Ybs Slayt1
Ybs Slayt1
Ybs Slayt1
Information Systems
• Chapter 1
• Information Systems in
Global Business Today
Information technology investment, defined as hardware, software, and communications equipment, grew from 21% to 33%
between 1999 and 2017.
Source: Based on data in U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts, Table 5.3.6. Real Private Fixed Investment
by Type, Chained Dollars (2018).
What’s New in
Management
• I T Innovations
– Cloud computing, big data, Internet of Things
– Mobile digital platform
– AI and machine learning
• New Business Models
– Online streaming music and video
– On-demand e-commerce services
What’s New in
Management
• E-commerce Expansion
– E-commerce expands to nearly $1 trillion in 2018
– Netflix now has more than 125 million U S subscribers
– Online services now approach online retail in revenue
– Online mobile advertising now larger than desktop
• Management Changes
– Managers use social networks, collaboration tools
– Business intelligence applications accelerate
– Virtual meetings proliferate
What’s New in
Management
• Firms and Organizations Change
– More collaborative, less emphasis on hierarchy and
structure
– Greater emphasis on competencies and skills
– Higher-speed/more accurate decision making based on
data and analysis
– More willingness to interact with consumers (social
media)
– Better understanding of the importance of I T
Globalization Challenges and
Opportunities: A Flattened
World
• Internet and global communications have greatly
changed how and where business is done
– Drastic reduction of costs of operating and transacting
on global scale
– Competition for jobs, markets, resources, ideas
– Growing interdependence of global economies
Globalization Challenges and
Opportunities: A Flattened
World
– Requires new understandings of skills, markets,
opportunities
– Challenges yes, but opportunities as well
– Over half of the revenue of S&P 500 US firms
is generated offshore
– Information systems enable globalization of commerce
The Emerging Digital
• In a fully digital firm:
– Significant business relationships are digitally enabled
and mediated
– Core business processes are accomplished through
digital networks
– Key corporate assets are managed digitally
• Digital firms offer greater flexibility in organization and
management
– Time shifting, space shifting
business process
Raw data from a supermarket checkout counter can be processed and organized to produce
meaningful information, such as the total unit sales of dish detergent or the total sales revenue from
dish detergent for a specific store or sales territory.
What Is an Information
System?
• Activities in an information system that produce
information:
– Input: Captures raw data from organization or external
environment
– Processing: Converts data into meaningful form
– Output: Transfers processed information to people
or activities that use it
– Feedback: Output returned to appropriate members of
organization to help evaluate or correct input stage
What is an Information
System?
• Sharp distinction between computer or computer program
versus information system
• Computer/computer program vs. information system
– Computers and software are technical foundation and
tools to store and process information
– Similar to the material and tools used to build a house
– Cannot produce required information to a particular
organization
Figure 1.4 Functions of
Information System
Dimensions of Information
• Organizations
• Management
• Technology
Using information systems effectively requires an understanding of the organization, management, and
information technology shaping the systems. An information system creates value for the firm as an
organizational and management solution to challenges posed by the environment.
Dimensions of Information
Systems: Organizations ( of 3) 1
• Complementary assets
– Examples of organizational assets
▪ Appropriate business model
▪ Efficient business processes
– Examples of managerial assets
▪ Incentives for management innovation
▪ Teamwork and collaborative work environments
– Examples of social assets
▪ The Internet and telecommunications infrastructure
▪ Technology standards
Figure 1.9 Contemporary
Approaches
Technical
• Emphasizes mathematically based models
• Computer science, management science, operations
research
Behavioral
• Behavioral issues (strategic business integration,
implementation, etc.)
• Psychology, economics, sociology
Approach of This Text:
Sociotechnical Systems ( 1 of 2)
• Management information systems
– Combine computer science, management science,
operations research, and practical orientation with
behavioral issues
• Four main actors
– Suppliers of hardware and software
– Business firms
– Managers and employees
– Firm’s environment (legal, social, cultural context)
Approach of This Text:
Sociotechnical Systems ( 2 of 2)
• Sociotechnical view
– Optimal organizational performance achieved by jointly
optimizing both social and technical systems used in
production
– Helps avoid purely technological approach
Figure 1.10 A Sociotechnical
Perspective on Information
System
s