Title: 1. ORGANIZATIONAL FOUNDATIONS OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
11. THE INFORMATION SYSTEMS REVOLUTION
TRANSFORMING BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
1.1
2LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- DEFINE INFORMATION SYSTEMS
- COMPUTER LITERACY versus INFORMATION SYSTEMS
LITERACY - EXPLAIN IMPACT OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS ON
ORGANIZATION MANAGEMENT
1.2
3LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- DESCRIBE ELECTRONIC COMMERCE ELECTRONIC
BUSINESS, RELATIONSHIP TO INTERNET DIGITAL
TECHNOLOGY - IDENTIFY MAJOR MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES TO BUILDING,
USING INFORMATION SYSTEMS
1.3
4MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES
- WHY INFORMATION SYSTEMS?
- CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO INFORMATION SYSTEMS
- NEW ROLE OF INFO SYSTEMS IN ORGANIZATIONS
- LEARNING TO USE INFO SYSTEMS NEW OPPORTUNITIES
WITH TECHNOLOGY
1.4
5BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
- GLOBALIZATION
- INDUSTRIAL ECONOMIES
- TRANSFORMATION OF THE ENTERPRISE
1.5
6GLOBALIZATION
- MANAGEMENT CONTROL
- COMPETITION IN WORLD MARKETS
- GLOBAL WORK GROUPS
- GLOBAL DELIVERY SYSTEMS
1.6
7TRANSFORMATION
- KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMIES
- PRODUCTIVITY
- NEW PRODUCTS SERVICES
- KNOWLEDGE AS AN ASSET
- TIME-BASED COMPETITION
- SHORTER PRODUCT LIFE
- TURBULENT ENVIRONMENT
- LIMITED EMPLOYEE KNOWLEDGE BASE
-
1.7
8TRANSFORMATION OF ENTERPRISE
- FLATTENING
- DECENTRALIZATION
- FLEXIBILITY
- LOCATION INDEPENDENCE
- LOW TRANSACTION COSTS
- EMPOWERMENT
- COLLABORATIVE WORK
1.8
9KNOWLEDGE- AND INFORMATION-INTENSE PRODUCTS
- PRODUCTS THAT REQUIRE A GREAT DEAL OF LEARNING
KNOWLEDGE TO PRODUCE
1.9
10LABOR FORCE COMPOSITION 1900-1996
1.10
Source Laudon Laudon 1999
11SYSTEM
INPUT
OUTPUT
PROCESS
1.11
12FUNCTIONS OF AN INFORMATION SYSTEM
1.12
13COMPUTER-BASED INFORMATION SYSTEMS (CBIS)
- FORMAL SYSTEMS
- FIXED DEFINITIONS OF DATA, PROCEDURES
- COLLECTING, STORING, PROCESSING, DISSEMINATING,
USING DATA
1.13
14INFORMATION SYSTEMS
ORGANIZATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT
1.14
15MAJOR ORGANIZATIONAL FUNCTIONS
- SALES MARKETING
- MANUFACTURING
- FINANCE
- ACCOUNTING
- HUMAN RESOURCES
1.15
16COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
- HARDWARE
- SOFTWARE
- STORAGE
- COMMUNICATIONS
- NETWORK
1.16
17APPROACHES TO INFO SYSTEMS
TECHNICAL APPROACHES
COMPUTER SCIENCE
OPERATIONS RESEARCH
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
BEHAVIORAL APPROACHES
1.17
18SOCIOTECHNICAL PERSPECTIVE
- OPTIMIZE SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
- TECHNOLOGY ORGANIZATION MUTUALLY ADJUST TO ONE
ANOTHER - UNTIL FIT IS SATISFACTORY
1.18
SOURCE Liker, et al, 1987
19SYSTEM INTERDEPENDENCE
1.19
20SCOPE OF INFO SYSTEMS
- 1950s TECHNICAL CHANGES
- 60s-70s MANAGERIAL CONTROL
- 80s-90s INSTITUTIONAL CORE ACTIVITIES
- GROWING IMPORTANCE
1.20
21WHAT YOU CAN DO ON THE INTERNET
- COMMUNICATE COLLABORATE
- ACCESS INFORMATION
- DISCUSS
- OBTAIN INFORMATION
- ENTERTAIN
- TRANSACT BUSINESS
1.21
22NEW OPTIONS FOR ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN
- FLATTENING ORGANIZATIONS
- SEPARATING WORK FROM LOCATION
- REORGANIZING WORK-FLOWS
- INCREASING FLEXIBILITY
- REDEFINING ORGANIZATIONAL BOUNDARIES
1.22
23THE CHANGING MANAGEMENT PROCESS
- ENTERPRISE RESOURCE PLANNING (ERP)
- ELECTRONIC COMMERCE
- ELECTRONIC BUSINESS
- ELECTRONIC MARKET
1.23
24ENTERPRISE RESOURCE PLANNING (ERP)
- SOFTWARE INTEGRATES ALL FACETS
- PLANNING, MANUFACTURING, INVENTORY, SALES,
FINANCE, ACCOUNTING - TRANSACTIONS ALERT ALL INVOLVED FACTORS
- UPDATES FILES, SPEEDS ACTION, CUTS COST
1.24
25ELECTRONIC COMMERCE
- INTERNET LINKS BUYERS, SELLERS
- LOWERS TRANSACTION COSTS
- GOODS SERVICES ADVERTISED, BOUGHT, EXCHANGED
WORLDWIDE - BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS INCREASING
1.25
26ELECTRONIC BUSINESS
- INTRANET BUSINESS BUILDS PRIVATE, SECURE NETWORK
- E-MAIL, WEB DOCUMENTS, GROUP SOFTWARE EXTENDS
EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION CONTROL - VIRTUAL ORGANIZATION
1.26
27VIRTUAL ORGANIZATION
1.27
28CHALLENGE OF INFO SYSTEMS
- STRATEGIC COMPETITIVE EFFECTIVE
- GLOBALIZATION MULTINATIONAL INFO
- INFO ARCHITECTURE SUPPORT GOALS
- INVESTMENT VALUE OF INFORMATION
- RESPONSIBILITY CONTROL ETHICS
-
1.28
29Connect to the INTERNET
PRESS LEFT MOUSE BUTTON ON ICON TO CONNECT TO THE
LAUDON LAUDON WEB SITE FOR MORE INFORMATION ON
THIS CHAPTER
1.29
301. THE INFORMATION SYSTEMS REVOLUTION
TRANSFORMING BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
1.30