Chapter 1 Business Information System
Chapter 1 Business Information System
Chapter 1 Business Information System
• Explain why information systems are so important today for business and
management
• Assess the impact of the Internet and Internet technology on business and
government
Four Factors of Production
• Land
• Labor
• Capital
• Entrepreneurship
Four Resources
• Physical Resources
• Human Resources
• Financial Resources
• Information Resources
Why Information Systems?
Technology perspective
Business Perspective
What Is an Information System? From the Technology perspective
Information systems enable the firm to increase its revenue or decrease its
costs by providing information that helps managers make better decisions
or that improves the execution of business processes.
A Business Perspective on Information Systems
Dimension Description
Outdated business processes
Organizational dimensions Unsupportive culture and attitudes
Political conflict
Turbulent business environment,
change
Complexity of task
Inadequate resources
Technology dimensions & Problems
Dimension Description
Insufficient or aging hardware
Technology dimensions Outdated software
Inadequate database capacity
Insufficient telecommunications
capacity
Incompatibility of old systems with
new technology
Rapid technological change
People dimensions & Problems
Dimension Description
Lack of employee training
Difficulties of evaluating performance
People dimensions Legal and regulatory compliance
Work environment
Lack of employee support and
participation
Indecisive management &
Poor management
A Business Problem-Solving Approach
• Solution Design
The second step is to design solutions to the problem (s) you have
identified. As it turns out, there are usually a great many
“solutions” to any given problem, and the choice of solution often
reflects the differing perspectives of people in an organization.
You should try to consider as many different solutions as possible
so that you can understand the range of possible solutions. Some
solutions emphasize technology; others focus on change in the
organization and people aspects of the problem. As you will find
throughout the text, most successful solutions result from an
integrated approach in which new technologies are accompanied
by changes in organization and people.
A Business Problem-Solving Approach
• Choice
Choosing the “best” solution for your business firm is the next step
in the process. Some of the factors to consider when trying to find
the “best” single solution are the cost of the solution, the feasibility
of the solution for your business given existing resources and
skills, and the length of time required to build and implement the
solution. Also very important at this point are the attitudes and
support of your employees and managers. A solution that does not
have the support of all the major interests in the business can
quickly turn into a disaster.
A Business Problem-Solving Approach
• Implementation
The best solution is one that can be implemented. Implementation
of an information system solution involves building the solution
and introducing it into the organization. This includes purchasing
or building the software and hardware—the technology part of the
equation. The software must be tested in a realistic business
setting; then employees need to be trained, and documentation
about how to use the new system needs to be written.
• Implementation
• Change management refers to the many techniques used to
bring about successful change in a business. Nearly all
information systems require changes in the firm’s business
processes and, therefore, changes in what hundreds or even
thousands of employees do every day. You will have to design
new, more efficient business processes, and then figure out how
to encourage employees to adapt to these new ways of doing
business. This may require meeting sessions to introduce the
change to groups of employees, new training modules to bring
employees quickly up to speed on the new information systems
and processes, and finally some kind of rewards or incentives to
encourage people to enthusiastically support the changes.
A Business Problem-Solving Approach
• Implementation
Implementation also includes the measurement of outcomes. After
a solution has been implemented, it must be evaluated to
determine how well it is working and whether any additional
changes are required to meet the original objectives. This
information is fed back to the problem solvers. In this way, the
identification of the problem can change over time, solutions can
be changed, and new choices made, all based on experience.
Problem Solving: A Process, Not an Event
• it is easy to fall into the trap of thinking about problem solving as an event
that is “over” at some point, like a relay race or a baseball game. Often in
the real world this does not happen. Sometimes the solution chosen does
not work, and new solutions are required.
• For instance, the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) spent more than $1 billion to fix a problem with shedding foam on
the space shuttle. Experience proved the initial solution did not work. More
often, the chosen solution partially works but needs a lot of continuous
changes to truly “fit” the situation. Initial solutions are often rough
approximations at first of what ultimately “works.”
• Sometimes, the nature of the problem changes in a way that makes the
initial solution ineffective. For instance, hackers create new variations on
computer viruses that require continually evolving antivirus programs to
hold in check. For all these reasons, problem solving is a continuous
process rather than a single event.
Components of an information system
Why Information Systems Matter
Capital management
Foundation of doing business
Productivity
Strategic opportunity and advantage
Capital Management:
When a firm goes digital, it's not about just adding a computer system to the
mix. Throwing a computer system at outdated business processes is
exactly the wrong thing to do. A truly digital firm has several characteristics
that distinguish it from most of the firms claiming to be digitized:
Characteristics:
Significant business relationships are digitally enabled and mediated
Core business processes are accomplished through digital networks and
span the entire organization
Key corporate assets are managed digitally internal and external
environments are quickly recognized and dealt with
And the number one reason digital firms experience greater opportunities
for success and profits is because they view information technology as the
"core of the business and the primary management tool."
