions part of everyone’s job
Enabling Role of Information Technology
* Reference : Reengineering the corporation by Michael Hammer & James Champy, 1993-94
Impact of MIS and IT on an Organization
•As transactional Information Systems:
- enables enterprise-wide shared and integrated
databases through :
i. improved decision making
ii. improved MIS reporting
- enables enterprise-wide cross functional work flow
automation through :
i. improving Intra-organizational transactions
ii. reducing in business processes lead times
iii. improved inventory and working capital management
iv. improved financial reconciliation
Impact of MIS on an organization