Information System

Global E-business and Collaboration

Chapter 2

VIDEO CASES

Case 1: Walmart’s Retail Link Supply Chain

Case 2: Salesforce.com: The Emerging Social Enterprise

Case 3: How FedEx Works: Inside the Memphis Hub

Instructional Video 1: US Foodservice Grows Market with Oracle CRM on Demand

 

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Define and describe business processes and their relationship to information systems.
  • Evaluate the role played by systems serving the various levels of management in a business and their relationship to each other.
  • Explain how enterprise applications improve organizational performance.

Learning Objectives

This chapter is designed to provide students a quick overview of the kinds of systems found in a typical corporation. Some of the concepts were introduced in Chapter 1. You could ask students to recall and describe the different levels of management in a business, intranets, and business processes using information from the previous chapter. Some are new—such as enterprise wide systems.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Explain the importance of collaboration and teamwork in business and how they are supported by technology.
  • Assess the role of the information systems function in a business.

Learning Objectives (cont.)

This is a good time to get students to talk about their experience working in organizations. How is collaboration and teamwork important in their business experience? Or the lack of team work? What kinds of work experiences do your students have? What did they think were the key organizational goals where they worked? How were information systems important (or not important)?

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Problem: Need to capture employee knowledge as 40% of workforce nears retirement
  • Solutions: New technology for collaborative knowledge sharing
  • Microsoft SharePoint Server 3010 provided companywide platform for collaboration, knowledge acquisition and transfer, and social tools
  • Demonstrates IT’s role in collaboration and documenting knowledge
  • Illustrates the need for changing organizational culture and business processes to use information systems effectively

TELUS Embraces Social Learning

 

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Business processes:
  • Flows of material, information, knowledge
  • Sets of activities, steps
  • May be tied to functional area or be cross-functional
  • Businesses: Can be seen as collection of business processes
  • Business processes may be assets or liabilities

Business Processes and Information Systems

Business processes are at the heart of every business. Ask students if they can give any examples of business processes that they come in contact with everyday. This could include anything from ordering a hamburger at McDonalds, to applying for a driver’s license at the DMV. Emphasize that studying a firm’s business processes is an excellent way to learn a great deal about how that business actually works. How could a business process be a liability? Think of some dysfunctional business processes or ask the students to come up with some really poor business process.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Examples of functional business processes
  • Manufacturing and production
  • Assembling the product
  • Sales and marketing
  • Identifying customers
  • Finance and accounting
  • Creating financial statements
  • Human resources
  • Hiring employees

Business Processes and Information Systems

Other examples include checking the product for quality (manufacturing and production), selling the product (sales and marketing), paying creditors (finance and accounting), and evaluating job performance (human resources). You could ask students to contribute other examples of business processes and describe which of the four types they are.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

Fulfilling a customer order involves a complex set of steps that requires the close coordination of the sales, accounting, and manufacturing functions.

FIGURE 2-1

The Order Fulfillment Process

Emphasize that each rectangle represents one part of the larger business process of order fulfillment. Notice that this business process spans several different functional areas of the business from sales (orders), to accounting, and to manufacturing. Important business processes typically span several different functional areas or divisions in a business.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Information technology enhances business processes by:
  • Increasing efficiency of existing processes
  • Automating steps that were manual
  • Enabling entirely new processes
  • Change flow of information
  • Replace sequential steps with parallel steps
  • Eliminate delays in decision making
  • Support new business models

Business Processes and Information Systems

Examples of entirely new business processes made possible by information technology are downloading a song from iTunes or buying a book or e-book from Amazon. You might also mention the Amazon book reader Kindle which is continuously connected to the Internet and allows customers to download books and pay for them using Amazon’s one-click purchase method. Ask students if they can name any other business processes that have been transformed in the last year years.

 

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Transaction processing systems
  • Serve operational managers and staff
  • Perform and record daily routine transactions necessary to conduct business
  • Examples: sales order entry, payroll, shipping
  • Allow managers to monitor status of operations and relations with external environment
  • Serve predefined, structured goals and decision making

Types of Information Systems

The purpose of these systems is to answer routine questions about the flow of transactions through the organization. These systems are a necessity for any business.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

A TPS for payroll processing captures employee payment transaction data (such as a time card). System outputs include online and hard-copy reports for management and employee paychecks.

