Keri Pearlson & Carol Saunders: Managing and Using Information Systems: A Strategic Approach - Fifth Edition
Keri Pearlson & Carol Saunders: Managing and Using Information Systems: A Strategic Approach - Fifth Edition
Keri Pearlson & Carol Saunders: Managing and Using Information Systems: A Strategic Approach - Fifth Edition
Learning Objectives
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
List the identifying factors of the eras of information usage. Know what makes an information resource valuable. Explain how information resources are used strategically in context of the 5-forces model. Understand how information resources can be used to alter the value chain.
Explain the importance of strategic alliances. Know the risks of information resources.
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Zara aligns its information system strategy with its business strategy. The system links demand to manufacturing and distribution. Customers visit up to 17 times per year to check on new items that may have arrived.
Limited products lead customers to immediately purchase products they like. Zaras business strategy leads to a loyal and satisfied customer base.
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The POS system sends daily updates to Zaras headquarters. Managers report to designers what sold and what customers wanted but couldnt find. The information is used to determine inventory management. New designs can be ordered twice a week. The entire process is automated so that new designs and products can be created quickly. Zara uses its information resources to sustain its advantages over competitors
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IS strategy from the 1960s to the 1990s was driven by internal organizational needs
o o
Lower existing transaction costs Provide support for managers by collecting and distributing
information
o
new capabilities
o
Era II 1970s
Effectiveness Solve problems and create opportunities Increasing productivity and better decision quality Organization/ group Data driven
Era IV 1990s
Strategic Transform industry/ organization Competitive position
Era V 2000+
Value creation Create collaborative partnerships Adding value
Era VI 2100+
Value creation Community and social business Creating relationships
Justify IT expenditures
Organization
Application specific
Era I 1960s
Dominate technology Mainframe, centralized intelligence
Era II 1970s
Minicomputer, mostly centralized intelligence
Era IV 1990s
Client Server, distributed intelligence
Era V 2000+
Internet, global ubiquitous intelligence
Era VI 2100+
Social platforms, social networks, mobile, cloud Plentitude Economics of relationships bundled with economics of information
IS help firms address their internal and external circumstances Enable managers to identify and use information resources strategically IS enable firms to gain advantage over the competition. Firms draw on modern and innovative applications
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The manager need to combine all the available firms resources: Internal resources o
External resources o
Information resources is defined as the available data, technology, people, and processes available to perform business
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Information Resources
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
IT asset is anything, tangible or intangible, that can be used by a firm in its processes for creating, producing and/or offering its products, goods or services. (i.e. IT infrastructure). IT capability is something that is learned or developed over time for the firm to create, produce or offer it products.
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IT Assets
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
IS infrastructure:
o o
Information repository
o
Logically-related data that is captured, organized and retrievable by the firm. Designed to improve the firms efficiency.
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IT Assets (Cont.)
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
Web 2.0 space include resources used but not owned by the firm
Available as a service such as Internet-based software (Software as a Service, or SAAS) Managers can manage customer information with an externally based IT resource Managers can find expertise or an entire network of individuals ready to participate in the innovation processes of the corporate using relatively little capital or expense. (i.e. Facebook, LinkedIn).
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Categories of IT Capabilities
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
Technical skills - applied to designing, developing and implementing information systems. IT management skills - critical for managing the IT function and IT projects. Relationship skills - can either be externally-focused or spanning across departments. Committing and developing information resources require
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IT Asset
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
Anything that can be used by a firm in its processes for creating, producing and/or offering its products (goods or services) Base foundation of the IT portfolio shared through the firm Data that is logically related and organized in a structured form accessible and able for decision making purposes. Hardware, software, network, data components, proprietary technology, webbased services Critical information about customers that can be used to gain strategic advantage. Much of this information is increasingly available on the web.
Something that is learned or developed over time in order for the firm to create, produce or offer it products in IT assets Ability applied to designing, developing and implementing information systems Ability to managing IT function and IT projects Proficiency in systems analysis and design; programming skills Being knowledgeable about business processes and managing systems to support them; evaluating technology options; envisioning creative IS solutions to business problems
Relationship skills
Ability of IS specialists to work with Spanning: having a good relationship between parties outside the IS department. IT and business managers Externally-forced: have a good relationship with an outsourcing vendor
Eras I through III value was derived from scarcity reflected in the cost to produce the information. Era IV value was derived from plenitude
Network effects is the value of a network node to a person or organization, it increases when others join the network. (i.e. e-mail)
o
Determining where a resources value lies and how it can be improved in a firms favor. The attributes of information resources that impact the value make it
Early adopters may experience a competitive advantage from using an information resource. The experience gained may lead to inequities between firms. Different experiences with a resource creates value, and a create strategic advantage.
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o o
The value of information mushrooms under conditions of information asymmetries. Possessor of information may use it against, or sell it to, companies or individuals who are not otherwise able to access the information.
