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Basic Concepts

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Title: Basic Concepts


1
  • Basic Concepts
  • The Work Centered Analysis Framework

2
Processing Résumés Using Resumix
3
Processing Résumés Using Resumix
CUSTOMER Manager who needs to hire an
employee Applicant who receives responses about a
job application Government agency that receives
reports about compliance to equal opportunity
guidelines PRODUCT List of applicants who fit
the criteria Selected data items about each
applicant Automatically generated rejection
letters
4
Processing Résumés Using Resumix
  • BUSINESS PROCESS
  • Major Steps
  • Define the criteria for selecting applicants
  • Receive résumés
  • Scan résumés and extract data
  • Select applicants meeting criteria and forward
    their résumés to the hiring manager
  • Send out rejection letters
  • Track the hiring process
  • Store applicant data for future searches
  • Rationale
  • Instead of finding appropriate candidates by
    searching through paper résumés, extract the
    information on the résumés and do the search
    automatically.

5
Processing Résumés Using Resumix
PARTICIPANTS Human resources employees Manager
doing the hiring
INFORMATION Description of job opening Scanned
résumés converted into a database format
List of qualified applicants
TECHNOLOGY Résumix software Scanner Unidentified
computers
6
DEBATE TOPIC
  • The technology is Resumix is designed to convert
    a resume into a series of fields in a database
    regardless of what the initial resume looks like.
    Statements that dont match these specific
    fields arent recognized. Does the use of this
    technology imply that a company does not care
    about the individuality of the applicants?

7
INTRODUCTION
  • Framework - brief set of ideas about organizing a
    thought process about a concept.It helps by
    identifying topics that should be considered and
    shows how they are related.
  • Models - useful representation of reality. The
    describe or mimic reality without dealing with
    the details
  • They both help us understand complexity

8
A Classification of Models
  • Iconic Models
  • Analog Models
  • Mathematical Models
  • Mental Models

9
Iconic and Analog Models
  • Iconic (scale) models - the least abstract model,
    is a physical replica of a system, usually based
    on a different scale from the original. Iconic
    models can scale in two or three dimensions.
  • Analog Models - Does not look like the real
    system, but behaves like it. Usually
    two-dimensional charts or diagrams. Examples
    organizational charts depict structure,
    authority, and responsibility relationships maps
    where different colors represent water or
    mountains stock market charts blueprints of a
    machine speedometer thermometer

10
Mathematical Models
  • Mathematical (quantitative) models - the
    complexity of relationships sometimes can not be
    represented iconically or analogically, or such
    representations may be cumbersome or time
    consuming.A more abstract model is built with
    mathematics.
  • Note recent advances in computer graphics use
    iconic and analog models to complement
    mathematical modeling.
  • Visual simulation combines the three types of
    models.

11
Mental Models
  • People often use a behavioral mental model.
  • A mental model is an unworded description of how
    people think about a situation.
  • The model can use the beliefs, assumptions,
    relationships, and flows of work as perceived by
    an individual.
  • Mental models are a conceptual, internal
    representation, used to generate descriptions of
    problem structure, and make future predications
    of future related variables.
  • Support for mental models are an important aspect
    of Executive Information Systems. We will discuss
    this in depth later.

12
Examples of Models
13
Viewing Businesses as Systems
  • A business is a system consisting of many
    subsystems, some of which are information
    systems.
  • Definition A system is a set of interacting
    components that operate together to accomplish a
    purpose.
  • Key ideas purpose, boundary, environment,
    inputs, outputs.
  • Businesses can be considered as systems
    consisting of business processes.
  • A processs value added is the amount of value it
    creates for internal or external customers.

14
Viewing a firm as a System
15
The Value Chain
  • The set of processes a firm uses to create value
    for its customers is called its value chain.
  • The value chain contains both primary processes
    and support processes.
  • The value chain is important because the way
    business processes are organized in a firm should
    be related to the way the firm creates value for
    customers.
  • Understanding how the value chain is supposed
    to work is the first step in improving business
    processes.