FIGURE 2-2

A Payroll TPS

Note that the outputs of the payroll system are useful not only within the company to managers, but also to regulatory agencies and other entities relying on the accuracy of the reported data.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Business intelligence
  • Data and software tools for organizing and analyzing data
  • Used to help managers and users make improved decisions
  • Business intelligence systems
  • Management information systems
  • Decision support systems
  • Executive support systems

Types of Information Systems

This slide emphasizes the relationship between the class of software called “business intelligence” and the decision-support systems used by middle and senior management, DSS and ESS. Business intelligence is a type of software used in analyzing data.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

Read the Interactive Session and discuss the following questions

Interactive Session: Technology

  • What types of transactions are handled by baggage handling systems?
  • What are the management, organization, and technology components of baggage handling systems?
  • What is the problem these baggage handling systems are trying to solve? Discuss the business impact of this problem. Are today’s baggage handling systems a solution to this problem?
  • What kinds of management reports can be generated from the data from these systems?

CAN AIRLINES SOLVE THEIR BAGGAGE HANDLING PROBLEMS?

 

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Management information systems
  • Serve middle management
  • Provide reports on firm’s current performance, based on data from TPS
  • Provide answers to routine questions with predefined procedure for answering them
  • Typically have little analytic capability

Types of Information Systems

Emphasize to students that management information systems is a specific category of information systems for middle management. It has the same name, but a very different meaning from the term introduced in Chapter 1 (the study of information systems in business and management). In other words, the study of management information systems involves looking at all the systems used in business. An MIS system is a specific type of an IS. It’s easy to get the two confused.

 

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

In the system illustrated by this diagram, three TPS supply summarized transaction data to the MIS reporting system at the end of the time period. Managers gain access to the organizational data through the MIS, which provides them with the appropriate reports.

FIGURE 2-3

How MIS Obtain Their Data from the Organization’s TPS

Emphasize the relationship between TPS and MIS here. MIS receive data from an organization’s TPS systems and create outputs that management can use to make strategic decisions.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

This report, showing summarized annual sales data, was produced by the MIS in Figure 2-3.

FIGURE 2-4

Sample MIS Report

Author (A) – need new img

This graphic represents the “reports” portion of the Figure 2-3. Emphasize this to students, perhaps referencing that slide again to drive home that point. Students may not understand the decimals in the “ACTUAL versus PLANNED” category, where anything above 1.00 represents more sales than planned and anything less represents a disappointing result of fewer sales than planned.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Decision support systems
  • Serve middle management
  • Support non-routine decision making
  • Example: What is the impact on production schedule if December sales doubled?
  • May use external information as well TPS / MIS data
  • Model driven DSS
  • Voyage-estimating systems
  • Data driven DSS
  • Intrawest’s marketing analysis systems

Types of Information Systems

You could ask whether or not students understand what is meant by non-routine decision making, as opposed to routine decision making, and why DSS are specifically designed to assist managers in making that type of decision. Ask students for examples of non-routine decisions they make or have made in the past as managers or employees.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

This DSS operates on a powerful PC. It is used daily by managers who must develop bids on shipping contracts.

FIGURE 2-5

Voyage-Estimating Decision Support System

DSS can rely on either analytical models or large databases to provide valuable information. You could ask which of these two types the above figure best resembles (analytical models). You could also ask them what types of decisions does this system help its users make? Examples include what vessels to send to particular destinations to maximize profit, the optimal loading pattern for cargo, and the optimal rate at which vessels should travel to maximize efficiency while still meeting their schedules, and so forth.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Executive support systems
  • Support senior management
  • Address non-routine decisions
  • Requiring judgment, evaluation, and insight
  • Incorporate data about external events (e.g. new tax laws or competitors) as well as summarized information from internal MIS and DSS
  • Example: Digital dashboard with real-time view of firm’s financial performance: working capital, accounts receivable, accounts payable, cash flow, and inventory

Types of Information Systems

Emphasize the connection between ESS, MIS, and DSS. ESS rely on accurate inputs from a firm’s MIS and DSS to provide useful information to executives. These systems should not exist in isolation from one another. If they are isolated from one another, it is a kind of organizational dysfunction, probably inherited from the past. Note that the digital dashboard is a common feature of modern-day ESS. Emphasize that a critical feature of ESS is ease of use and simplicity of display. Executives using an ESS want quick access to the most critical data affecting their firm.

