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ISM 158 Business Information Strategy

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ISM 158 Business Information Strategy Instructor: Kevin Ross Teaching Assistant: Joey Rios ISM 158: Overview This class considers the role of information in business ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ISM 158 Business Information Strategy


1
ISM 158Business Information Strategy
  • Instructor Kevin Ross
  • Teaching Assistant Joey Rios

2
ISM 158 Overview
  • This class considers the role of information in
    business strategy. In particular, we focus on
    decisions regarding information technology and
    information systems to give a business
    competitive advantage over other companies. We
    will focus on case studies to see why some
    businesses are more successful than others in
    building information systems that lead to
    organizational and individual efficiencies.
  • We look at how information impacts industries,
    markets and countries, and leads to technology
    development. We develop an understanding of
    design and maintenance of networked
    organizations, including issues of leadership and
    management.

3
Schedule
Date Topic (Reading corresponding chapter from text) Case (Reading corresponding case from text) Presentation Assessment
1 Tue, April 3 Introduction
Thu, April 5 No class Instructor Away
2 Tue, April 10 IT Strategy
3 Thu, April 12 Charles Schwab
4 Tue, April 17 IT and Organization Leapfrog
5 Thu, April 19 Extending the Enterprise
6 Fri, April 20 (makeup class time and venue TBA) Wyndham Project Team and Topic Due
4
Schedule
Date Topic (Reading corresponding chapter from text) Case (Reading corresponding case from text) Presentation Assessment
7 Tue, April 24 Making the case for IT
8 Thu, April 26 IT Doesnt matter
9 Tue, May 1 Internetworking Infrastructure
10 Thu, May 3 iPremier Project Proposal Due
11 Tue, May 8 Reliability and Security
12 Thu, May 10 Ford
13 Tue, May 15 Managing Diverse IT Infrastructure
5
Schedule
Date Topic (Reading corresponding chapter from text) Case (Reading corresponding case from text) Presentation Assessment
14 Thu, May 17 Postgirot
15 Tue, May 22 Organizing and Leading IT
16 Thu, May 24 Cathay Pacific Business Proposal Due
17 Tue, May 29 Managing IT Outsourcing
18 Thu, May 31 Royal Caribbean Cruises
19 Tue, June 5 IT Portfolio Management
20 Thu, June 7 Conclusion Global Landscape Project Due
Wed, June 13, 8am Final Exam Final Exam
6
Instructor
  • Kevin Ross
  • kross_at_soe.ucsc.edu
  • Office hours Tuesday 3 5pm
  • (or by appointment)
  • E2 room 559

7
Teaching Assistant
  • Joseph Rios
  • rios_at_soe.ucsc.edu

8
Assessment
Value Due date
News Presentation 5 Throughout
Quizzes 10 Throughout
Discussion Participation 10 Throughout
Business Proposal 10 Thu, May 25
Project 40 Thu, Apr 27 and Thu, June 8
Final Exam 25 Wed, June 14, 1200 300
Policy Assignments are due at the start of class
on the due date. Late assignments, missed
presentations and quizzes will result in zero
grade unless specific permission is given by
instructor at least one week in advance.
9
News Presentation
  • Each student will present one news story to the
    class during the quarter.
  • The story can be from any source, and describe an
    interesting recent development in the use of
    information for business strategy.
  • The presentation should be professionally
    presented using powerpoint or similar technology.
  • 5-8 minutes in length,
  • include both factual information (who is doing
    what and why?) and some commentary (your opinion
    is this a good idea why?!) on the story.
  • All news sources that have been used should be
    acknowledged with specific references on a final
    slide.
  • The student is responsible for one of
  • (a) bringing the slides on a laptop,
  • (b) bringing slides on a USB drive that will work
    on instructors laptop, or
  • (c) emailing slides to the instructor the night
    before the presentation.
  • A schedule of presentations will be posted at the
    end of the first week, and changes can only be
    made with permission of the instructor.
  • Email instructor to volunteer for an early slot!

