Management Information System
Management Information System
Competitive Forces Model: Michael Porter designed various vital frameworks for developing an
organization’s strategy. One of the most renowned among managers making strategic decisions is
the five competitive forces model that determines industry structure. According to Porter, the
nature of competition in any industry is personified in the following five forces:
1. Threat of new potential entrants
2. Threat of substitute product/services
3. Bargaining power of suppliers
4. Bargaining power of buyers
5. Rivalry among current competitors
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Competitive Strategies:
1. Cost leadership: In cost leadership, a firm sets out to become the low cost producer in
its industry. The sources of cost advantage are varied and depend on the structure of
the industry. They may include the pursuit of economies of scale, proprietary
technology, preferential access to raw materials and other factors. A low cost producer
must find and exploit all sources of cost advantage. if a firm can achieve and sustain
overall cost leadership, then it will be an above average performer in its industry,
provided it can command prices at or near the industry average.
2. Differentiation: In a differentiation strategy a firm seeks to be unique in its industry
along some dimensions that are widely valued by buyers. It selects one or more
attributes that many buyers in an industry perceive as important, and uniquely
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positions itself to meet those needs. It is rewarded for its uniqueness with a premium
price.
3. Innovation: Finding new ways of doing business. This strategy may involve
developing new products and services or entering unique market or market niches. It
may involve making radical changes to business process for producing products and
services that are so different form the way a business has been conducted that they
alter the fundamental structure of an industry.
4. Growth: significantly expanding a company’s capacity to produce goods and services,
expanding into global markets, diversifying into new products and services, or
interchanging into related products and services.
5. Alliance: Establishing new business linkage and alliances with customers, suppliers,
competitors, consultants, and other companies. These linkages may include mergers,
acquisitions, joint ventures, forming of virtual companies.
VALUE CHAIN : Activities within an organization that bring products and services to
market
Primary activities – take raw materials and transform it into something of greater
value
Inbound logistics • Marketing and sales
Operations • Service
Outbound logistics
Supporting activities – those functions that the company requires to do business
but do not directly add value to a product or service
HR • Procurement
Firm infrastructure IT
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How can information systems change the way an organization reacts to its competitive
forces?
By changing the bargain power of suppliers
By building closer ties with customers
By increasing or decreasing barriers to entry in a market
By serving as the basis for new products and/or services
The analysis and design of workflows and processes within an organization. A business process is
a set of logically related tasks performed to achieve a defined business outcome. Re-engineering
is the basis for many recent developments in management. Business process reengineering (often
referred to by the acronym BPR) is the main way in which organizations become more efficient
and modernize. Business process reengineering transforms an organization in ways that directly
affect performance.
The FUNDAMENTAL rethinking and RADICAL redesign of business PROCESSES to bring
about DRAMATIC improvements in critical, contemporary measures of performance, such as
cost, quality, service and speed.”
Potential payback is high, but so is risk of disruption and failure
Organizational redesign approaches are an important enabler of reengineering
Includes use of IT, process teams, case managers
The best way to map and improve the organization's procedures is to take a top down approach,
and not undertake a project in isolation. That means:
Starting with mission statements that define the purpose of the organization and describe
what sets it apart from others in its sector or industry.
Producing vision statements which define where the organization is going, to provide a
clear picture of the desired future position.
Build these into a clear business strategy thereby deriving the project objectives.
Defining behaviours that will enable the organization to achieve its' aims.
Producing key performance measures to track progress.
Relating efficiency improvements to the culture of the organization
Identifying initiatives that will improve performance.
Once these building blocks are in place, the BPR exercise can begin.
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A REENGINEERED BUSINESS
PROCESS
Virtual Company Strategies: Forming virtual companies has become an important competitive
strategy in today’s global markets.
A virtual company uses an organizational structure called a network structure because
these companies are usually interlinked by the Internet, intranets, and extranets
This creates flexible and adaptable companies keyed to exploit fast changing business
opportunities
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IT plays an important role in providing computing and telecom resources to support the
communications, coordination, and information flows needed. Managers of a virtual company
depend on IT to help them manage a network of people, knowledge, financial and physical
resources provided by many business partners to quickly take advantage of rapidly changing
opportunities.
Business strategies of virtual companies include:
• Share infrastructure and risk
• Link complementary core competencies
• Increase facilities and market coverage
• Gain access to new markets and share market or customer loyalty
• Share information and risk with alliance partners
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Why create a virtual company?
• A business may not have the time or resources to develop the manufacturing and
distribution infrastructure, people competencies, and information technologies needed
• By forming a virtual company of all star partners, a world class solution for customers can
be created
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Combination: Explicit to Explicit This is our most familiar process. We take explicit,
explainable knowledge, combine it with other explicit knowledge and develop new explicit
knowledge. This process characterizes most studying in school, the development of new designs
and procedures.
Internalization: Explicit to Tacit This is the process whereby something we learn becomes
automatic. When you first learned to drive, it was an explicit process, in which a constant internal
monologue reminded you to check the mirror, shift the gears, press the brake, etc. Once you more
deeply learned the process, it becomes completely internal and you can drive for hours without
noticing your driving. One interesting thing is that generally when you try to pay attention to how
you are doing these things, it impairs your performance. Just try writing down the steps to tying
your shoe and following them.
Socialization: Tacit to Tacit
One of the most powerful human learning capacities is through socialization, observing behavior
by others and copying their behaviors and beliefs. Humans learn to speak and survive in their
culture almost entirely by socialization. Psychologists talk about how reward and punishment are
at the root of learning, but in fact we often learn by observing how others are rewarded and
punished for their behavior. For example, if you are new to a group, and someone in the group
does a behavior that triggers a negative nonverbal reaction in the other members of the group, you
learn immediately, and often unconsciously, not to do that behavior. Fields that understand the
role of this tacit to tacit process develop people for their field with fewer lectures and more labs,
studios, and apprenticeships.
Externalization: Tacit to Explicit The book is full of stories of product development
collaborations, and one of the strongest themes is that successful design often requires getting
tacit knowledge into an explicit form so that you can develop effective designs. For example, in
the development of the automatic bread maker, no matter how many times they interviewed
bakers and watched them work, their designs failed to produce good bread. Finally, some
engineers apprenticed themselves to a famous baker and made a whole lot of bread before they
figured out that kneading process included a pulling aspect that created air spaces in the dough.
As engineers, they then put blunt fins at the bottom of the chamber to pull on the mass of bread
dough as it was rotated, making much better bread.
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An agile company can make a profit in markets with broad product ranges and short
model lifetimes, and can produce orders in arbitrary lot sizes
Products can be priced based on their value as solutions not on their cost to
produce
An agile company leverages the impact of its people and the knowledge they
possess