 

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Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

Read the Interactive Session and discuss the following questions

Interactive Session: Technology

  • What management, organization, and technology issues had to be addressed when implementing Business Sufficiency, Business Sphere, and Decision Cockpits?
  • How did these decision-making tools change the way the company ran its business? How effective are they? Why?
  • How are these systems related to P&G’s business strategy?

PILOTING PROCTER & GAMBLE FROM DECISION COCKPITS

 

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Enterprise applications
  • Systems for linking the enterprise
  • Span functional areas
  • Execute business processes across firm
  • Include all levels of management
  • Four major applications:
  • Enterprise systems
  • Supply chain management systems
  • Customer relationship management systems
  • Knowledge management systems

Types of Information Systems

Enterprise applications are used to manage the information used in the systems discussed previously. In other words, enterprise applications are used to ensure that TPS, MIS, DSS, and ESS work together smoothly.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

Enterprise applications automate processes that span multiple business functions and organizational levels and may extend outside the organization.

FIGURE 2-6

Enterprise Application Architecture

The purpose of this graphic is simply to illustrate that enterprise systems are very large and diverse databases that pull information from many parts of the firm and enable processes both across the firm, at different organizational levels, as well as with suppliers and customers.

 

The triangle represents the organization, with different colors for the four main business functions. The ovals show that an enterprise application architecture incorporates systems used in sales and marketing, enabling these to communicate with each other and externally, with suppliers and customers. It also incorporates information supplied by knowledge management systems, manufacturing and finance systems, and other enterprise systems. The purpose of incorporating data and information from all of these sources is to enable and automate cross-functional business processes and supply accurate information to aid decision making.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Enterprise systems
  • Collects data from different firm functions and stores data in single central data repository
  • Resolves problem of fragmented data
  • Enable:
  • Coordination of daily activities
  • Efficient response to customer orders (production, inventory)
  • Help managers make decisions about daily operations and longer-term planning

Types of Information Systems

This slide emphasizes the singularity of enterprise systems (one system) that integrates information flows from a variety of sources and serves a wide variety of groups and purposes in the firm. Remind students of the difference between enterprise applications and enterprise systems: Enterprise applications are any applications that span the enterprise, and types of enterprise applications include CRM, SCM,KMS and enterprise systems. Enterprise systems refers to the larger database environment within which these applications reside and operate.

Note that enterprise systems are referred to in some first as “enterprise resource planning systems (ERP).

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Supply chain management (SCM) systems
  • Manage firm’s relationships with suppliers
  • Share information about:
  • Orders, production, inventory levels, delivery of products and services
  • Goal:
  • Right amount of products to destination with least amount of time and lowest cost

Types of Information Systems

Emphasize that SCM systems are interorganizational systems, automating the flow of information across organizational boundaries. This distinction is important because SCM systems must be designed with the business processes of potential partners and suppliers in mind.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Customer relationship management systems:
  • Provide information to coordinate all of the business processes that deal with customers
  • Sales
  • Marketing
  • Customer service
  • Helps firms identify, attract, and retain most profitable customers

Types of Information Systems

CRM systems are extremely important for both marketing and customer service. You could ask students if they’ve ever filled out a survey for a company. Then connect that to information systems, perhaps explaining that the information they entered was provided as input to a CRM system for analysis.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Knowledge management systems (KMS)
  • Support processes for capturing and applying knowledge and expertise
  • How to create, produce, deliver products and services
  • Collect internal knowledge and experience within firm and make it available to employees
  • Link to external sources of knowledge

Types of Information Systems

The idea that business firms are repositories of knowledge may be new to many students. Ask students for examples of firm knowledge, for instance, the knowledge required to run a fast food restaurant, or the knowledge required to operate a Web site such as Amazon. Explain that knowledge management systems are useful for helping a firm’s employees understand how to perform certain business processes or how to solve problems. What might the consequences be for a firm with poor knowledge management systems?

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Also used to increase integration and expedite the flow of information
  • Intranets:
  • Internal company Web sites accessible only by employees
  • Extranets:
  • Company Web sites accessible externally only to vendors and suppliers
  • Often used to coordinate supply chain

Types of Information Systems

Enterprise applications are typically extremely expensive as well as difficult to implement. Ask students why this would be so:

Intranets and extranets use Internet technology to communicate internally to employees, allow employees to communicate with one another and share documents, and to help communication with vendors. They are essentially password protected Web sites. The simplest intranets and extranets may use static Web pages to relay information, whereas more sophisticated versions may be database-driven and enable key business processes. Ask students if they have used an intranet or extranet before and what services or information it provided. Does their school have an intranet/extranet? Generally universities have a Web site with different levels of access for the general public, registered students, faculty, and administrators. The public-facing part of the Web site can be thought of as the “extranet,” while the part of the Web site serving students and faculty can be thought of as the “intranet.” These terms (intranet and extranet) are fading from use, but students will occasionally find firms still using these terms.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • E-business
  • Use of digital technology and Internet to drive major business processes
  • E-commerce
  • Subset of e-business
  • Buying and selling goods and services through Internet
  • E-government:
  • Using Internet technology to deliver information and services to citizens, employees, and businesses

Types of Information Systems

The use of Internet technology has transformed and continues to transform businesses and business activity. This slide aims to distinguish different terminology used in the book.

E-business refers to the use of the Internet and networking to enable all parts of the business, whereas e-commerce refers to just that part of business that involves selling goods and services over the Internet.

 

Internet technology has also brought similar changes in the public sector—the use of Internet and networking technologies in government is referred to as e-government. Ask students what changes in businesses or government due to new Internet technologies they have noticed.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Collaboration:
  • Short-lived or long-term
  • Informal or formal (teams)
  • Growing importance of collaboration:
  • Changing nature of work
  • Growth of professional work—“interaction jobs”
  • Changing organization of the firm
  • Changing scope of the firm
  • Emphasis on innovation
  • Changing culture of work

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

A number of factors are leading to a growing emphasis on collaboration in the firm. Work is changing, requiring more cooperation and coordination. Professions play a larger role in firms than before, and this often requires more consultation among experts than before. Organizations are flatter, with many more decisions made far down in the hierarchy. Organizations are more far flung around the globe, in multiple locations. There’s an emphasis on finding and sharing ideas which requires collaboration. Finally, what it means to be a “good” employee these days is in part an ability to work with others, and collaborate effectively. The culture of work has changed.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Social business
  • Use of social networking platforms, internal and external
  • Engage employees, customers, and suppliers
  • Goal is to deepen interactions and expedite information sharing
  • “Conversations”
  • Requires information transparency
  • Driving the exchange of information without intervention from executives or others

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

Ask students how they use social sites such as Facebook, and if they have ever used these sites for business purposes. How about Twitter?

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Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Business benefits of collaboration and teamwork
  • Investments in collaboration technology can bring organization improvements, returning high ROI
  • Benefits:
  • Productivity
  • Quality
  • Innovation
  • Customer service
  • Financial performance
  • Profitability, sales, sales growth

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

Research regarding the business benefits of collaboration is anecdotal; however, business and academic communities generally regard collaboration as an essential driving factor in business success: Firms that collaborate more make more money.

 

Ask students to give examples of how collaboration can improve productivity, product quality, and customer service. Has anyone had a fruitful collaborative experience in which an aspect of a company they worked at or an organization they were in?

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Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

Successful collaboration requires an appropriate organizational structure and culture, along with appropriate collaboration technology.

FIGURE 2-7

Requirements for Collaboration

This slide graphically describes how collaboration is believed to impact business performance. Two primary ingredients are needed: collaboration capability (including how much collaboration is possible) and collaboration technology or means. The quality of these two factors directly affects firm performance—the higher quality of collaboration means better firm performance. Ask students how collaboration can be high or low quality? An example of low-quality collaboration could be a team put together to solve a business problem but is unable to effectively work together because of internal politics. Do students have any experience with poor collaboration?

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Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Building a collaborative culture and business processes
  • “Command and control” organizations
  • No value placed on teamwork or lower-level participation in decisions
  • Collaborative business culture
  • Senior managers rely on teams of employees.
  • Policies, products, designs, processes, and systems rely on teams.
  • The managers purpose is to build teams.

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

Collaboration is not something that spontaneously arises—it must be enabled and nurtured. Collaborative culture is an essential factor—simply having collaborative technology will not result in collaboration if it isn’t seen as part of the business and rewarded. Have any students worked at “command and control” organizations? If so, were they able to see aspects of the business that could be improved but were unable to make contributions because of the firm’s culture? Are there any businesses or business functions that benefit by less collaboration? Are there any disadvantages to collaboration?

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Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Tools for collaboration and teamwork
  • E-mail and instant messaging
  • Wikis
  • Virtual worlds
  • Collaboration and social business platforms
  • Virtual meeting systems (telepresence)
  • Google Apps/Google sites
  • Cyberlockers
  • Microsoft SharePoint
  • Lotus Notes
  • Enterprise social networking tools

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

The text goes into more depth on each of these tools. Give an example for each type of tool. A business use of social networking is Facebook accounts for businesses; using wikis as extended, more complete FAQs, and virtual worlds to conduct online meetings for employees around the world. Distinguish these individual tools from Internet-based collaboration environments, which are suites of collected collaboration tools, enabling communication and data-sharing between tools. How many of your students used Google Docs?

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Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Enterprise social networking software capabilities
  • Profiles
  • Content sharing
  • Feeds and notifications
  • Groups and team workspaces
  • Tagging and social bookmarking
  • Permissions and privacy

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Two dimensions of collaboration technologies
  • Space (or location)—remote or co-located
  • Time—synchronous or asynchronous
  • Six steps in evaluating software tools

What are your firm’s collaboration challenges?

What kinds of solutions are available?

Analyze available products’ cost and benefits.

Evaluate security risks.

Consult users for implementation and training issues.

Evaluate product vendors.

Systems for Collaboration and Teamwork

When evaluating collaboration tools for your businesses, the first step is to identify the kind of problem you have. The key problems are time and location. Generally, no one has enough time and often key people are not in the right place. Some teams may need to work together in real-time, whereas others may simply need shared documentation. In analyzing collaboration tools by the space/time dimensions you can determine what types of tools will solve your problem. The six steps in evaluating software are applicable not only for collaboration tools but any software solution for your company. First determine the challenge or problem, look for solutions for this particular problem, and so forth.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

Collaboration technologies can be classified in terms of whether they support interactions at the same or different time or place or whether these interactions are remote or co-located.

FIGURE 2-8

The Time/Space Collaboration Tool Matrix

You can use this matrix to identify solutions to the time/location issues that face a firm, and to choose specific collaboration technologies.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • Information systems department:

Formal organizational unit responsible for information technology services

Often headed by chief information officer (CIO)

  • Other senior positions include chief security officer (CSO), chief knowledge officer (CKO), chief privacy officer (CPO)

Programmers

Systems analysts

Information systems managers

The Information Systems Function in Business

Defined simply, the information systems department of a firm is responsible for coordinating all of the systems previously mentioned in this chapter. How the department is organized depends on the nature and size of the business. Small companies may not have a formal department, whereas large companies may have several departments for different business functions, or they have an IT Department in each corporate division. Ask students what types of information systems departments they have had experience with.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

  • End users
  • Representatives of other departments for whom applications are developed
  • Increasing role in system design, development
  • IT Governance:
  • Strategies and policies for using IT in the organization
  • Decision rights
  • Accountability
  • Organization of information systems function
  • Centralized, decentralized, and so on

The Information Systems Function in Business

As the development of business information systems matures, end users have been increasingly recognized as pivotal to developing a successful system. In addition, the information systems department has also been recognized as a powerful resource for developing new products, services, and efficiencies. As such, IT governance is a central business concern—being able to use IT efficiently and effectively has become more and more essential to a business’s success.

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Management Information Systems

Chapter 2: Global E-business and Collaboration

 

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