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Management Information Systems

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Title: Management Information Systems


1
Management Information Systems
2
Data versus Information
Yummy Bday Cake
Raw ingredients
Information
Data
Information is raw data combined with knowledge
of the business climate and processes to produce
actionable information and recommendations.
3
Information Technology RULES the world!!!
4
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Set of interrelated components Collects, stores
and distributes information Supports decision
making and control in an organization Key
elements
5
ENVIRONMENT
Suppliers
Customers
ORGANIZATION
PROCESSING Classify Arrange Calculate
OUTPUT
INPUT
Feedback
Competitors
Regulatory Agencies
Stockholders
INFORMATION SYSTEM
6
INFORMATION SYSTEMS COMPONENTS
  • Inputs raw data
  • May be physical, electronic or conceptual
  • May use a manual or automated process
  • Processing conversion of inputs to outputs
  • May be comprised of computations, data storage,
    choosing alternatives
  • May be a manual or automated process
  • Outputs information used to make decisions
  • May be delivered in paper form or electronically
  • Outputs of one system may be inputs to another
    system
  • Feedback/assessment outputs used to improve
    system performance
  • Can flag for incorrect processing
  • Cue for managerial interventions
  • Supply estimates of future input values
    (forecasting)

7
NEED FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • Globalization opportunities
  • Emergence of the internet
  • Emerging Digital Firm
  • digital firm one in which all significant
    business relationships are digitally enabled and
    core business processes are accomplished through
    digital networks.
  • any information ? available anytime ? anywhere
  • responds rapidly to environments
  • flexibility
  • time shifting ? 24x7 work culture
  • space shifting ? global workshop

8
The Toyota Example
9
Toyota views IT as an indispensable tool
Toyota uses Oracle-based Vehicle Order
Management System
10
Vehicle Order Management System
Manufacturing plants
Inventories
Factories
Data
  • From customer
  • Dealer Identification
  • Model
  • Color

INFORMATION SYSTEM
  • Shipping instructions
  • Invoices
  • Production reports

Information
11
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
IMPROVED DECISION MAKING
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
CUSTOMER- SUPPLIER INTIMACY
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
SURVIVAL
NEW PRODUCTS, SERVICES BUSINESS MODELS
12
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS - 1
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
IMPROVE EFFICIENCY
HIGH PRODUCTIVITY
13
The Wal Mart Example
  • It is the world's largest public corporation by
    revenue,
  • according to the 2008 Fortune Global 500
  • largest private employer in the United States
  • and the largest grocery retailer in the United
    States

14
Information Systems Brilliant business
practices Supportive management Success
Wal Mart uses RetailLink System
15
Supplier 1
Supplier 2
Supplier n
Informs about the purchase
RetailLink System
Replacement shipped
Wal Mart 5289
Wal Mart 1
Wal Mart 3
Wal Mart 2
One of the most efficient retail store in the
industry.
16
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS - 2
NEW PRODUCTS, SERVICES BUSINESS MODELS
A SAMPLE BUSINESS MODEL
ENABLING TOOL TO CREATE NEW PRODUCTS, SERVICES
BUSINESS MODELS
17
The Apple Example
CD
NANO
18
iTunes Video player
iTunes Music Service
iPod nano
The iPod business model
iPod original
19
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS - 3
CUSTOMER- SUPPLIER INTIMACY
Revenue Profits up
KNOW YOUR CUSTOMER
Good service
Cost down
KNOW YOUR SUPPLIER
Engaging suppliers
20
TAL Apparel, a shirt maker in Hong Kong
(China), retail giant JC Penney in the United
States Power Synchronization
The JCPenney Example
21
TAL (Hong Kong)
Point of sales data
JCPenney Store 1
JCPenney Store 2
JCPenney Store n
22
Analyse this relation called VENDOR-MANAGED-INVENT
ORY
JCPenney cedes functions to TAL TAL responds
directly to customer-demand Manufacturer-customer
link is strong TAL analyses sales of a new design
in JCPenney Stores TAL, not JCPenney, decides how
many more of the new design to manufacture Sales
forecasting was now done by TAL and not JCPenney
  • Advantages
  • Saves time
  • Saves money
  • Hurdles
  • Suitable only for big firms because it requires
    high investments.