16
Primary processes for a hypothetical restaurant
17
The Functional Areas of a Business
  • Large subsystems of a firm related to specific
    business disciplines are often called the
    functional areas of the business.
  • Examples Production, Sales and Marketing,
    Finance.
  • Most Businesses are organized around these
    functional areas.
  • Sometimes there can be organizational inertia
    where organizational members focus on the
    functional areas instead of the customer.
  • Functional areas are important, but they should
    not be the basis for studying information systems

18
Business Processes and Functional Areas
19
Functional Areas in a Typical College or
University
  • Admissions
  • Records and Registration
  • Financial Aid
  • Bursar
  • Human Resources
  • Accounts Payable
  • Budget, Finance, and Accounting
  • Academic Department
  • University Advancement
  • Student Services
  • Residence Life
  • Public Safety
  • Physical Plant
  • Student Career Development

20
The Context of Information Systems.
21
The System We Are Talking About.
  • A work system is a system in which human
    participants perform a business process using
    information, technology, and other resources to
    produce products for internal or external
    customers.
  • The core of a work system is a business process,
    a related group of steps or activities that uses
    people, information, and other resources to
    create value for internal or external customers.
  • Work is the application of human and physical
    resources to generate outputs used by internal
    and external customers.

22
Information System vs. Work Systems
Bar code scanners and computers identify the
items sold and calculate the bill Work system
supported by the information system Performing
customer checkout Aspects of the work system not
included in the information system Establishing
personal contact with customers, putting the
groceries in bags University registration system
permits students to sign up for specific class
sections Work system supported by the information
system Registering for classes Aspects of the
work system not included in the information
system Deciding which classes to take and which
sections to sign up for in order to have a good
weekly schedule Word Processing system used for
typing and revising chapters Work system
supported by the information system Writing a
book Aspects of the work system not included in
the information system Deciding what to say in
the book and how to say it
23
Information System vs. Work Systems
Interactive system top managers use to monitor
their organizations performance Work system
supported by the information system Keeping
track of organizational performance Aspects of
the work system not included in the information
system Talking to people to understand their
views about what is happening System that
identifies people by scanning and analyzing voice
prints Work system supported by the information
system Preventing unauthorized access to
restricted areas Aspects of the work system not
included in the information system Human guards,
cameras, and other security measures
24
WCA framework for thinking about any system in
business
25
Example Who is a toy factorys customer?
26
Relationship between data, information, and
knowledge
27
WCA framework for thinking about any system in
business
28
Five Perspectives for Understanding a Work System
  • ARCHITECTURE
  • What are the components of the system that
    performs the work and who uses the work
    product?
  • How are the components linked?
  • How do the components operate together?
  • PERFORMANCE
  • How well do the components operate individually?
  • How well does the system operate? (How well is
    the work performed?)
  • How well should the system operate?
  • INFRASTRUCTURE
  • What technical and human infrastructure does the
    work rely on?
  • In what ways does infrastructure present
    opportunities or obstacles?
  • CONTEXT
  • What are the impacts of the organizational and
    technical context?
  • In what ways does the context present
    opportunities or obstacles?
  • RISKS
  • What foreseeable things can prevent the work from
    happening,
  • can make the work inefficient, or can cause
    defects in the work product?
  • What are the likely responses to these problems?

29
Important Point
  • Improvements in a work system are usually related
    to the links between the architecture and the
    performance perspectives.
  • Customer satisfaction is largely determined by
    product performance.
  • Product performance is determined by a
    combination of product architecture and the
    internal work system performance.
  • Note efficiency vs. effectiveness

30
From work system architecture to customer
satisfaction
31
  • Detailed Discussion of the Five Perspectives
  • Architecture
  • Performance
  • Infrastructure
  • Context
  • Risks

32
Architecture, Perspective 1
  • Architecture is a summary of how a work system
    operates. It focuses on the components of the
    system and how those components are linked, and
    how they operate together to produce outputs.
  • It is not merely a technical issue IT and
    business professional involved with a system need
    to understand how it operates.
  • It is impossible to build an information system
    without detailed documentation of information and
    technology components of the architecture.
  • We use successive decomposition for documenting
    and summarizing architecture.
  • Process operation and process characteristics

33
Architecture, Perspective 1
34
Architecture, Perspective 1
CUSTOMER Customers entire cycle of involvement
with the product Requirements Acquisition Use Main
tenance Retirement PRODUCT Components Information
content Physical Content Service content (more
in Chapter 6)
35
Architecture, Perspective 1
  • BUSINESS PROCESS
  • Process operation
  • Processes providing inputs
  • Sequence and scheduling of major steps
  • Processes receiving the outputs
  • Process characteristics
  • Degree of structure
  • Range of involvement
  • Level of integration
  • Complexity
  • Degree of reliance on machines
  • Linkage of planning, execution, and control
  • Attention to exceptions, errors, and malfunctions
  • More to be covered in Chapter 3.

36
Architecture, Perspective 1
PARTICIPANTS Formal and informal
organization Job responsibility Organization
chart
INFORMATION Major data files in the
database Data organization and access
TECHNOLOGY Major components Hardware Software
37
Performance, Perspective 2
  • Performance - How well the system operates.
  • A complete analysis involves qualitative and
    quantitative measurements.
  • Consider some performance variables.

