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Information Technology

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Title: Information Technology


1
Chapter 2
  • Information Technologys Strategic Importance

2
Introduction
  • IT is changing the fabric of our society
  • Shifts power from governments to citizens
  • Flow of intellectual property is no longer
    constrained by national boundaries
  • IT is changing business
  • Senior executives expect IT to play a central
    role in streamlining operations and to link
    customers, suppliers, and employees more closely

3
Strategic Issues for Senior Executives
  • Obtain or maintain competitive advantage
  • Use the Web to facilitate intra- and
    inter-organizational linking
  • Enable decentralized operations with effective
    central coordination
  • Develop flexible and responsive infrastructures
    for the firm
  • Capitalize on fleeting but critical business
    information

4
Time Criticality of Information
  • Modern IT enables the creation of highly
    decentralized operations that can rapidly respond
    and exploit high value information that is short
    lived
  • These decentralized structures must be quickly
    adaptable to shifting opportunities in a highly
    competitive environment
  • By enabling these agile operations, IT can be
    expected to directly contribute to the bottom line

5
Strategic Information Systems
  • These are information systems whose unique
    functions or specific applications shape an
    organizations competitive strategy and provide
    it with competitive advantage
  • These are internal or external systems
  • These systems provide a firm with competitive
    advantage
  • Systems range from transaction processing systems
    to decision-support systems

6
Visualizing Competitive Forces
  • Michael Porter developed a model to help
    visualize competition
  • To gain a competitive edge within an existing
    industry competitors must
  • Diminish customer and supplier leverage
  • Lower the possibility of substitute products
    entering the marketplace
  • Discourage new market entrants

7
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8
Strategic Thrusts
  • In 1988, Charles Wiseman created a detailed
    addition to the general framework of strategy
    development
  • He created a theory based on five thrusts
  • Differentiation
  • Cost
  • Innovation
  • Growth
  • Alliances

9
Differentiation
  • The firms products or services are distinguished
    from competitors products or services, or
    conversely a rivals differentiation is reduced
  • For example, Automated Teller Machines (ATMs)
    distinguish the services of some financial
    institutions from others

10
Cost
  • Advantage is attained either by reducing costs to
    the firm, to its suppliers, or customers, or by
    increasing costs incurred by competing firms
  • For example, advanced order-entry systems or
    business-to-business e-commerce systems reduce
    both suppliers and customers business costs

11
Innovation
  • Introducing changes to the product or process
    causes fundamental shifts in the way the industry
    conducts its business
  • Web-based trading was introduced by some
    brokerage firms, and became widely offered by
    others as the standard level of service expected
    by customers began to include Web-based access

12
Growth
  • Advantage is secured by expansion, forward or
    backward innovation, or by diversification in
    product or services
  • The Wall Street Journal and other national
    newspapers used electronic transmission and
    remote printing facilities to create a national
    distribution, thus expanding the potential market

13
Alliance
  • Firms achieve advantage by establishing
    agreements, forming joint ventures, or making
    acquisitions
  • Many national companies use joint ventures for
    strategic thrusts. Even rivals join together
    such as Microsoft and IBM when it serves a mutual
    purpose

14
Time
  • Competitive advantage is secured by rapid
    response to changing market conditions or by
    supplying a more timely flow of products or
    services
  • Electronic design automation tools, CAD/CAM
    systems, and production logistics systems are
    thrusts that increase manufacturings response to
    the marketplace

15
New Economy Paradigms
  • The Internet and the World Wide Web have enabled
    firms to capture the advantages of all six
    thrusts quickly
  • The Internet has reshaped the competitive
    landscape for business and industry
  • The Internet has created a global marketplace
    with increasing international trade

16
Strategic Systems in Action
  • Over the past two decades, information systems
    have been used to create value in business. Two
    industries, airlines and financial services,
    created systems that have resulted in significant
    competitive advantage to their owners.
  • These systems have not been static, and their
    evolution is impressive given the dramatic
    changes in technology and the business
    environment over time.
  • Boring -Lets talk about something fun.

