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Chapter 3: Business Functions and Supply Chains

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Title: Chapter 3: Business Functions and Supply Chains


1
Chapter 3 Business Functions and Supply Chains
Management Information Systems, Fifth Edition
2
Objectives
  • Identify various business functions and the role
    of IS in these functions
  • Explain how IS in the basic business functions
    relate to each other
  • Articulate what supply chains are and how
    information technology supports management of
    supply chains

3
Objectives
  • Enumerate the purposes of customer relationship
    management systems
  • Explain the notion of enterprise resource
    planning systems

4
Effectiveness and Efficiency
  • Information technology makes work more effective,
    more efficient, or both
  • Effectiveness the degree to which a goal is
    achieved
  • Efficiency the relationship between resources
    expended and benefits gained in achieving a goal
  • Productivity efficiency of human resources

5
Effectiveness and Efficiency
  • Productivity increased with software applications
  • Customer relationship management system serves
    customers better and faster
  • Service continues after delivery of goods as
    customer service
  • Often combined with supply management systems to
    make enterprise resource planning system

6
Effectiveness and Efficiency
Figure 3.1 Business activities consist of
customer relationship management, supply chain
management, and supporting functions
7
Effectiveness and Efficiency
Figure 3.2 Information systems in different
business functions are interdependent
8
Accounting
  • Purpose is to track every financial transaction
  • Make sure company is pulling a profit
  • Accounts payable and receivable track who owes
    who what
  • Balance sheet picture of financial situation
  • Includes profit-and loss report

9
Accounting
  • Accounting information system pulls information
    from transaction processing system
  • Automatically routes purchases to accounts
    payable
  • Generates reports on demand or on schedule
  • Cost-accounting systems accumulate data about
    costs involved in producing specific products

10
Accounting
Figure 3.3 Accounting information systems
include features that reflect up-to-date performan
ce of the organization in financial terms
11
Finance
  • Firms health is measured by its finances
  • Information systems improve financial management
  • Financial managers try to manage money as
    efficiently as possible

12
Finance
  • Financial managers have any goals
  • Collect payables as soon as possible
  • Making payments at the latest time allowed by
    contract or law
  • Ensuring that sufficient funds are available for
    day-to-day operations
  • Taking advantage of opportunities to accrue
    highest yield on funds possible

13
Finance
Figure 3.4 Financial information systems help
manage cash and investment portfolios
14
Cash Management
  • Financial information systems help managers track
    company finances
  • Cash management systems deal specifically with
    cash
  • Electronic funds transfer huge cash transactions
  • From one bank to another

15
Investment Analysis and Service
  • Investors goal is buy asset and sell higher
  • Must know current prices of securities in real
    time
  • Information systems provide investors and clients
    with financial news, stock prices, and exchange
    rates
  • Factors to consider in investing are variability,
    expected return, and liquidity

16
Engineering
  • Time to market time between generating an idea
    for product and completing a prototype
  • Engineering includes designing and building the
    prototype
  • Brainstorming group meeting and collaborating to
    generate ideas
  • Minimizing time to market is key to maintain
    competitive edge
  • Information systems contribute significantly to
    minimizing time to market

17
Engineering
  • Computer-aided design tools to create, modify
    and store designs and drawings
  • Rapid prototyping creating one-of-a-kind
    products to test design in three dimensions
  • Takes hours rather than days or weeks to produce
    product
  • Computer-aided manufacturing systems that
    instruct machines to manufacture parts and
    assemble product

18
Engineering
Figure 3.5 Engineering information systems aid
engineers in designing new products and
simulating how they operate
19
Supply Chain Management
  • Supply Chain procurement of raw materials,
    processing materials, and delivering goods
  • Processing goods also known as manufacturing
  • Supply Chain Management monitoring, controlling,
    facilitating supply chains
  • CAD systems often automatically transfer data to
    CAM systems
  • IT helps scheduling, planning, allocating,
    analyzing manufacturing operations

20
Material Requirements and Purchasing
  • Material requirements planning Inventory control
  • Determines when inventory needs to be restocked
  • Can predict future need based on demand forecasts
  • Bill of materials raw material and subcomponent
    demands
  • Economic order quantity optimal quantity to be
    bought

21
Manufacturing Resource Planning
  • Manufacturing resource planning plans entire
    manufacturing process
  • Uses master production schedule
  • Master production schedule specifies how
    production capacity is used to meet customer
    demands
  • Just-in-time manufacturing suppliers ship parts
    directly to assembly lines
  • Saves storage costs

22
Monitoring and Control
  • Information systems help control manufacturing
    processes
  • Controlling processes ensures quality

23
Shipping
  • Performed by manufacturer or shipping company
  • Many variables that affect cost and speed of
    shipping
  • Sophisticated software to optimize shipping
    efficiency necessary to stay competitive
  • Vehicles equipped with computers and satellite
    communication

24
RFID in SCM
  • Radio frequency identification allows recording
    of information about product
  • Electronic product code replaces universal
    product code with much more information
  • Info includes date of manufacturing, plant
    location, expiration date, destination
  • Ensures genuineness of products

25
Customer Relationship Management
  • Customer Relationship Management supporting
    relationships with customers
  • Supports three areas
  • Marketing
  • Sales
  • Customer service

26
Customer Relationship Management
Figure 3.10 Customer relationship management
systems help marketing, sales, and customer
service departments target interested customers,
learn from their experiences, and serve them
better
27
Market Research
  • To promote products successfully, organizations
    must perform market research
  • Market research discover populations and regions
    that are most likely to purchase product
  • Conduct interviews with consumers and retailers
  • Statistical models predict sales volumes of
    different products