10
Quizzes
  • There will be up to five surprise quizzes over
    the quarter.
  • These will be fairly short and test knowledge of
    the text and cases.
  • Students who are absent the day of a quiz will
    receive a zero grade for that quiz
  • unless they have informed the instructor at least
    a week in advance that they have to miss class
    (for some legitimate reason)

11
Discussion Participation
  • We will discuss cases approximately once per
    week. Active participation in the discussions of
    the cases and the course material is expected and
    examined.

12
Business Proposal
  • You will be provided with a scenario for a
    business information system problem, and be
    required to make a written proposal of a
    solution, as the chief information officer.
  • Details will follow.

13
Project
  • The major assignment in this class is a
    comprehensive project. You will analyze a major
    (at least 1000 employees) company, and study how
    they use information and information systems to
    achieve competitive advantage.
  • The project can be completed in groups of two or
    three, as you select, and the company is chosen
    by the group.
  • Details will follow, but start thinking about
    group and topic

14
Final Exam
  • The final examination will cover the topics from
    the whole year.
  • You will not be allowed to bring notes into the
    exam room.

15
Prerequisites
  • This course is for juniors and seniors
  • ISM 50 or permission of instructor required
  • Interest in technology and business

16
Feedback Please!
  • Instructor has substantially revised the course
    material
  • The course is for you
  • Dont hesitate to ask questions, give suggestions
  • As senior students, you know that youll get out
    what you put in

17
Textbook
18
  • The Challenges of Managing in a Network Economy
  • IT is a source of opportunity and advantage but
    also uncertainty risk
  • Chasm between viewpoints
  • Business executives View IT with apprehension
  • Technical executives Business leaders lack
    vision
  • What is undeniable is the rapidity of change
  • In system architecture and interfaces
  • In business
  • In work and the workforce

19
The Embedding of IT
  • IT now embedded in
  • Definition and execution of strategy
  • Organization and leadership of businesses
  • Definitions of unique value propositions
  • Every business definition is morphing before our
    eyes
  • Markets
  • Industries
  • Strategies
  • Firm designs
  • Information is now a major economic good

20
Riding the IT Rollercoaster
  • Mid 1990s
  • World Wide Web demonstrated IT potential
  • Structural and technical hurdles remained in
    using IT
  • Late 1990s
  • Capital markets caught the fever
  • VCs eager to spend on IT, regardless of long-term
    path to profitability
  • 21st Century
  • Speculative bubble burst
  • Downward spiral until 2003

21
What Now?
  • What we know
  • World is forever changed IT will never return to
    the basement
  • Technology as core enabler, primary business
    channel
  • Global village is here to stay
  • Rigid organization boundaries have fallen
  • What we need to do
  • Engage in sense-making of the transformation
  • Mine the last decade of business experimentation
  • Synthesize in order to choose a path forward

22
Key Themes
  1. Continuous pace of technology evolution requires
    that we confront new choices for designing and
    building industries, markets, organizations
  2. Business models that dominated the Industrial
    Economy are evolving
  3. Types of opportunities pursued and technology
    employed strongly influence approach to
    developing, operating, managing IT
  4. As IT infrastructure becomes more standardized,
    modular, scaleable, there is a shift in IT
    investment priorities and decisions

23
Key Themes (cont.)
  1. The time required for successful organization
    learning and assimilation of rapidly changing
    technologies limits practical speed of change
  2. External industry, internal organizational, and
    technological changes are increasing pressure on
    organizations to buy rather than to make IT
    applications and services
  3. Ability to exploit technology requires high
    levels of engagement and cooperation among four
    key constituencies business executives, IT
    executives, users, technology providers/partners

24
Key Themes (cont.)
  • Ability to ensure high levels of security,
    privacy, reliability, and availability is a core
    capability that determines organizations
    ultimate success and survival
  • Over the last decade, there has been a
    fundamental shift in IT that has dramatically
    impacted the way
  • People access and use technology
  • Organizations exploit technology
  • Technology is developed and managed

25
Questions?
26
Guest Talk
  • Adam Ryszka, ISM alumni 2006
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