38
Performance, Perspective 2
39
Performance, Perspective 2
CUSTOMER Customer Satisfaction PRODUCT Cost Quali
ty Responsiveness Reliability Conformance to
standards and regulations
40
Performance, Perspective 2
BUSINESS PROCESS Rate of output Consistency Produ
ctivity Cycle time Flexibility Security
41
Performance, Perspective 2
PARTICIPANTS Skills Involvement Commitment Job
satisfaction
INFORMATION Quality Accessibility Presentation Pr
evention of unauthorized access
TECHNOLOGY Functional capabilities Ease of
use Compatibility Maintainability
42
Comparing Vague Descriptions, Measurements, and
Interpretations
ACCURACY OF INFORMATION Vague description The
information doesnt seem very accurate. Measuremen
t 97.5 of the readings are correct within
5. InterpretationThis is (or is not) accurate
enough, given the way the information will be
used. SKILLS OF PARTICIPATION Vague description
The sales people are very experienced. Measurement
Every salesperson has 5 or more years of
experience 60 have more than 10
years. InterpretationThis system is (or is not)
appropriate for such experienced people. CYCLE
TIME OF BUSINESS PROCESS Vague description This
business process seems to take a long
time. Measurement The three major steps take an
average of 1.3 days each, but the waiting time
between the steps is around 5 days. Interpretation
This is (or is not) better than the average for
this industry, but we can (or cannot) improve by
eliminating some of the waiting time. QUALITY OF
THE WORK SYSTEM OUPUT Vague description We
produce top quality frozen food, but our
customers arent enthusiastic. Measurement65
of our customers rate it average or good even
though our factory defect rate is
only.003 Interpretation Our manufacturing
process does (or doesnt) seem O.K., but we do
(or dont) need to improve customer satisfaction.
43
Infrastructure, Perspective 3
  • Infrastructure Essential Resources shared with
    other systems.
  • Infrastructure failures may partially be beyond
    the control of people who rely on it (e.g. power
    outages).
  • Evaluation is difficult because the same
    infrastructure may support some applications
    excessively and others insufficiently.
  • Critical mass, having enough users to attain
    desired benefits, may be a key infrastructure
    issue.
  • Distinguish between infrastructure and the
    supporting technology (laptops used in the sales
    process vs. used for company e-mail).

44
Infrastructure, Perspective 3
  • Technology can be infrastructure if it is outside
    the work system, shared between work systems,
    owned and managed by a central authority, or when
    details are largely hidden from users.
  • Business professionals are often surprised at the
    amount of effort and expense absorbed by human
    infrastructure.

45
Infrastructure, Perspective 3
46
Infrastructure, Perspective 3
CUSTOMER Technical and human infrastructure the
customer must have to use the product PRODUCT Inf
rastructure related to information
content Infrastructure related to physical
content Infrastructure related to service content
47
Infrastructure, Perspective 3
BUSINESS PROCESS Infrastructure related to
internal operation of the process Infrastructure
related to inputs from other processes Infrastruct
ure related to transferring the product to other
processes
48
Infrastructure, Perspective 3
PARTICIPANTS Shared human infrastructure
INFORMATION Shared information infrastructure
TECHNOLOGY Shared technology infrastructure
49
Context, Perspective 4.
  • The organizational, competitive, and regulatory
    environment surrounding the system.
  • The environment around the system may create
    incentives and even urgency for change.
  • The personal, organizational, and economic parts
    of the context have direct impact through
    resource availability.
  • Even with enough monetary resources, context
    factors ranging from historical precedents and
    budget cycles to internal politics can be
    stumbling blocks.
  • Incentives
  • Organizational Culture
  • Stakeholders

50
Context, Perspective 4
51
Context, Perspective 4
CUSTOMER Issues in the customers environment
that may affect satisfaction or use Business and
competitive climate PRODUCT Substitute
products Ways the customer might bypass this type
of product altogether
52
Context, Perspective 4
BUSINESS PROCESS Organizational culture Concerns
of stakeholders Organizational policies and
initiatives Government regulations and industry
standards
53
Context, Perspective 4
PARTICIPANTS Incentives Other responsibilities
and job pressures
INFORMATION Policies and practices regarding
information sharing, privacy, etc.
TECHNOLOGY Technology policies and
practices Technology that may become available
soon
54
Risk, Perspective 5
  • Risks Foreseeable Things that can go wrong in
    terms of
  • accidents and malfunctions
  • computer crime
  • project failure
  • (To be considered again in Chapter 13.)