23
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS - 4
IMPROVED DECISION MAKING
Over Production
forecast
Under Production
Lack of Information
best guesses
luck
Misallocation of resources
Poor response times
24
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS - 5
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
CUSTOMER- SUPPLIER INTIMACY
Charging less for superior products
Responding to customers and suppliers in real time
IMPROVED DECISION MAKING
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
NEW PRODUCTS, SERVICES BUSINESS MODELS
Higher sales
Higher profits
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
25
THE DELL EXAMPLE
26
  • Dell Computer has changed the competitive
    landscape by
  • Offering customized products directly to
    customers on demand without premiums in either
    price or lead time
  • Minimizing inventory to unthinkable levels
  • Being agilequickly responding to the
    market/technology changes
  • Eliminating the cost and risk of finished goods
    inventory
  • Successfully executing a mass customization
    strategy quarter after quarter, year after year

Mass customization is the use of flexible
computer-aided manufacturing systems to produce
custom output. Those systems combine the low unit
costs of mass production processes with the
flexibility of individual customization.
27
OBJECTIVES OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS - 6
SURVIVAL
28
END OF SESSION - 1 September 7, 2009 - Section
A September 8, 2009 - Section B
29
DIMENSIONS OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Effective understanding of organization,
management IT
Technology
Organizations
Information Systems
Management
30
Organizations
  • Key elements
  • People
  • Structure
  • Business Process
  • Politics
  • Culture

31
Organizations
  • People
  • Executives
  • Knowledge workers
  • Data workers
  • Production workers
  • Service workers

32
  • Structure

Organizations
Ad Hoc Unscheduled Summarized Infrequent Forward
Looking External Wide scope
Strategic Management
Unstructured
Information
Decisions
Semi-structured
Tactical Management
Pre-specified Scheduled Detailed Frequent Historic
al Internal Narrow Focus
Operational Management
Structured
33
President/ Vice President/ CEO/ Directors
Strategic Level
  • Requires even less detailed
  • information
  • Overall branch performance
  • To open/ close a branch
  • Strategies

Branch Manager
Tactical Level
  • Requires less detailed
  • information more general
  • information
  • How much stock to order?
  • How much floor space
  • required?
  • Dollar value of sales

Operational Level
Supervisor
  • Requires detailed information
  • How many items available?
  • How many items on order?

illustration
34
  • Business Process

Organizations
  • Manner in which work is organized, coordinated,
    focused to produce a valuable product or service
  • These processes can be decomposed into several
    sub-processes, which have their own attributes.
  • All these sub-processes contribute towards
    achieving of the major goal.

35
SALES
Generate order
Submit order
ACCOUNTING
Check audit
Approve credit
Generate invoice
MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION
Ship product
Assemble product
A sample business process
36
  • Politics

Organizations
  • Political Behavior
  • Activities that are not required as part of ones
    formal
  • role in the organization
  • But influence, or attempt to influence, the
    distribution
  • of advantages or disadvantages within the
    organization

resources
about
Conflict
Different people
Different view points
rewards
punishment
37
  • Culture

Organizations
  • Bedrock, unassailable, unquestioned assumptions
    that define goals and products
  • What the organization should produce?
  • How the organization should produce the
    products?
  • Rarely publicly spoken
  • Powerful unifying force
  • Restrains political conflict
  • Promotes common understanding, agreement on
    procedures common practices
  • Powerful Restraint on change
  • Resists change to any basic assumptions

38
Management
?
  • BERATE ANYONE WHOS SLIGHTLY LATE
  • UNNECESSARY MEETING
  • PROMOTE THE UNQUALIFIED
  • DUCK OUT AT 300 PM TO PLAY GOLF

39
Management
  • Manager must
  • perceive business challenges in the environment
  • set organizational strategy to address these
    challenges
  • allocate human and financial resources to
    coordinate work
  • exercise responsible leadership
  • create new products and services
  • be creative

Success
40
Technology
  • Computer Hardware
  • physical equipments
  • Computer Software
  • preprogrammed instructions
  • Data Management Technology
  • software concerning storage of data on physical
    storage media
  • Networking and Telecommunications Technology
  • physical devices and software to link various
    systems for data transfer
  • networks - internet/ intranet/ extranet

