MIS (Management Information Systems) : Margaret Rouse
MIS (Management Information Systems) : Margaret Rouse
MIS (Management Information Systems) : Margaret Rouse
MIS (management information systems) is the department controlling hardware and software systems
used for business-critical decision-making within an enterprise.
The MIS department was originally the whole of information technology. From the 1960s to the early
1980s, practitioners and business schools referred to MIS, rather than IT. In the early days, enterprise
computing's main role was to help the CEO and CFO with information systems management for a few
key run-the-business tasks, such as order entry, accounting and budgeting. No
enterprise applications existed; programmers painstakingly wrote code to carry out these functions,
usually on a mainframe.
These systems were business-critical, meaning a business would fail if it had to go back to manual
accounting. If MIS failed, the business was in danger. The CFO oversaw MIS, ensuring the developers
and administrators delivered what accounting needed.
In the 1980s, with the advent of personal computers that ran spreadsheets, the scope of computing's
responsibilities began to change. Personal spreadsheets took business-critical processes out of the
domain of upper management; MIS needed to service a wider range of users -- deploying external, as
well as internal, software programs. The name of the department changed to reflect this new set of
internal customers, becoming information systems (IS). The MIS department became one, still-vital
part of the overall IS department.
Types of MIS
The four types of MIS are:
• Transaction Processing System (TPS), which processes the routine transactions associated
with a business. Example transactions include payroll processing, order processing, such as for
an e-commerce business, and invoicing.
• Management Support Systems (MSS), which store and organize data, enabling end users to
generate reports and analyze data to address business needs and inform planning. A data
warehouse is an example of a Management Support System.
• Decision Support Systems (DSS), which analyze business data to assist managers with
decision making. For example, a DSS could project revenue figures based on new product sales
assumptions.
• Expert Systems, which provide managers with insights and advice, using artificial intelligence
(AI) to simulate the expert knowledge of a human in a particular field.
Importance of MIS
MIS, both the department and the software system, can help companies gain a competitive advantage.
The data managed by an MIS system can help managers make better decisions related to sales,
manufacturing, resource allocation and more. Both the MIS department and the software systems help
organizations increase productivity by enabling workers to spend more time on productive tasks.
The MIS department plays an important role in providing these support services within an organization:
• Governance, which involves systems and controls over employees’ use of computing systems.
This MIS department defines, manager and enforces rules on how (and whether) employees can
access the company’s technologies and network infrastructure. MIS is responsible for IT
security, as well as enforcing codes of conduct related to computer systems use.
• Infrastructure, which refers to the technology systems that support the day-to-day functioning
of the business, such as phones, desktop/laptop computers, servers, application software and
cloud computing. The MIS department provides internal help desk and support services,
assisting employees and troubleshooting issues related to the infrastructure.
• Data management, which involves the provisioning and management of systems that enable
employees to access and update critical business data. The MIS department is responsible for
ensuring the availability and security of the data management systems.
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Margaret Rouse asks: