Module 1 PPT
Module 1 PPT
Module 1 PPT
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The Role of Information Systems in Business Today
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The Role of Information Systems in Business Today
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The Role of Information Systems in Business Today
• Operational excellence:
– Improvement of efficiency to attain higher
profitability
– Information systems, technology an
important tool in achieving greater
efficiency and productivity
– Walmart’s RetailLink system links suppliers
to stores for superior replenishment system
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The Role of Information Systems in Business Today
• Operational excellence:
– Improvement of efficiency to attain higher profitability
• New products, services, and business models:
– Enabled by technology
• Customer and supplier intimacy:
– Serving customers raises revenues and profits
– Better communication with suppliers lowers costs
• Improved decision making
– More accurate data leads to better decisions
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The Role of Information Systems in Business Today
• Competitive advantage
– Delivering better performance
– Charging less for superior products
– Responding to customers and suppliers in real
time
– Examples: Apple, Walmart, UPS
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The Role of Information Systems in Business Today
• Survival
– Information technologies as necessity of business
– May be:
• Industry-level changes, e.g. Citibank’s
introduction of ATMs
• Governmental regulations requiring record-
keeping
– Examples: Toxic Substances Control Act, Sarbanes-
Oxley Act
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Types of Information Systems
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Types of Information Systems
• Business intelligence
– Data and software tools for organizing and analyzing
data
– Used to help managers and users make improved
decisions
• Business intelligence systems
– Management information systems
– Decision support systems
– Executive support systems
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Types of Information Systems
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Types of Information Systems
In the system illustrated by this diagram, three TPS supply summarized transaction data to the MIS reporting
system at the end of the time period. Managers gain access to the organizational data through the MIS, which
provides them with the appropriate reports.
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Types of Information Systems
This report, showing summarized annual sales data, was produced by the MIS in Figure 2-3.
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Types of Information Systems
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Types of Information Systems
This DSS operates on a powerful PC. It is used daily by managers who must develop bids on shipping
contracts.
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Types of Information Systems
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Anatomy of a Computer System
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• Anatomy of a Computer System
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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Major types of Optical disks
• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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• Anatomy of a Computer System (contd.)
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Direct and Sequential Access
• Direct or Random Access
• Directly store and retrieve data
• Each storage position has a unique address and can be accessed in the
same length of time
• Semiconductor memory chips, magnetic disks
• Sequential Access
• Data is stored and retrieved sequentially
• Must be accessed in sequence by searching through prior data
• Magnetic tape
Input Technologies
• Keyboard
• Still most widely used input device
• Pointing Stick
• Small eraser-head device embedded in keyboard
• Cursor moves in the direction of the pressure placed on the stick
• Trackball
• Stationary device, similar to mouse
• Roller ball moves cursor on screen
Input Technologies (contd.)
• Touchpad
• Small, rectangular, touch-sensitive surface
• Usually on keyboard
• Cursor moves in direction your finger moves
• Touch Screen
• Use computer by touching screen
• Screen emits a grid of infrared beams, sound waves,
or electric current
• Grid is broken when screen is touched
• Pen-Based Computing
• Used in Tablet PCs and PDAs
• Pressure-sensitive layer, similar to touch screen, under
liquid crystal display screen
• Software digitizes handwriting, hand printing, and hand
drawing
Input Technologies (contd.)
• Speech Recognition Systems
• Speech be the future of data entry
• Easiest, most natural means of human communication
• Speech recognition systems digitize, analyze, and classify speech and sound patterns
• Compares to a database of sound patterns in its vocabulary
• Passes recognized words to the application software
• Typically requires voice recognition training
• Optical Scanning
• Devices read text or graphics and convert them into digital input for computers
• Enables direct entry of data from source documents
• A document management library system
• Scans documents, then organizes and stores them for easy reference or retrieval
• Scanners
• Compact desktop models are popular for low cost and ease of use
• Larger, more expensive flatbed scanners are faster and provide high-resolution color scanning
• Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
• Software that reads characters and codes
• Used to real merchandise tags, sort mail, score tests
• Optical scanning wands read bar codes
Other Input Technologies
• Magnetic Stripe
• Reads the magnetic stripe on credit cards
• Smart Cards
• Microprocessor chip and memory on credit card
• Digital Cameras
• Allows you to shoot, store, and download photos or full-motion video with
audio into the PC
• Images and audio can then be edited or enhanced
• Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR)
• Used by banks to magnetically read checks and deposit slips
• Requires an iron oxide-based ink
• Reader-sorter equipment magnetizes the ink, then passes it under a reading
head to sense the signal
Output Technologies
• Video Displays
• Cathode-ray tube (CRT)
• Liquid crystal displays (LCDs)
• Active matrix and dual scan
• Plasma displays
• Used in large TVs and flat-panel monitors
• Printed Output
• Inkjet printers spray ink on a page
• Laser printers use an electrostatic process similar to a photocopying machine
• Radio frequency identification (RFID)
• Use tiny tags with embedded microchips containing data
about an item and location, and antenna
• Common uses:
• Automated toll-collection
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• Types of Software
• Systems Software
• Includes the operating system and all the utilities that enable the computer to function.
• Application Software
• Includes programs that do real work for users eg spreadsheets, presentation software, etc
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• General Hardware and Software Trends
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
• XML
• Extensible Markup Language.
• Foundation technology for Web services. More powerful and flexible than HTML.
• XML can perform presentation, communication and storage of data on the Web.
• XML allows web services to pass data from one process to another in a standard format –
making it possible for computers to manipulate, interpret, perform operations on data and
connect, interact with Web browsers, computer programs, software modules like ERP, etc
without human intervention.
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
• Software Outsourcing
• Today, many companies purchase or rent their software applications from external
sources. There are 3 major formats of software outsourcing:
1. Software packages and Enterprise Software
• Prewritten commercially available set of s/w programs which eliminate need for the firm to
write its own software programs for its functions like payroll processing or order handling.
• Companies like SAP, Oracle, PeopleSoft provide powerful ERP software to support nearly all
the business processes of a firm.
2. Software Outsourcing
• Companies enter into contracts with other companies, often in low-wage areas of the world,
to manage legacy applications or application development or testing etc.
• Countries like India earlier provided lower-level maintenance, data entry, call center
operations. However, more consulting and development is taking place these days at India
with IT becoming a major industry in India and fueling much part of its growth and GDP.
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
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• General Software Features and Trends (contd.)
• Disadvantages:
• Security risks since responsibility for data storage and control is in the hands of the
provider.
• System reliability: Business can get impacted if the provider’s systems go down or
become unavailable for some time because of any glitch.
• Many companies have unique business processes which might not be translated well in
the cloud based model which typically provides general software for all.
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Developing Business/IT
Solutions
IS Development
• When the systems approach is applied to the
development of an information systems solution to
business problems, it is called information systems
development or application development
Systems Development Lifecycle (SDLC)
Systems Development Process
• Systems Investigation
• The first step in the systems development process
• May involve consideration of proposals generated by a
business/IT planning process
• Also includes the preliminary feasibility study of
proposed information system solutions
Systems Development Process
• Feasibility Studies: a preliminary study to
determine the
• Information needs of prospective users
• Resource requirements
• Costs
• Benefits
• Feasibility
• In some cases, a feasibility study is unnecessary
Operational Feasibility
• How well the proposed system will
• Support the business priorities of the organization
• Solve the identified problem
• Fit with the existing organizational structure
Economic Feasibility
• An assessment of
• Cost savings
• Increased revenue
• Decreased investment requirements
• Increased profits
• Cost/benefit analysis
Technical Feasibility
• Determine the following can meet the needs
of a proposed system and can be acquired or
developed in the required time
• Hardware
• Software
• Network
Human Factors Feasibility
• Assess the acceptance level of
• Employees
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Management support
• Determine the right people for the various new or
revised roles
Legal/Political Feasibility
• Assess
• Possible patent or copyright violations
• Software licensing for developer side only
• Governmental restrictions
• Changes to existing reporting structure
Systems Analysis
• An in-depth study of end user information needs
• It produces the functional requirements used as the
basis for the design of an information system
• It typically involves a detailed study of the
• Information needs of a company and end users
• Activities, resources, and products of one or more of the
information systems currently being used
• Information system capabilities required to meet the
information needs of business stakeholders
Organizational Analysis
• Study of the organization, including…
• Management structure
• People
• Business activities
• Environmental systems
• Current information systems
• Input, processing, output, storage, and control
Analysis of the Present System
• Before designing a new system, it is important
to study the system to be improved or
replaced
• Hardware and software
• Network
• People resources used to convert data resources
into information products
• System activities of input, processing, output,
storage, and control
Logical Analysis
• A logical model is a blueprint of the current system
• It displays what the current system does, without
regard to how it does it
• It allows an analyst to understand the processes,
functions, and data associated with a system without
getting bogged down with hardware
and software
Functional Requirements
• This step of systems analysis is one of the most
difficult
• Determine what type of information each business
activity requires
• Try to determine the information processing capabilities
required for each system activity
