2. What is Information Management ?
In today’s knowledge economy, organizations that can’t properly utilize
their information assets risk serious failure. Information
management is an emerging field that is concerned with:
• The infrastructure used to collect, manage, preserve, store and
deliver information
• The guiding principles that allow information to be available to the
right people at the right time
• The view that all information, both digital and physical, is an asset
that requires proper management
• The organizational and social contexts in which information exists
3. What is Information Management ?
• Information management is closely related to, and overlaps
with, the management of data, systems, technology,
processes and – where the availability of information is
critical to organisational success – strategy.
• This broad view of the realm of information management
contrasts with the earlier, more traditional view, that the
life cycle of managing information is an operational matter
that requires specific procedures, organisational
capabilities and standards that deal with information as a
product or a service.
4. What is Information Management ?
• ‘Information management’ is an umbrella
term that encompasses all the systems and
processes within an organisation for the
creation and use of corporate information.
• In terms of technology, information
management encompasses systems such as:
5. What is Information Management ?
• web content management (CM)
• document management (DM)
• records management (RM)
• digital asset management (DAM)
• learning management systems (LM)
• learning content management systems (LCM)
• collaboration
• enterprise search
• and many more…
6. What is Information Management ?
• Information management is, however, much
more than just technology. Equally importantly, it
is about the business processes and practices that
underpin the creation and use of information.
• It is also about the information itself, including
the structure of information (‘information
architecture’), metadata, content quality, and
more.
7. What is Information Management ?
Information management therefore
encompasses:
people
process
technology
content
Each of these must be addressed if information
management projects are to succeed.
8. Purpose of Information Management
The purpose of information management is
to....
• design, develop, manage, and use information
with insight and innovation
• support decision making and create value for
individuals, organizations, communities, and
societies
9. A contemporary portfolio model for
information
• At the heart of his view of information
management is a portfolio model that takes
account of the surging interest in external
sources of information and the need to
organise un-structured information external
so as to make it useful (see the figure).
11. Information Management Model
• Such an information portfolio as this shows
how information can be gathered and usefully
organised, in four stages:
• Stage 1: Taking advantage of public
information: recognise and adopt well-
structured external schemes of reference
data, such as post codes, weather data, GPS
positioning data and travel timetables,
exemplified in the personal computing press.
12. Information Management Model
• tage 2: Tagging the noise on the world wide
web: use existing schemes such as post codes
and GPS data or more typically by adding
“tags”, or construct a formal ontology that
provides structure. Shirky provides an
overview of these two approaches
13. Information Management Model
• Stage 3: Sifting and analysing: in the wider
world the generalised ontologies that are
under development extend to hundreds of
entities and hundreds of relations between
them and provide the means to elicit meaning
from large volumes of data. Structured data in
databases works best when that structure
reflects a higher-level information model – an
ontology, or an entity-relationship model
14. Information Management Model
• Stage 4: Structuring and archiving: with the large
volume of data available from sources such as the
social web and from the miniature telemetry
systems used in personal health management,
new ways to archive and then trawl data for
meaningful information. Map-reduce methods,
originating from functional programming, are a
more recent way of eliciting information from
large archival datasets that is becoming
interesting to regular businesses that have very
large data resources to work with, but it requires
advanced multi-processor resources.
15. Competencies to manage information
• The Information Management Body of
Knowledge was made available on the world
wide web in 2004 and sets out to show that
the required management competencies to
derive real benefits from an investment in
information are complex and multi-layered.
The framework model that is the basis for
understanding competencies comprises six
“knowledge” areas and four “process” areas:
16. Competencies to manage information
1. Information technology: The pace of change
of technology and the pressure to constantly
acquire the newest technological products can
undermine the stability of the infrastructure
that supports systems, and thereby optimises
business processes and delivers benefits. It is
necessary to manage the “supply side” and
recognise that technology is, increasingly,
becoming a commodity.
17. Competencies to manage information
2. Information system: While historically
information systems were developed in-
house, over the years it has become possible
to acquire most of the software systems that
an organisation needs from the software
package industry. However, there is still the
potential for competitive advantage from the
implementation of new systems ideas that
deliver to the strategic intentions of
organisations.
18. Competencies to manage information
3. Business processes and Business information:
Information systems are applied to business
processes in order to improve them, and they
bring data to the business that becomes
useful as business information. Business
process management is still seen as a
relatively new idea because it is not
universally adopted, and it has been difficult
in many cases; business information
management is even more of a challenge
19. Competencies to manage information
4. Business benefit: What are the benefits that we are
seeking? It is necessary not only to be brutally honest
about what can be achieved, but also to ensure the
active management and assessment of benefit
delivery. Since the emergence and popularisation of
the Balanced scorecard there has been huge interest in
business performance management but not much
serious effort has been made to relate business
performance management to the benefits of
information technology investments and the
introduction of new information systems until the turn
of the millennium
20. Competencies to manage information
5. Business strategy: Although a long way from the
workaday issues of managing information in
organisations, strategy in most organisations
simply has to be informed by information
technology and information systems
opportunities, whether to address poor
performance or to improve differentiation and
competitiveness. Strategic analysis tools such as
the value chain and critical success factor analysis
are directly dependent on proper attention to the
information that is (or could be) managed
21. Information management challenges
• Organisations are confronted with many
information management problems and
issues. In many ways, the growth of electronic
information (rather than paper) has only
worsened these issues over the last decade or
two.
22. Information management challenges
• Common information management problems include:
• Large number of disparate information management
systems.
• Little integration or coordination between information
systems.
• Range of legacy systems requiring upgrading or
replacement.
• Direct competition between information management
systems.
• No clear strategic direction for the overall technology
environment.
23. Information management challenges
• Limited and patchy adoption of existing information
systems by staff.
• Poor quality of information, including lack of
consistency, duplication, and out-of-date information.
• Little recognition and support of information
management by senior management.
• Limited resources for deploying, managing or
improving information systems.
• Lack of enterprise-wide definitions for information
types and values (no corporate-wide taxonomy).
24. Information management challenges
• Large number of diverse business needs and issues to
be addressed.
• Lack of clarity around broader organisational strategies
and directions.
• Difficulties in changing working practices and processes
of staff.
• Internal politics impacting on the ability to coordinate
activities enterprise-wide.
• While this can be an overwhelming list, there are
practical ways of delivering solutions that work within
these limitations and issues.
• Information management issues can be overwhelming