55
Risk, Perspective 5
56
Risk, Perspective 5
CUSTOMER Customer dissatisfaction Interference by
other stakeholders PRODUCT Inadequate or
unreliable products Fraudulent products
57
Risk, Perspective 5
BUSINESS PROCESS Operator error Sloppy
procedures Inadequate backup and
recovery Mismatch between process requirements
and participants abilities Unauthorized access
to computers, programs, data
58
Risk, Perspective 5
PARTICIPANTS Crime by insiders or
outsiders Inattention by participants Failure to
follow procedures Inadequate training
INFORMATION Data errors Fraudulent data Data
theft
TECHNOLOGY Equipment failure Software
bugs Inadequate performance Inability to build
common sense into information systems
59
Systems Analysis
  • Systems Analysis is different for the business
    professional than from the system builder.
  • Technical vs. non-technical.
  • Think of what will happen in the future when
    systems building tools become more effective for
    non-programmers.

60
Steps in systems analysis for business
professionals
61
Defining the Problem
  • Identify the purpose of the analysis and scope of
    the work system.
  • Tradeoffs - broad vs. narrow.
  • Constraints
  • priorities
  • system snapshots

62
Using the WCA for a System Snapshot
63
Definitions of Topics in a System Snapshot
CUSTOMER Product used by Internal or external
customers who use or receive direct benefit from
the product Other stakeholders People who have a
significant stake in the work system or its
product even though they do not use the product
directly and do not participate directly in the
work system Infrastructure requirements
Infrastructure the customer should have to use
the product effectively
64
Definitions of Topics in a System Snapshot
PRODUCT Information content The aspects of the
product that consist of information Physical
content The aspects of the product that consist
of physical things Service content The aspects
of the product that consist of services performed
for specific customers
65
Definitions of Topics in a System Snapshot
BUSINESS PROCESS Major steps Listing the major
steps in this business process Rationale The
overriding idea or approach that determined the
process would be performed using the current
approach rather than another Processes providing
inputs External processes outside the work
system that produce inputs of information,
physical things, or services needed in order for
this business process to operate Processes
receiving the product The customers processes
that receive and use the product of this work
system
66
Definitions of Topics in a System Snapshot
PARTICIPANTS People who perform the work Shared
human infrastructure
INFORMATION Created or modified within this
system Received from other work system
TECHNOLOGY Technology within the system Shared
technology infrastructure
67
The 10 Issues in the Work-Centered Analysis
Method
Systems analysis step 1. Define the problem 2.
Describe the current work system in enough depth
and 3. Design potential improvements 4.Decide
what to do
Corresponding issues for thinking about a
system Issue 1 Problem Definition Issue 2
Improvements from product changes Issue 3
Improvements from process changes Issue 4
Improvements related to work system
participants Issue 5 Improvements from better
information Issue 6 Improvements from better
technology Issue 7 Improvements from shared
infrastructure Issue 8 Improvements related to
the business context Issue 9 Improvements from
risk reduction Issue 10 Recommendation
68
Common Systems Analysis Pitfalls Related to
Elements of the WCA Framework
69
Common Pitfalls - WCA Elements
  • Customer
  • ignore customer and the fact that the customer
    should evaluate the product.
  • Treating managers as customers even though they
    dont use the product directly.
  • Product
  • forget that the purpose is to produce a product
    or service for a customer.
  • Forget that the product of a work system is often
    not the product of the organization.

70
Common Pitfalls - WCA Elements
  • Business Process
  • Define process so narrowly that improvement is of
    little consequence.
  • Define process to widely that it is too complex.
  • Confuse business process measures(consistency and
    productivity) with product measures (cost to the
    customer and quality perceived by customer).
  • Think of business process as theory and ignore
    its support by participants, information, and
    technology
  • Participants
  • ignore incentives and other pressures
  • focus on users rather than participants.

71
Common Pitfalls - WCA Elements
  • Information
  • assume better information generates better
    results.
  • Ignoring the importance of soft information not
    captured by formal systems.
  • Technology
  • assume better technology generates better
    results.
  • Focus on the technology without thinking about
    whether it makes a difference in the work system.

72
Common Pitfalls - Five Perspectives
  • Architecture
  • over emphasis on architectural details
  • confusion related to peoples roles
  • Performance
  • Tendency to ignore performance
  • tendency to exaggerate the scope of work system
    performance.
  • Infrastructure
  • Tendency to ignore infrastructure issues

73
Common Pitfalls - Five Perspectives
  • Context
  • tendency to ignore incentives, organizational
    culture, and non-participant stakeholders when
    designing systems.
  • Risks
  • tendency to assume system will operate as planned.
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