• The goal is to identify what should be done, not how to
do it
Systems Design
• Systems design focuses on three areas
Prototyping
• Prototyping is the rapid development and testing of
working models
• An interactive, iterative process used during
the design phase
• Makes development faster and easier, especially when
end user requirements are hard to define
• Has enlarged the role of business stakeholders
Prototyping Life Cycle
User Interface Design
• Focuses on supporting the interactions
between end users and their computer-based
applications
• Designers concentrate on the design of attractive
and efficient forms of user input and output
• Frequently a prototyping process
• Produces detailed design specifications for
information products, such as display screens
System Specifications
• Formalizing the design of
• User interface methods and products
• Database structures
• Processing procedures
• Control procedures
Implementing New Systems
• The systems implementation stage involves
• Hardware and software acquisition
• Software development
• Testing of programs and procedures
• Conversion of data resources
• Conversion alternatives
• Education/training of end users and
specialists who will operate the new system
Implementation Process
Evaluating Hardware, Software,
Services
• Establish minimum physical and performance characteristics
for all hardware and software
• Formalize these requirements in an RFP/RFP
• Send RFQ to appropriate vendors
• Evaluate bids when received
• All claims must be demonstrated
• Obtain recommendations from other users
• Search independent sources for evaluations
• Benchmark test programs and test data
Software Evaluation Factors
• Hardware evaluation factors apply to software, as
do these
• Quality
• Efficiency Software that is
slow, hard to
• Flexibility use, bug-filled,
• Security or poorly
documented is
• Connectivity
not a good
• Maintenance choice
• Documentation at any price
• Hardware
Evaluating IS Services
• Examples of IS services
• Developing a company website
• Installation or conversion of hardware/software
• Employee training
• Hardware maintenance
• System design and/or integration
• Contract programming
• Consulting services
Other Implementation Activities
• The keys to successful implementation of a new
business system
• Testing
• Data conversion
• Documentation
• Training
System Testing
• System testing may involve
• Testing and debugging software
• Testing website performance
• Testing new hardware
• Review of prototypes
Data Conversion
• Data conversion includes
• Converting data elements from the old database to the
new database
• Correcting data errors
• Filtering out unwanted data
• Consolidating data from several databases
• Organizing data into new data subsets
• Improperly organized and formatted data is a major
cause of implementation failures
Documentation
• User Documentation
• Sample data entry screens, forms, reports
• System operating instructions
• Systems Documentation
• Method of communication among those developing,
implementing, and maintaining a computer-based
system
• Detailed record of the system design
• Extremely important when diagnosing problems and
making system changes
Training
• End users must be trained to operate a new
business system or its implementation will fail
• May involve only activities, such as data entry,
or all aspects of system use
• Managers and end users must understand how
the new technology impacts business operations
• System training should be supplemented with
training related to
• Hardware devices
• Software packages
Major System Conversion
Strategies
Direct Conversion
• Direct conversion
• The simplest conversion strategy
• The most disruptive to the organization
• Sometimes referred to as the slam dunk or cold-turkey
strategy
• May be the only viable solution in cases of emergency
implementation or if the old and new system cannot
coexist
• Has the highest risk of failure
• Involves turning off the old system and turning on the
new one
Parallel Conversion
• Old and new systems are run
simultaneously until everyone is satisfied
that
• The new system functions correctly
• The old system is no longer needed
• Conversion to new system can be single
cutover or phased cutover
• Has the lowest risk, but the highest cost
• Can cost 4 times more than using the old
system
• Best choice where an automated system
is replacing a manual one
Pilot Conversion
• Scenarios best suited to a pilot conversion
• Multiple business locations
• Geographically diverse locations
• Advantages of single location conversion
• Can select a location that best represents the conditions
across the organization
• Less risky in terms of loss of time or delays in processing
• Can be evaluated and changed before further
installations
Phased Conversion
• A phased or gradual conversion
• Takes advantage of both the direct and parallel
approaches
• Minimizes the risks involved
• Allows the new system to be brought online
as logically ordered functional components
• Disadvantages
• Takes the most time
• Created the most disruption to the organization over
time
Post-Implementation Activities
• The single most costly activity
• Correcting errors or faults in the system
• Improving system performance
• Adapting the system to changes in the operating or
business environment
• Requires more programmers than does application
development
• May exist for years
Post-Implementation Review
• Ensures that the newly implemented system
meets the established business objectives
• Errors must be corrected by the maintenance
process
• Includes a periodic review/audit of the system as
well as continuous monitoring