Reliance on the individual skills of IT professional Risky as key individuals will leave the firm, taking their experience with them. Development of unique knowledge-sharing processes, and creation of an organizational memory.
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Capturing of lessons learned from all team members after the completion of each project. Using social technologies to record interactions and activity streams. Information resource become obsolete:
o
Understanding the nature of the information resources at hand is a prerequisite to using them effectively.
Managers confront elements that influence the competitive environment. Slim tolerance for error. Managers must take multiple view of the strategic landscape: First view - Porters five competitive forces model. Second view - Porters value chain. Third view focuses on the types of IS resources needed to gain
competitive advantage.
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1.
Porters five forces model show the major forces that shape the competitive environment of the firm (figure 2.3 and 2.4). Threat of New Entrants: new firms that may enter a companies market. Bargaining Power of Buyers: the ability of buyers to use their market power to decrease a firms competitive position Bargaining Power of Suppliers: the ability suppliers of the inputs of a product or service to lower a firms competitive position Threat of Substitutes: providers of equivalent or superior alternative products Industry Competitors: current competitors for the same product.
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2.
3.
4.
5.
Figure 2.3 Five competitive forces with potential strategic use of information resources.
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
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Industrial Competitors
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Value chain model addresses the activities that create, deliver, and
product or service.
o
Support activities make it possible for the primary activities to exist and remain coordinated.
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Stakes or resources required just to be in the business.(i.e. banks and ATMs) Initially rare and valuable resources were the communities many companies implemented using social IT. These communities were a valuable resource for the firms that sponsored them, and only a few existed.
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Many firms who invested in systems learned that gaining a competitive advantage does not automatically mean that you can sustain it over the long term.
Technical Skills
IT Management Skills Relationship Skills Externally-focused Spanning
Note: L = low; M = medium; H = high
M
H
L
H
M
L
M
L
M
M
H H
M H
L L
M L
L-M L
Adapted from Wade, M and Hulland, J. The Resource-Based View and Information Systems Research: Review, Extension and Suggestions for Future Research,, MIS Quarterly, 28(1), pp. 107-142.
Strategic Alliances
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
An interorganizational relationship that affords one or more companies in the relationship a strategic advantage. E.g., the alliance between Zynga and Facebook helped Zynga benefit from the revenue resulting from its gamers on Facebook community. IS can be the platform upon which a strategic alliance functions. E.g., The alliance between Delta and e-Travel helped Delta reduce agency reservation fees and offered e-Travel new corporate leads.
Linking value chains through SCM is another way firms build an ITfacilitated strategic alliance.
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Co-opetition: a new strategy whereby companies cooperate and compete at the same time with companies in their value net. Value net includes a company and its competitors and complementors, as well as its customers and suppliers, and the interactions among all of
them.
Complementor is a company whose product or service is used in conjunction with a particular product or service to make a more useful set for the customer.
Co-opetition is the strategy for creating the best possible outcome for a business by optimally combining competition and cooperation.
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Potential Risks
Pearlson and Saunders 5th Ed. Chapter 2
There are many potential risks that a firm faces when attempting to use IT to outpace their competition. Awakening a sleeping giant a large competitor with deeper pockets may be nudged into implementing IS with even better features (i.e FedEx and UPS).
Demonstrating bad timing sometimes customers are not ready to use the technology designed to gain strategic advantage (i.e. GRiDPAD
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they are poorly implemented (i.e. Virgin America, Hershey Foods, and
Austin Energy).
Failing to deliver what users what systems that dont meet the firms target market likely to fail (i.e. Netflix) Web-based alternative removes advantages consider risk of losing any advantage obtained by an information resource that later becomes available as a service on the web. (i.e. Clear Channel Communications)
Running afoul of the law Using IS strategically may promote litigation (American Airlines, Google).
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Information is increasingly a core component of the product or service offered by the firm. IT strategy is business strategy they cannot be created without each other.
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Customer relationship management (CRM) (p. 59) - a tool to optimize the processing of customer information . Co-opetition (p. 65) - is the strategy for creating the best possible outcome for a business by optimally combining competition and cooperation. Enterprise resource planning (ERP) (p. 59) - a tool that automates functions of the operations activities of the value chain.
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IT asset (p. 47) - anything, tangible or intangible, that can be used by A Firm in its processes for creating, producing and/or offering its products, goods or services. (i.e. IT infrastructure). IT capability (p. 47) - something that is learned or developed over Time for the firm to create, produce or offer it products. Network effects (p. 48) - the value of a network node to a person or organization, it increases when others join the network. (i.e. e-mail)
Resource-based view (RBV) (p. 59) - competitive advantage comes From the information and other resources of the firm. Strategic alliance (p. 64) an inter-organizational relationship that affords one or more companies in the relationship a strategic advantage. Supply chain management (SCM) (p. 59) - an approach to how
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