17
Differentiation
  • January 9, 2001 - Apple introduces iTunes for the
    Macintosh, a program that converts audio CDs into
    compressed digital audio files, organizes digital
    music collections, and plays Internet radio.
  • October 23, 2001 - Apple unexpectedly announces
    the first iPod at a price of 399. Unlike most
    competing digital audio players, Apple relies on
    a hard disk for storage instead of flash memory
    or interchangeable CD-ROMs, and uniquely focuses
    on promoting the small size, power, and ease of
    use of its device. Did Apple release iTunes with
    the iPod in mind? According to an official Apple
    timeline, development of the iPod began only six
    months earlier.

18

19
Cost
  • Mid-November, 2001 - Third-party developers begin
    to write workaround software that lets the iPod
    work with PCs.
  • July 17, 2002 - Apple makes four major
    announcements. First, PC versions of the iPods
    are unveiled, including MusicMatch software
    instead of iTunes. Second, a 20GB iPod is
    introduced. Third, 10GB and 20GB models now sport
    a new touch-sensitive Scroll Wheel instead of an
    actual moving wheel, which was easier to damage.
    And finally, iPod prices are lowered 5GB drops
    to 299, 10GB drops to 399, and the 20GB model
    sits at 499.
  • October, 2002 - By this point, retailers Best
    Buy, Dell, and Target have all started to sell
    iPods.

20
Innovation
  • April 28, 2003 - Big news Apple unveils the
    updated "third-generation" iPod and the iTunes
    Music Store for Mac users. The new iPods are
    thinner and smaller than before, feature a bottom
    Dock Connector port rather than a top-mounted
    FireWire port, and have entirely touch sensitive
    controls.
  • Apple's iTunes Music Store launches with 99 cent
    per track / 9.99 per album pricing and a library
    of 200,000 songs, but isn't yet available for PC
    users.
  • October 16, 2003 - Apple releases both iTunes and
    the iTunes Music Store for U.S.-based PC users,
    phasing out support for MusicMatch PC software in
    the process. Apple also announces total sales of
    13,000,000 songs via iTunes since launch.

21
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22
Growth
23
Alliance
  • January 8, 2004 - In an entirely unexpected move,
    personal computer heavyweight Hewlett-Packard
    announces at the Las Vegas Consumer Electronics
    Show that it will license the iPod from Apple
    rather than develop a competing product. HP CEO
    Carly Fiorina promises to release and sell a "HP
    blue"-colored iPod by Summer, and agrees to
    market iTunes to its PC customers almost
    immediately.
  • August 27, 2004 - Hewlett-Packard announces the
    Apple iPod from HP (or iPodhp), a repackaged
    version of the 4G iPod with new manuals and
    HP-supplied technical support.

24
Time
  • October 12-14, 2004 - Analysts report that iPod
    sales are 82 of all digital music players and
    92 of all hard-drive based players nearest hard
    drive competitor Creative has 3.7. Over
    2,000,000 iPods were shipped in the prior 3
    months alone, and iTunes downloads hit
    150,000,000, a rate of 4 million downloads per
    week.
  • January 11, 2005 - Apple announces the iPod
    Shuffle for 99.00 to capture the remaining
    market of solid state mp3 players

25
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26
Where are the Opportunities
  • Most commonly, opportunities present themselves
    as product or service offerings that
    differentiate themselves from others through the
    application of IT
  • Innovative use of technology in the right
    application
  • Lowers business costs
  • Reduces time barriers

27
Importance of Technology
  • Advanced technology shapes the products and
    services of the future
  • IT offers opportunities for innovative
    organizations to increase their value
  • Information is so fundamental to business today,
    that small advances in information management are
    magnified as these increases are amplified across
    business processes