41
INFORMATION SYSTEMS Vs INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Technology
Payroll System
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Hardware Software Databases
Networks Other related components
Inventory System
is used to build
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Marketing System
Customer Service System
42
INTERDEPENDENCE BETWEEN ORGANIZATIONS AND
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Hardware
Business Strategic Objectives Business Processes
Software
Data Management
Tele- communications
Business Firm
Information System
43
A BUSINESS PERSPECTIVE ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • support of business operations
  • automation of business process
  • simplification of business processes
  • reengineering of business processes
  • support of managerial decision making
  • Improved co-ordination among various functional
    areas
  • Dynamic scheduling among the different functional
    areas
  • support of strategic competitive advantage
  • Shortening of response time
  • Up-to-date information on revenues, budget
    performance
  • E-business opportunities

44
The Indian Railways Passenger Reservation System
example
  • Largest and busiest rail networks in the world
  • 18 million passengers and more than 2 million
    tonnes of freight daily
  • 6,909 stations over a total route length of more
    than 63,327 kilometers

45
Impact of Information Systems
  • Reduction in cost of labor
  • Reduction in transaction cost for customers,
    suppliers, distributors
  • Faster decision support resulting in customer
    satisfaction
  • Higher productivity and performance

Speaks of ecommerce viability in India
46
CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO INFORMATION SYSTEMS
TECHNICAL APPROACH
BEHAVIORAL APPROACH
47
TECHNICAL APPROACH
  • Features
  • Use of mathematical models to study IS
  • Physical technology Formal capabilities of IS

MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
OPERATIONS RESEARCH
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Mathematical Techniques
Decision-making models Management practices
Theories of computability Methods of
computation Methods of efficient data storage
48
BEHAVIORAL APPROACH
Features
  • Does not ignore technology
  • Development and Maintenance of IS

SOCIOLOGY
ECONOMICS
PSYCHOLOGY
Studies dynamics of digital markets and how IS
can affect cost and structures within a firm
Studies how decision-makers use information
Studies how Groups, Organizations Individuals
influence system development and vice versa
49
HOW BUSINESSES USE INFORMATION SYSTEMS
BUSINESS PROCESSES AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • What is a business process?
  • Unique ways of workflows
  • A business is a collection of business processes
  • Source of competitive strength if they enable the
    organization to innovate
  • Liability if based on outdated ways
  • Tied to a specific functional area
  • May cross different functional areas

50
HOW DO INFORMATION SYSTEMS ENHANCE BUSINESS
PROCESSES ?
  • Increasing the efficiency of existing processes
  • Automating business processes
  • Enabling entirely new processes that are capable
    of transforming the business
  • Changing flow of information
  • Simultaneous access to information
  • Eliminates delay in decision-making
  • Examples iTunes
  • Amazon

51
END OF SESSION - 2 - Section B
52
TYPES OF BUSINESS INFORMATION SYSTEMS
FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE
SALES MARKETING SYSTEMS
SALES
  • Contacting customers
  • Selling the products and services
  • Taking orders
  • Following up on sales

MAREKTING
?Identifying customers ?Determining customer
needs ?Planning and Developing products
services to meet customer need ?Advertising and
promoting products services
53
MARKETING INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • For monitoring the efficiency and effectiveness
    of the distribution of their products and
    services, sales managers need information to plan
    and monitor the sales force
  • Management needs information on the performance
    of specific products, product lines, or brands
  • Price, revenue, cost and growth information can
    be used for pricing decisions, for evaluating the
    performance of current products, and for
    predicting the performance of future products

54
Locating prospective customers Tracking
sales Processing orders
System Description Groups Served
Order processing Enter, process track orders Operational Management
Pricing analysis Determine prices for products services Middle Management
Sales trend forecasting Prepare five-year sales forecasts Senior Management
Monitor trends affecting new products Planning
for new products Monitor performance of
competitors
Supports market research Analyses advertising
promotional campaigns
55
SALES SUPPORT SYSTEMS
  • Sales support systems are applications that
    facilitate the interface between the sales force
    and the corporation in the support of the
    customer

56
To inventory production systems
Sales data
Sales System
Management reports
Sales file
Sales Report November 2008 Sales Report November 2008 Sales Report November 2008
Item Description Units sold
1234 ABC 850
5678 XYZ 1050
Data elements in Sales File
Store Item Item description Color
Online Queries
A SALES INFORMATION SYSTEM
57
MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION SYSTEMS
MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION
  • Planning
  • Development
  • Maintenance of production facilities
  • Establishment of production goals
  • Facilities, materials, labor
  • Scheduling of equipment
  • Availability of production materials


