Week One
Week One
Week One
1- Increased e-commerce
Globalization
1Operational excellence
5Competitive advantage
6Survival
Operational Excellence:
- Information systems, and technology an important tools in achieving greater efficiency and productivity
- Walmart’s Retail Link system links suppliers to stores for a superior replenishment system
- Business model: describes how a company produces, delivers, and sells a product or service to create wealth
- Information systems and technology are major enabling tools for new products, services, and business models
- Serving customers well leads to customers returning, which raises revenues and profits
- Example: High-end hotels that use computers to track customer preferences and used to monitor and customize the
environment
- Intimacy with suppliers allows them to provide vital inputs, which lowers costs
- Example: Nygard’s information system which links sales records to a contract manufacturer
Improved Decision-Making:
- Without accurate information managers must use forecasts, best guesses, luck
- Results in
/Misallocation of resources
Competitive Advantage:
Survival:
- Industry-level changes
Information Technology: The hardware and software that a firm needs to achieve business objectives.
Information vs Data:
4- feedback: Output returned to members of the organization to help them evaluate or correct the input and/or processing
- Computers and software are the technical foundation and tools, similar to the material and tools used to build a house.
/the key elements of an organization: people/ structure/ business processes/ politics/ culture
-Senior management
-Middle management
-Operational management
-Knowledge workers
-Data workers
Managers set organizational strategies for responding to business challenges. In addition, managers must act creatively to
create new products and services and occasionally recreate the organization.
Creating Value:
Information systems are instrumental in creating value. Investments in information technology will result in the following:
-Superior returns
-Productivity increases
-Revenue increases
1- Technical Approach: Emphasizes mathematically based models/ Computer science, management science, operations
research
2- Behavioral Approach: Behavioral issues (strategic business integration, implementation, etc.)/ Psychology, economics,
sociology
- Business Model: An abstraction of what an enterprise is and how it delivers products and services.
- Information: Data that have been shaped into a form that is meaningful and useful to human beings.
- Information Technology (IT): The hardware and software technologies a firm needs to achieve its
business objective.
- Management Information Systems: The study of information systems focusing on their use in business
and management.
- World Wide Web: System with universally accepted standards for storing, retrieving, and formatting
data.
- Networking and Telecommunications: Physical devices and software that link various computer
hardware components.
- Information system: interrelated components working together to collect, process, store, and disseminate
information to support decision making.
- culture: the set of fundamental assumptions about what products the organization should produce, how, and where
it should produce them
- data: streams of raw facts representing events occurring in an organization or the physical environment before they
have been organized.
◼ In 2019, global spending on information technology (IT) and IT services was nearly $3.8 trillion.
◼ In addition, firms spent another $160 billion on management consulting and services - which involves redesigning firms’
business operations to take advantage of these new technologies (Statista, 2020).
❑ the Internet has drastically reduced the costs of operating on a global scale (think born global firms like Airbnb and MNCs
like FB)
There is a growing interdependence between a firm’s ability to use information technology and its ability to implement
corporate strategies and achieve corporate goals.
What a business would like to do in five years often depends on what its systems will be able to do.
In contemporary systems, there is a growing interdependence between a firm’s information systems and its business
capabilities
Businesses and firms invest heavily in information systems to achieve six strategic business objectives:
◼ Competitive advantage
◼ Survival
Information technology (IT) consists of all the hardware and software that a firm needs to use in order to achieve its business
objectives.
An information system can be defined technically as a set of interrelated components that collect (or retrieve), process,
store, and distribute information to support decision-making and control in an organization.
◼ In addition, information systems may also help managers and workers analyze problems, visualize complex subjects, and
create new products.
To fully understand information systems, it’s important that the broader dimensions in which it operates are understood.
◼ These dimensions have the power to provide solutions to challenges and problems in the business environment.
Business Perspective on IS
Managers and firms invest in information technology and systems because they provide real economic value to the
business. The decision to build or maintain an information system assumes that the returns on this investment will be
superior to other investments in buildings, machines, or other assets.
◼ These superior returns include increased productivity, increased revenues superior long-term strategic positioning of the
firm in certain markets
The value of an information system to a business, as well as the decision to invest in any new information system, is largely
determined by the extent to which the system will lead to better management decisions, more efficient business processes,
and higher firm profitability.
Complementary IS Assets
Awareness of the organizational and managerial dimensions of information systems can help us understand why some firms
achieve better results from their information systems than others.
However, not every firm that invests in IS reaps the same level of benefit or value. This potential variation lies in
complementary assets a firm has to its IS.
Complementary assets are those assets required to derive value from a primary investment. These can be organizational,
Managerial or Social.
Complementary IS Assets
Organizational Assets:
◼ Supportive organizational culture, Appropriate business model & processes, Strong IS team, Decentralized authority
Managerial Assets:
◼ Strong Senior Management, Incentives for innovation, Teamwork & Collaboration, Training
Social Assets:
◼ Internet and Telco infrastructures, laws & regulations, IT Literate labor force.
There is a growing interdependence between a firm’s ability to use information technology and its ability to implement
corporate strategies and achieve corporate goals.
Businesses and firms invest heavily in information systems to achieve six strategic business objectives: Operational
excellence, New business models, Customer and supplier intimacy, Improved decision-making, Competitive advantage, and
Survival.
The company’s complementary assets are required to reap the benefits of IS appropriately.