WHY DO BUSINESS INVEST IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS
• Operational Excellence
Businesses continuously seek to improve the efficiency of their operations
in order to achieve higher profitability. Information systems and
technologies are some of the most important tools available to managers
for achieving higher levels of efficiency and productivity in business
operation.
Wal-Mart, the largest retailer on Earth, exemplifies the power of information
systems coupled with brilliant business practices and supportive
management to achieve world-class operational efficiency. In 2007, Wal-
Mart achieved more than $348 billion in sales—nearly one-tenth of retail
sales in the United States—in large part because of its Retail Link system,
which digitally links its suppliers to every one of Wal-Mart’s 5,289 stores
worldwide. As soon as a customer purchases an item, the supplier
monitoring the item knows to ship a replacement to the shelf. Wal-Mart is
the most efficient retail store in the industry, achieving sales of more than
$28 per square foot, compared to its closest competitor, Target, at $23 a
square foot, with other retail firms producing less than $12 a square foot.
WHY DO BUSINESS INVEST IN INFORMATION
SYSTEMS
• New Products, Services, and Business Models
Information systems and technologies are a major enabling tool
for firms to create new products and services, as well as entirely
new business models. A business model describes how a
company produces, delivers, and sells a product or service to
create wealth. Today’s music industry is vastly different from the
industry in 2000. Apple Inc. transformed an old business model of
music distribution based on vinyl records, tapes, and CDs into an
online, legal distribution model based on its own iPod technology
platform. Apple has prospered from a continuing stream of
innovations, including the original iPod, the iPod nano, the iTunes
music service, the iPod video player, and the iPhone.
WHY DO BUSINESS INVEST IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS
The Mandarin Oriental in Manhattan and other high-end hotels exemplify the use of
information systems and technologies to achieve customer intimacy. These hotels use
computers to keep track of guests’ preferences, such as their preferred room
temperature, check-in time, frequently dialed telephone numbers, and television
programs, and store these data in a giant data repository. Individual rooms in the hotels
are networked to a central network server computer so that they can be remotely
monitored or controlled. When a customer arrives at one of these hotels, the system
automatically changes the room conditions, such as dimming the lights, setting the room
temperature, or selecting appropriate music, based on the customer’s digital profile. The
hotels also analyze their customer data to identify their best customers and to develop
individualized marketing campaigns based on customers’ preferences.
WHY DO BUSINESS INVEST IN INFORMATION
SYSTEMS
• Competitive Advantage
When firms achieve one or more of these business objectives
—operational excellence; new products, services, and
business models; customer/supplier intimacy; and improved
decision making—chances are they have already achieved a
competitive advantage. Doing things better than your
competitors, charging less for superior products, and
responding to customers and suppliers in real time all add up
to higher sales and higher profits that your competitors
cannot match.
WHY DO BUSINESS INVEST IN INFORMATION
SYSTEMS
• Survival
Business firms also invest in information systems and
technologies because they are necessities of doing business.
Sometimes these necessities are driven by industry-level
changes.
For instance, after Citibank introduced the first automatic
teller machines (ATMs) in the New York region in 1977 to
attract customers through higher service levels, its
competitors rushed to provide ATMs to their customers to
keep up with Citibank. Today, virtually all banks in the United
States have regional ATMs and link to national and
international ATM networks.
Providing ATM services to retail banking customers is simply
a requirement of being in and surviving in the retail banking
business.
Dimensions of Information Systems
• organizations exist everywhere, and each has its own structure, just as workplace
organizations have structures and personalities to fit their needs, or in some cases, their
old habits.
• A baseball team needs talented, well-trained players at different positions. Sometimes,
the success of the team depends on a good, well-informed coach or manager. So too
with the workplace organization. Business organizations have their major business
functions, which need many kinds of players with various talents, who are well-trained
and well-informed, in order to succeed.
• The larger the organization, the more formal the management structure, including the
need for standard operating procedures (SOPs). SOPs can help streamline standard
business processes so that managers and employees can properly complete their tasks
in a more efficient manner. Many companies now integrate these business processes
into their information systems to ensure uniformity, consistency, and compliance. As
we'll see in upcoming chapters, many companies are even incorporating the informal
work processes into their information systems in an effort to capture as much corporate
knowledge as possible.
• Just as every baseball team needs good players at different positions, a business
organization requires different employees to help it succeed. Knowledge workers help
create new knowledge for the organization and data workers help process the
paperwork necessary to keep an organization functioning. Without production or
service workers, how would the company get its products and services to the
customer?
Management
The World Wide Web allows big companies to act "small” and
small companies to act "big." It has leveled the playing field so
entrepreneurs can break into new markets previously closed to
them. A Web site, consisting of a few pages or hundreds of
pages, enables businesses to get close and stay close to their
customers in new ways. It is truly a revolution in our global
economy.
The Challenge of Information Systems: Key Management Issues