2. Knowing the potential
impact of information
systems and having the
ability to put this knowledge
to work can result in
success in organizations
reaching their goalsâĻ
3. System users, business
managers, and
information systems
professionals must work
together to build a
successful information
system
4. Levels of Management in Organizations:
(Information Needs & Decision Making)
Source: Essentials of Management Information SystemsSource: Essentials of Management Information Systems
Need information to
make strategic (long
term) decisions
Need information to
make tactical(short
term) decisions
Need information to
make operational
(daily) decisions
5. What is an Information System?
1. âĻa set of interrelated components that collect, manipulate, and
disseminate data and information and provide feedback to meet
an objectiveâĻBusinesses can use information systems to
increase revenues and reduce costs. (Star & Reynolds, 2011)
2. âĻan organized combination of people, hardware, software,
communication networks, data and procedures that stores,
retrieves, transforms, and disseminate information in an
organization.
6. Roles of Information Systems in
Business
īSupport business processes and operations for lower level management
īSupport decision making for middle management
īSupport strategies for competitive advantage for top level management
7. Categories of Information
Systems
Manual Information System Computer-based Information System
Example:
īUsing filing cabinets in
hospitals to store records
of patients is a manual
information system
Example:
ī Using a school
management system to
register university
students and follow their
progress throughout each
term would be an
example of a
computerized
information system
8. Computer-Based Information Systems
-Technology Infrastructure
âĻall hardware, software,
databases, telecommunications,
people, and procedures configured
to collect, manipulate, store, and
process data into information
9. Source: Principles of Information Systems, Tenth Edition
Components of a Computer-Based
Information Systems
10. Computer-Based Information Systems
(CBIS)
īHardware:
īConsists of computer
equipment used to
perform input, processing,
and output activities
īSoftware:
īConsists of the computer
programs that govern the
operation of the computer
īDatabase:
īOrganized collection of
facts and information,
typically consisting of two
or more related data files
âĸ Telecommunications
networks and the Internet
âĸ The electronic transmission of
signals for communications
īPeople:
īThe most important element
in most computer-based
information systems
īProcedures:
īInclude strategies, policies,
methods, and rules for using
the CBIS
11. Types of Information Systems in Business
īTransaction Processing Systems
īManagement Information Systems
īDecision Support Systems
īOffice Automation Systems
12. Information Systems at Different Levels
of Management
âĸ ESS:ESS: Helps address
strategic issues and long-
term trends, both in firm and
in external environment.
âĸ MIS & DSS:MIS & DSS: Helps with
monitoring, controlling,
decision making, and
administrative activities.
âĸ TPS:TPS: Keeps track of basic
activities and transactions of
organization (e.g., sales,
receipts, deposits,
withdrawals, payroll, flow of
materials in a factory).).
13. Transaction Processing Systems :
â Transaction:
īąAny business-related
exchange, such as payments
to employees and sales to
customers
â Transaction Processing
System (TPS): Organized
collection of people,
procedures, software, databases,
and devices used to record
completed business transactions
â Serve operational managers.
â Principal purpose is to answer routine
questions and to track the flow of
transactions through the organization.
â Example: inventory questions,
granting credit to customer,
performing deposits & withdrawals
â Monitor status of internal operations
and firmâs relationship with external
environment.
â Major producers of information for
other systems.
â Highly central to business operations
and functioning.
14. Two types of Transaction Processing
Systems (TPS)
īBatchTPS:
īBatch processing involves processing several transactions at the
same time, and the results are not immediately available when
the transaction is being entered. There is a time delay.
Transactions are accumulated over a period and processed in
groups at a date in the future. For example, IS used in payroll
systems
īOnlineTPS (OLTP):
īProcesses data as soon as it becomes available. There is no time
delay. It processes transactions in real time. This is used for
systems in which time is critical. For example, IS used in an
airline reservation system
16. Management information system
(MIS):
īOrganized collection of
people, procedures,
software, databases, and
devices that provides
routine information
to managers and
decision makers
âĸ Provide middle managers with reports
on firmâs performance to monitor firm
and help predict future performance.
âĸ Produces summaries and reports on
basic operations using data collected
from a TPS.
âĸ Provide weekly, monthly, annual
results, but may enable drilling down
into daily or hourly data.
âĸ Typically not very flexible systems
with little analytic capability.
18. Decision Support System (DSS):
īUsed to support problem-specific decision making
īUsed when problem is complex and information
needed to determine appropriate action is difficult
to obtain
īFor example, an IS that is used daily by managers to
develop bids contracts
īThis relies on both internal and external data to
make decisions.
īIt does not make the final decision but will operate
more as a guide to managers
20. Expert systems:
īGive computer ability
to make suggestions
and function like an
expert in a particular
field
īVirtual reality:
īļSimulation of a real or
imagined environment
that can be experienced
visually in three
dimensions
âĸ Tools that capture the
expertise of knowledge
workers and provide advice
to non-experts in a given
field.
22. Executive Support Systems
(ESS):
âĸ Serve senior managers information to make strategic decisions.
âĸ Address strategic issues and long-term trends.
īŧ E.g., Five years plan for product diversification?
âĸ handles non-routine informational problems.
âĸ Provide generalized computing capacity that can be applied to changing
array of problems.
âĸ Draw summarized information from MIS, DSS, and data from external
events.
âĸ Typically use portal withWeb interface to present content.
23. Table 1.5: Showing major components of an ESS
Source: Principles of Information Systems, Tenth Edition
24. Implications: Information Systems
(IS) in Society, Business, and Industry
īHave been developed to meet the needs of all types of
organizations and people
īSpeed and widespread use opens users to a variety of threats
from unethical people
25. Security, Privacy, and Ethical Issues in
Information Systems and the Internet
īDrawbacks of information systems:
īPersonal data, including Social Security and credit card
numbers, can be lost or stolen
īTo protect against threats to your privacy and data:
īInstall security and control measures
īUse of information systems:
īRaises work concerns, including job loss through increased
efficiency
26. Enterprise Systems for Functional
Areas in Organizations
īEnterprise systems are used at all levels of management and
work across several functional areas in the organization.
īFunctional areas and operating divisions of business:
īFinance and accounting
īSales and marketing
īManufacturing
īHuman resource management
īLegal information systems
īDistribution and Logistics
28. Sales and Marketing
īMajor Function: Sales management, market research,
promotion, pricing, new products
īMajor Applications:
1. Point of SaleTerminals in supermarkets
2. Inventory systems for stock control
3. Sales Ordering systems
4. Marketing research system
5. Pricing System
32. Human Resource
īMajor Function: Personnel records, Employee Benefits,
Compensation, Labor Relations, Professional Development
Training
īMajor Application:
īPayroll,
īEmployee Records
īEmployee Benefit Systems
īPersonnelTraining Systems
34. Information Systems in Industry
īBelow is a list of industries in which IS can be used:
īAirline industry
īInvestment firms
īBanks
īTransportation industry
īPublishing companies
īHealthcare maintenance organizations
īRetail companies
īPower management and utility companies
īProfessional services
īManagement consulting firms
35. Sources
īLaudon, K. and Laudon, J. (2013). Essentials ofEssentials of
Management Information Systems. NewYorkManagement Information Systems. NewYork
University. PearsonUniversity. Pearson
īStar, R. and Reynolds, G. (2011). Principles of
Information Systems,Tenth Edition. Cengage Learning,
USA