Machine control Controls the actions of machines equipment Operational Management
Production Planning Decides when and how many products should be produced Middle Management
Facilities location Decides where to locate new production facilities Senior Management
System
Groups Served
Description
58
Shipment Order data
Inventory Control System
Management reports
Inventory Master file
Item Code Description Units on hand Units on order
1234 Fan belt 10, 211 0
5678 Power cord 55, 710 77,000
Data elements in inventory master file
Item Code Description Units on order Reorder point
Online Queries
AN INVENTORY SYSTEM
59
FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS
  • managing firms financial assets (cash, stocks,
    bonds etc)
  • managing the capitalization of the firm
  • determining ROI

FINANCE
  • maintaining and managing firms financial
    records
  • oversee and manage flow of funds into the firm

ACCOUNTING
System Description Groups Served
Accounts receivable Tracks money owed by the firm Operational Management
Budgeting Prepares short-term budget Middle Management
Profit Planning Prepares long-term profit Senior Management
60
To general ledger
Invoice Customer data
Accounts Receivable System
Management reports
A/R Master file
Cust Name Current Balance
1234 ABC 2011.00
5678 XYZ 5510.00
Data elements in A/R Master file
Customer Name Address Credit limit Invoice
number
Online Queries
AN ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE SYSTEM
61
HUMAN RESOURCES SYSTEMS
HUMAN RESOURCES
  • responsible for attracting, developing and
    maintaining firms workforce

System Description Groups Served
Training Development Tracks employee training, skills performance appraisals Operational Management
Compensation analysis Monitors the range and distribution of employee wages, salaries benefits Middle Management
HR Planning Plans the long-term labor force needs of the organization Senior Management
62
To payroll
Employee data
Human Resources System
Management reports
Employee Master file
Employees before December 2008 Employees before December 2008 Employees before December 2008
Emp Name Date of Join
1234 ABC 13/05/2007
5678 XYZ 06/11/2008
Data elements in Employee Master file
Employee Name Address Age Educational
Background
Online Queries
AN EMPLOYEE RECORD KEEPING SYSTEM
63
TYPES OF BUSINESS INFORMATION SYSTEMS
CONSTITUENCY PERSPECTIVE
  • Examines systems in terms of level of management
    and types of decision that they support

Operational Managers
Middle Managers
Senior Managers
Transaction-level info
Specific Info on specific Functional areas
Knowledge workers
Summary info
External or internal databases
INFORMATION
64
Operational Managers
TRANSACTION PROCESSING SYSTEMS (TPS)
  • Keeps track of elementary activities and
    transactions of the organizations
  • Performs and records the daily routine
    transactions necessary to conduct business
  • most suitable for pre-defined, structured tasks
  • usually has high volumes of inputs and outputs
  • repetitive in nature
  • central to a business
  • major producers of information for other types
    of systems
  • managers use TPS to monitor internal operations
    and relations with external environment

65
MIS
TPS
managers
MIS files
Order Processing System
Sales data
Order file
Unit product cost data
Materials Resource Planning System
reports
Production master file
Product change data
MIS
General ledger System
Expense data
Accounting file
66
Middle Managers
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
  • serves middle management
  • normally draw data from TPS
  • converts data into information for monitoring
    performance
  • transactions in TPS are analysed and reported by
    MIS
  • large volumes of inputs summary report outputs
  • generally provide answers to routine questions
    specified in advance
  • follows a predefined procedure for answering
    questions
  • not flexible
  • have little analytical capability

MarketStar case Exhibit 2
67
Employees
SOURCES OF MIS
Corporate databases ofinternaldata
Databasesofexternaldata
Corporateintranet
Decisionsupportsystems
Databasesofvalidtransactions
Application databases
Transactionprocessingsystems
Managementinformationsystems
Executivesupportsystems
Businesstransactions
Operationaldatabases
Expertsystems
Drill-down reports
Exception reports
Demand reports
Key-indicator reports
Input anderror list
Scheduledreports
68
OUTPUTS OF A MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM
  • Scheduled reports
  • Produced periodically, or on a schedule (daily,
    weekly, monthly)
  • Key-indicator report
  • Summarizes the previous days critical activities
  • Typically available at the beginning of each day
  • Demand report
  • Gives certain information at a managers request
  • Exception report
  • Automatically produced when a situation is
    unusual or requires management action

