1 / 14

Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Information Systems in Organizations. Information Systems in Organizations. Organization Collection of people and resources established to accomplish a set of goals (profit & non-profit) System of inputs, transformation, and outputs Value Chain (Porter)

evadne
Download Presentation

Chapter 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Information Systems in Organizations

  2. Information Systems in Organizations • Organization • Collection of people and resources established to accomplish a set of goals (profit & non-profit) • System of inputs, transformation, and outputs • Value Chain (Porter) • Series of activities that add value to a product/service (e.g., warehousing, production, distribution, marketing, etc.) • IS monitors performance of these processes • IS has becomepart of the value-added processes IS for management

  3. Organizational Structures • Traditional, Project, Team, Multidimensional • Lean organizations use IS to empower employees • Information can be provided to front line employees • Faster resolution of customer issues • IS assists in sharing information throughout the org. • Reduce costs and increase product quality • Improves productivity • IS helps increase employee satisfaction • Self-service applications • Faster feedback & recognition IS for management

  4. Organizational Culture & Change • Organizational Culture • Common beliefs, values, & understandings • Organizational Change • Internal & external causes • Overcoming resistance is key to successful change • Employee involvement is necessary • Change model (Lewin & Schein) • Unfreeze, Move, Refreeze • Change agents are required for successful adoption of new information systems IS for management

  5. Lewin/Schein Model Unfreeze Move Refreeze IS for management

  6. Reengineering Business Processes Changes to Organizational Structure Changes to Organizational Values Changes to Information Systems Reengineering IS for management

  7. Continuous Improvement & TQM • Constantly seek ways to add value (e.g., reduce number of defects, improve time to market) • Quality Product must meet or exceed customer expectations • TQM (Demming) • Collection of tools & techniques to achieve continuous improvement • IS is a key element of TQM Collecting & analyzing data, designing & manufacturing new products, improving customer service IS for management

  8. Outsourcing & Downsizing • Outsourcing • Contracting external professional services to perform activities/processes, e.g., human resources, advertising, information systems • Enables an organisation to focus on its core strengths • Downsizing • Reducing the number of employees to cut costs • Effects on morale, communication, & productivity • Early retirement “buyout packages” help to lessen the effects on remaining employees • NOT rightsizing IS for management

  9. Competitive Advantage (1) • Seeking & Maintaining a Competitive Advantage • Five-Force Model (Porter) • Rivalry among existing competitors • Threat of new entrants • Threat of substitute products • Bargaining power of buyers • Bargaining power of suppliers • IS can help to gain competitive advantage • Altering industry structure (alliances & partnerships) • Creating new goods & services and enhancing existing ones • Using IS as a strategic weapon (e.g., Sabre, Wal-Mart) IS for management

  10. Competitive Advantage (2) • Strategies for gaining a competitive advantage • Low cost producer (IS can help to reduce a variety of costs) • Product Differentiation IS can help to differentiate, e.g., quality, features, delivery • Market Differentiation • IS can help to identify target markets • Use of Data Mining IS for management

  11. Performance Based Systems • IS is now a key factor in improving productivity Redefining how organizations achieve their goals • Measuring the Value of IS ROI, earnings,market share, customer satisfaction • Most IS projects are driven by at least one of the following factors: • Tangible or intangible savings • Legal requirements • Modernisation • Pilot project IS for management

  12. Careers in IS • IS employees are relatively high in demand • Above average starting salaries • Job market for IS professionals continues to grow • Primary areas • CIO • Operations • Systems Development • Systems Support • Consulting • Sales IS for management

  13. Case • Textron - outsourcing, pages 77-78 IS for management

  14. Next Class: • Chapter Three: Hardware: Input, Processing, and Output Devices • Case: Unisys - customer service, pages 132-133 IS for management

More Related