28
Targeted Marketing
  • Targeted Marketing promote to people most likely
    to purchase products
  • Database technology allows smaller companies to
    use targeted marketing
  • Can direct promotional dollars to customers most
    likely to buy
  • Spam cheap method of advertising involving
    sending mass e-mail communications

29
Targeted Marketing
  • Database management systems sort consumers
  • Telemarketing marketing over the telephone
  • PC connected to large database
  • Computer telephony integration allows computer
    to use telephone line as input
  • Data mining using large data warehouses to find
    trends on consumer habits

30
Customer Service
  • Web-based customer service provides automated
    customer service 24/7
  • Saves labor costs
  • Saves paper costs
  • Consists of FAQs, tracking systems, maintaining
    customer profiles
  • Artificial intelligence used to emulate a
    real-life customer service representative

31
Salesforce Automation
  • Equips traveling salespeople with information
    technology
  • Makes sales presentations more efficient
  • Let salespeople present different options for
    products and services on net

32
Human Resource Management
  • Employee record management
  • Promotion and recruitment
  • Training
  • Evaluation
  • Compensation and benefits management

33
Human Resource Management
F
Figure 3.11 Human resource management
information systems help managers optimize
promotion and recruitment, training, and
evaluation
34
Employee Record Management
  • Keep personnel records to satisfy laws
  • Payroll and tax calculation
  • Human Resource information systems are now
    digitized
  • Saves space, time and costs

35
Promotion and Recruitment
  • Select best-qualified person for position
  • Selection process automated with IS
  • Intranet interorganizational network that
    supports Web applications
  • Helps HR manager post position vacancy
    announcements
  • Automated recruiting and selection software saves
    costs of publishing help wanted ads

36
Training
  • Improving employee skills
  • Multimedia software training replacing classrooms
    and teachers
  • Training software emulates situations where
    employee must act
  • Information technology reduces training costs
    dramatically

37
Evaluation
  • Employee ability must be periodically evaluated
    by supervisors
  • Often is a subjective process, which is a problem
  • Evaluation software tries to solve this problem
    by standardizing evaluation process
  • Provide tools to aid in fairly evaluating every
    employee

38
Compensation and Benefits Management
  • Compensation includes salary, hourly pay, and
    bonus
  • Programs calculate pay and taxes
  • Automatically generates paychecks and performs
    direct deposits
  • Programs help manage benefits
  • Benefits database accessible through intranet

39
Interorganizational Supply Chain Management
Systems
  • Inventory is decreasing while gross domestic
    product is increasing
  • Money saved from inventory can be spent elsewhere
  • Reduction in inventory attributed to supply chain
    management systems
  • Streamline operations throughout chain
  • Newer SCM systems connect multiple organizations

40
Interorganizational Supply Chain Management
Systems
Figure 3.12 A shared supply chain management
system
41
The Importance of Trust
  • Supply chain systems work best when all
    businesses are sharing information
  • Trust between allied companies facilitates
    collaboration
  • Risk of disclosing important figures is present
  • Risk of taking advantage of demand figures is
    present

42
The Musical Chairs of Inventory
  • Small enterprises do not use SCM systems
  • Affects more powerful organization that small
    enterprise is linked to
  • Inventory turns the number of times the business
    sells its inventory
  • When SCM of companies are not linked, supplier
    requirements unknown so companies must overstock
    inventory
  • One company sits with lean inventory while other
    stands, hence musical chairs

43
Collaborative Logistics
  • Web allows organizations from different
    industries to collaborate
  • Businesses combine freight, sharing trucks
  • Optimize logistics by connecting SCM systems
  • SCM systems help collaborative warehousing
  • Share warehouse space

44
Enterprise Resource Planning
  • Replace old, disparate information systems with
    enterprise applications
  • Enterprise Resource Planning manages daily
    operations
  • Complex
  • Require special tailoring for specific
    organizations
  • Relatively expensive

45
Summary
  • Effectiveness is the degree to which a task is
    accomplished
  • Efficiency is the ratio of output to input
  • Productivity is the measure of peoples
    efficiency
  • Information systems have been integrated into
    accounting services
  • Financial information systems help managers track
    cash

46
Summary
  • Computer-aided design systems help engineers
    design new projects
  • Computer-aided manufacturing systems direct
    machines that assemble parts
  • Supply chain management systems optimize
    workload, speed, and cost in supply chains
  • Customer relationship management includes the
    entire cycle of relationships with customers

47
Summary
  • Human resource management systems facilitate
    staff selection and record keeping
  • Multiple companies SCM systems can be linked,
    facilitating cooperation, which requires trust
  • Installing an enterprise resource planning system
    can encompass all business processes

48
Summary
49
Ethical Considerations
  • Consumer Privacy
  • Who Owns / Controls the Information
  • Consumer Beware!
  • Eight Issues Concerning Privacy
  • Never E-Mail Social Security Number
  • Never E-Mail Credit Card Number
  • Be Careful With Personal Information

50
Eats2Go
  • How Is IT Being Utilized?
  • Accounting
  • Management
  • Manufacturing
  • Marketing
  • Payroll Administration
  • Quickbooks

51
Case Studies
  • Wachovia Bank
  • Sales Tracking
  • Clients
  • Modeling Forecasting
  • Canada Post
  • ERP Human Resources Module
  • Employer Benefits
  • Employee Benefits

52
Video Krispy Kreme
  • How do they use technology?
  • Making product
  • Employees
  • Standardization

53
Outside Investigation
  • Supply Chain Management
  • http//www.cio.com/enterprise/scm
  • http//www.supply_chain.org

54
Excel / Lab Assignments
  • For Next Week
  • Student Tutorial 6 Review Assignment
  • Computer Lab
  • Excel Multiple Worksheets Functions
  • Excel Tutorial 6 Java Cafe
  • Open Computer Labs
  • Fridays 12-2PM in Business 214
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