69
Scheduled Report Example
Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Detail Report Prepared 08/10/xx
Order CustomerID Sales Rep ID ShipDate Quantity Item Amount
P12453 C89321 CAR 08/12/96 144 P1234 3,214
P12453 C89321 CAR 08/12/96 288 P3214 5,660
P12453 C03214 GWA 08/13/96 12 P4902 1,224
P12455 C52313 SAK 08/12/96 24 P4012 2,448
P12456 C34123 JMW 08J/13/96 144 P3214 720
70
Key Indicator Report Example
Daily Sales Key Indicator Report Daily Sales Key Indicator Report Daily Sales Key Indicator Report Daily Sales Key Indicator Report
ThisMonth LastMonth LastYear
Total Orders Month to Date 1,808 1,694 1,014
Forecasted Sales for the Month 2,406 2,224 2,608
71
Demand Report Example
Daily Sales by Sales Rep Summary Report Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales by Sales Rep Summary Report Prepared 08/10/xx
Sales Rep ID Amount
CAR 42,345
GWA 38,950
SAK 22,100
JWN 12,350
72
Exception Report Example
Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx Daily Sales Exception Report ORDERS OVER 10,000 Prepared 08/10/xx
Order CustomerID Sales Rep ID ShipDate Quantity Item Amount
P12453 C89321 CAR 08/12/96 144 P1234 13,214
P12453 C89321 CAR 08/12/96 288 P3214 15,660
P12453 C03214 GWA 08/13/96 12 P4902 11,224


73
Middle Managers
DECISION-SUPPORT SYSTEMS (DSS)
  • support non-routine decision making for middle
    management
  • follow procedures which are not fully predefined
  • combines information from external sources (
    eg current stock prices)
  • use a variety of models to analyze data
  • condenses data into a form in which
    decision-makers can analyse
  • include user-friendly software

74
Characteristics of a DSS (1)
  • Handles large amounts of data from different
    sources
  • Provides report and presentation flexibility
  • Offers both textual and graphical orientation

75
Characteristics of a DSS (2)
  • Supports drill down analysis
  • Performs complex, sophisticated analysis and
    comparisons using advanced software packages

76
Characteristics of a DSS (3)
  • Performs different types of analyses
  • What-if analysis
  • Makes hypothetical changes to problem and
    observes impact on the results
  • Simulation
  • Duplicates features of a real system
  • Goal-seeking analysis
  • Determines problem data required for a given
    result

77
Capabilities of a DSS (1)
  • Supports
  • Problem solving phases
  • Different decision frequencies

Merge withanother company?
How many widgets should I order?
low
high
Frequency
78
Capabilities of a DSS (2)
  • Highly structured problems
  • Straightforward problems, requiring known facts
    and relationships.
  • Semi-structured or unstructured problems
  • Complex problems wherein relationships among data
    are not always clear, the data may be in a
    variety of formats, and are often difficult to
    manipulate or obtain

79
Senior Managers
EXECUTIVE SUPPORT SYSTEMS
  • Characteristics
  • A specialized DSS that includes all the hardware,
    software, data, procedures, and people used to
    assist senior-level executives within the
    organization

Board of directors
President
Function areavice presidents
Function areamanagers
80
Characteristics of ESS
  • Tailored to individual executives
  • Easy to use
  • Drill down capabilities
  • Support the need for external data
  • Help with situations with high degree of
    uncertainty
  • Linked with value-added business processes
  • Address non-routine decisions requiring judgment,
    insight, evaluation
  • Draw summarized information from external MIS and
    DSS

81
INTER-RELATIONSHIP OF SYSTEMS ON ONE ANOTHER
82
ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS (1)
MANUFACTURING
FINANCE
BUSINESS PROCESS BUSINESS PROCESS ENTERPRISE
WIDE BUSINESS PROCESS
CUSTOMERS
Organizational Boundaries
Organizational Boundaries
VENDORS
HUMAN RESOURCES
SALES MARKETING
83
ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS (2)
  • Also called Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
    systems
  • Integrates key business processes of a firm into
    a single system
  • Enables information to flow seamlessly
    throughout the organization
  • Main focus on internal processes
  • May include transactions with customers vendors
  • Enables speedy communication of information
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