28
The Time Dimension
  • Time is an irreplaceable asset and source of
    competitive advantage
  • Information Technology and modern
    telecommunications systems are well suited to
    leveraging time as a strategic thrust
  • Just-in-time manufacturing (JIT) is a common
    example

29
McDonnell Douglas Corp
  • Implemented a JIT system for coordination of work
    flow. The resulting system required
  • 111 new programs
  • Modifications to 97 other programs
  • 1900 person hours of programming labor
  • Meetings for project planning and execution

30
JIT Benefits at McDonnell Douglas
31
Media Breaks
  • Media breaks occur when information goes from
    voice to paper, paper to digital or other like
    transitions
  • Media breaks require human intervention, incur
    costs, risk errors, and take time
  • Unified information systems eliminate media
    breaks, decreasing cost in time and money

32
Strategic Value of Networks
  • Offers significant reductions in time and
    distance barriers
  • Enhances business processes and improve business
    efficiency
  • Digital business information reduces errors,
    lowers costs, and improves control
  • Innovative applications of telecom and IT can
    create new markets and expand customer demand

33
Networkings Strategic Value
34
The Strategist Looks Inward
  • Strategic systems are conceived by first
    analyzing the firms internal functions
  • 85 of all e-business infrastructures are
    patterned after non online legacies
  • Firms commonly have a portfolio of hundreds to
    thousands of applications
  • Deciding which ones to automate requires a keen
    understanding of the firms strategy,
    competitors, and culture

35
External Strategic Thrusts
  • How external factors create strategic
    opportunities
  • A more complicated set of questions
  • Requires a more global view of the company and
    its place in the industry (upper management)
  • Requires a well-grounded understanding of
    technology and its strengths and limitations
    (Information Technologists)

36
Integrating the Strategic Vision
  • Using a three dimensional model, all three groups
    of strategic influences can be represented
  • Strategic Thrusts (Differentiation, Cost,
    Innovation, Growth, Alliance, and Time)
  • Competitive Groups (Suppliers, Competitors, and
    Customers)
  • Strategic Focus (Internal and External)

37
Integrated Model of Strategic Influences
38
Value Chains for E-Business
  • Modern e-business models operate in nearly all
    the dimensions of the figure
  • Use internal (example ERP) and external
    (Web-based B2C and B2B)
  • Exploit the six strategic thrusts
  • Firms adopting e-business models reconstruct
    their value chains around powerful new
    information technology

39
Other Considerations
  • Strategic information systems have several common
    characteristics worth noting
  • Organization and Environment
  • Financial Implications
  • Legal Considerations

40
Organization and Environment
  • Strategic information systems alter the market
    environment and create fundamental changes in the
    field of competition
  • Competitors must adapt to the new landscape or
    face disadvantage
  • Survivors of this process re-establish an
    equilibrium

41
Financial Implications
  • Strategic information systems require continued
    investments to sustain their advantages
  • First movers capture time at expense of cost and
    potential failure
  • Even established firms can be beaten when
    technology appears that is so disruptive, like
    the Internet, that no advantage exists for the
    incumbents

42
Legal Considerations
  • Resort to the courts can be a tool for
    competitors to blunt the advantages gained by
    technology
  • Protection of intellectual property by patents
    can also be a powerful tool to further the
    advantages of an innovator by denying the
    competition access to a newly created market

43
Cautions
  • Most strategic information systems are
    evolutionary. They are based on pre-existing
    systems within the firm
  • Successful firms focus on the details of success
    instead of a grand scheme. Lasting competitive
    advantage is not found in a few grand strokes
  • The entire firm must be competitive across all
    areas. IS alone can not deliver a killer app
    that eliminates the competition

44
Summary
  • Information technology is vital to the continued
    success of modern firms
  • Senior leadership understands that IT is a potent
    source of competitive advantage
  • They are prepared to invest in needed
    applications and hardware, but expect a
    substantial return on that investment
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