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Information Systems A Business Approach

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Porter's Competitive Forces. Information. Architecture. Value Chain ... Porter's 5 competitive forces are: New entrants. Increased bargaining power of buyers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Information Systems A Business Approach


1
Information SystemsA Business Approach
  • Strategic IS Management

2
Strategy and Information Systems
  • Strategy works at different levels in the
    organisation
  • There should be a corporate strategy
  • There should be an information systems strategy
  • The IS strategy should be aligned with the
    corporate strategy
  • Much of this section may seem to focus on general
    strategy but these techniques can be used for IS
    strategy formulation

3
Strategy
  • A strategy is a plan for achieving medium and
    long term goals
  • A strategic plan includes the goals, means
    (strategies) and metrics (measurements e.g.
    critical success factors) and addresses the
    mission and vision statement of the organisation
  • The more mature an organisation the better
    defined its plans are
  • Strategic plans can date very quickly in a
    changing environment
  • many businesses opt for a loose fitting general
    framework rather than a detailed plan as a result

4
Advantages Of A Strategic Plan
  • Provides the organisation with a focus - this
    should be communicated to staff, suppliers and
    customers.
  • People are more effective when they know what
    they are supposed to be doing - their activities
    are more focussed also decision making should
    improve.
  • The production of a strategic plan involves SWOT
    analysis
  • finding out where strengths and weaknesses lie
    and developing/maintaining a competitive
    advantage.
  • NB. Planning is like cutting the grass, you can
    do a great job today but it will need doing again
    fairly soon and on a regular basis.

5
Components Of Corporate Strategy
Markets
Competition
Organisational Culture and Environment
Environment
Alliances
MISSION
Economy
Politics
Resources
Strategic Analysis
SWOT Analysis
Porter's Competitive Forces
Skills
Capital
Information Architecture
Value Chain Analysis
Outsourcing
Growth
Defensive
Stability
Levels of Strategy
Corporate
Business
Functional
Strategy Implementation
6
Level of organisational strategy
7
Strategic Analysis
  • SWOT Analysis
  • A form of competitive analysis
  • Strengths of the organisation
  • Weaknesses of the organisation
  • Opportunities in the environment
  • Threats in the environment

8
Example SWOT Analysis
9
Porters Competitive Forces
  • Porters competitive forces
  • another form of competitive analysis
  • never intended for IS use but often applicable in
    a general sense
  • Porters 5 competitive forces are
  • New entrants
  • Increased bargaining power of buyers
  • Increased bargaining power of suppliers
  • Threat of other industries offering substitutes
  • Rivalry between competing sellers

10
Value Chain Analysis
  • Value chain analysis
  • a lower form of analysis than SWOT in which the
    organisation is viewed as an input output system
  • resources (inputs) are brought into the
    organisation, processed and then sold (outputs)
  • Improvements can be made in the each of the
    primary secondary activities in the value chain
  • Primary activities - Inbound logistics,
    Operations, Outbound logistics, Marketing,
    Service
  • Secondary activities administration, research
    and development, human resource management and
    information systems development

11
Example Value Chain
  • Primary activities are key tasks that return most
    value, secondary activities are support tasks
    (e.g. admin) here Web applications add value to
    both.

12
Aligning IS With Business Goals
  • The IS strategic plan must be conformant with the
    business plan (top down). For some organisations,
    the IS is the business plan.
  • Care must be taken to avoid developing systems
    which
  • Take too much time and money to develop because
    they do not have the full backing of senior
    people.
  • Do not provide a significant return to the
    organisation because they are peripheral to the
    core business needs.
  • Displace other, perhaps more worthwhile, projects
    from being developed as they consume
    organisational resources.
  • Are not maintained effectively and eventually
    become a problem for the business. The
    information systems may be poorly perceived by
    the customers and/or employees.

13
Traditional vs. Dynamic Companies
14
Knowledge Management
  • KM consists of creating, storing, managing,
    accessing and sharing tacit knowledge (personal
    knowledge) and explicit knowledge (documented in
    books, intranets, etc.)
  • A wide range of companies are effectively
    developing knowledge management programmes for
  • cost reduction
  • process improvement
  • improving productivity
  • improving time to market
  • and increasing innovation
  • The types of application include Frequently
    Asked Questions (FAQs), reuse, best practices,
    problem solving software, decision support
    systems, resource management systems, and asset
    management systems

15
Types Of Knowledge
  • Know-why - explanatory knowledge, scientific
    knowledge of principles (laws of nature)
  • Know-how - skills, the ability to organise
    resources to achieve desired outcomes
  • Know-who - social knowledge, refers to specific
    social relations - e.g. who controls the
    resources needed in a particular situation.
  • Know-when/Know-where - economically useful
    knowledge about markets
  • Know-what - catalogue knowledge

16
The Learning Organisation
  • Peter Senge (1990) coined the term to describe
    companies whose ability to learn will provide
    them with a competitive advantage
  • A company which creates new knowledge may not
    manage it effectively
  • The learning organisation and knowledge
    management should go hand in hand.
  • How many companies can you think of which have a
    feedback mechanism in the systems and processes
    for learning?

17
The Real Challenge
  • The reward structures in most companies often
    conspire against good knowledge management
  • Pay and conditions are related to status which in
    turn relates to knowledge and skills
  • Why would employee A help employee B to become a
    rival in the promotion and pay stakes?
  • Information systems can play a key role in
    helping people share knowledge, store knowledge,
    and find knowledge

18
Summary
  • A strategy is a medium to long term plan
    outlining the goals of the organisation
  • The information systems plan should be aligned
    with the organisation's strategic plan
  • IS managers can employ one or a number of
    strategic planning methods, such as Porter's
    Competitive Model and SWOT Analysis
  • There are occasions when the information
    technology can act as a strategic driver in its
    own right
  • The Information Architecture is a plan for the
    organisation's information and technology
    infrastructure
  • Creating an effective knowledge based
    organisational environment is a strategic
    direction facilitated by information systems
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