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Principles of Information
Systems
Eighth Edition
Chapter 10
Information and Decision Support
Systems
2Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Principles and Learning Objectives
• Good decision-making and problem-solving skills
are the key to developing effective information and
decision support systems
– Define the stages of decision making
– Discuss the importance of implementation and
monitoring in problem solving
3Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Principles and Learning Objectives
(continued)
• The management information system (MIS) must
provide the right information to the right person in
the right format at the right time
– Explain the uses of MISs and describe their inputs
and outputs
– Discuss information systems in the functional areas
of business organizations
4Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Principles and Learning Objectives
(continued)
• Decision support systems (DSSs) are used when
the problems are unstructured
– List and discuss important characteristics of DSSs
that give them the potential to be effective
management support tools
– Identify and describe the basic components of a
DSS
5Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Principles and Learning Objectives
(continued)
• Specialized support systems, such as group
support systems (GSSs) and executive support
systems (ESSs), use the overall approach of a
DSS in situations such as group and executive
decision making
– State the goals of a GSS and identify the
characteristics that distinguish it from a DSS
– Identify the fundamental uses of an ESS and list the
characteristics of such a system
6Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Decision Making and Problem Solving
• Every organization needs effective decision making
• In most cases, strategic planning and overall goals
of the organization set the course for decision
making
• Information systems can assist with strategic
planning and problem solving
7Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Decision Making as a Component of
Problem Solving
• Decision-making phase: first part of problem-
solving process
– Intelligence stage: potential problems or
opportunities are identified and defined
– Design stage: alternative solutions to the problem
are developed
– Choice stage: requires selecting a course of action
8
Decision Making as a Component of Problem
Solving (continued)
Figure 10.1: How Decision Making Relates to Problem Solving
9Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Decision Making as a Component of
Problem Solving (continued)
• Problem solving: goes beyond decision making to
include implementation and monitoring stages
• Implementation stage: a solution is put into effect
• Monitoring stage: decision makers evaluate the
implementation
10Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Programmed Versus Nonprogrammed
Decisions
• Programmed decision
– Decision made using a rule, procedure, or quantitative
method
– Easy to computerize using traditional information
systems
• Nonprogrammed decision
– Decision that deals with unusual or exceptional
situations
– Not easily quantifiable
11Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Optimization, Satisficing, and Heuristic
Approaches
• Optimization model: find the best solution, usually
the one that will best help the organization meet its
goals
• Satisficing model: find a good—but not
necessarily the best—problem solution
• Heuristics: commonly accepted guidelines or
procedures that usually find a good solution
12
Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Optimization, Satisficing, and Heuristic Approaches
(continued)
Figure 10.2: Optimization Software
13Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
An Overview of Management
Information Systems
• Management information system (MIS)
– Integrated collection of people, procedures,
databases, and devices
– Provides managers and decision makers with
information to help achieve organizational goals
– Can give the organization a competitive advantage
– Providing the right information to the right people in
the right format and at the right time
14Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Management Information Systems in
Perspective
• Management information system (MIS) (continued)
– Provides managers with information that supports
effective decision making and provides feedback on
daily operations
• Use of MISs spans all levels of management
15Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Management Information Systems in Perspective
(continued)
Figure 10.3: Sources of Managerial Information
16Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Inputs to a Management Information
System
• Internal data sources
– TPSs and ERP systems and related databases
– Data warehouses and data marts
– Specific functional areas throughout the firm
• External data sources
– Customers, suppliers, competitors, and stockholders
whose data is not already captured by the TPS
– Internet
– Extranets
17Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Outputs of a Management Information
System (continued)
• Scheduled report: produced periodically, or on
schedule, such as daily, weekly, or monthly
• Key-indicator report: summary of previous day’s
critical activities
• Demand report: developed to give certain
information at someone’s request
• Exception report: automatically produced when a
situation is unusual or requires management action
• Drill-down reports: provide increasingly detailed
data about a situation
18Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Outputs of a Management Information System
(continued)
Figure 10.5: Reports Generated by an MIS
19Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Outputs of a Management Information System
(continued)
Table 10.1: Guidelines for Developing MIS Reports
20Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Characteristics of a Management
Information System
• Provide reports with fixed and standard formats
• Produce hard-copy and soft-copy reports
• Use internal data stored in computer system
• Allow users to develop custom reports
• Require user requests for reports developed by
systems personnel
21Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Functional Aspects of the MIS
• Most organizations are structured along functional
lines or areas
• MIS can be divided along functional lines to
produce reports tailored to individual functions
22Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Functional Aspects of the MIS (continued)
Figure 10.6: An Organization’s MIS
23Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Financial Management Information
Systems
• Financial MIS: provides financial information to
executives and others
• Some financial MIS subsystems and outputs
– Profit/loss and cost systems: profit and revenue
centers
– Auditing: internal and external
– Uses and management of funds
24Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Financial Management Information
Systems (continued)
Figure 10.7: Overview of a Financial MIS
25Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Manufacturing Management
Information Systems
• Manufacturing MIS subsystems and outputs
monitor and control the flow of materials, products,
and services through the organization
• Design and engineering: CAD systems
• Master production scheduling and inventory control
– Methods: MRP, JIT
• Process control
– Techniques: CAM, CIM
• Quality control and testing
26
Manufacturing Management
Information Systems (continued)
Figure 10.8: Overview of a Manufacturing MIS
27Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Marketing Management Information
Systems
• Marketing MIS: supports managerial activities in
product development, distribution, pricing
decisions, and promotional effectiveness
• Subsystems
– Marketing research
– Product development
– Promotion and advertising
– Product pricing
– Sales analysis
28
Marketing Management Information Systems (continued)
Figure 10.9: Overview of a Marketing MIS
29
Marketing Management Information Systems
(continued)
Figure 10.10: Reports Generated to Help Marketing Managers Make Good
Decisions
30Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Human Resource Management Information Systems
• Human resource MIS: concerned with activities
related to employees and potential employees
• Subsystems
– Human resource planning
– Personnel selection and recruiting
– Training and skills inventory
– Scheduling and job placement
– Wage and salary administration
31Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Human Resource Management
Information Systems (continued)
Figure 10.11: Overview of a Human Resource MIS
32Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Other Management Information
Systems
• Accounting MIS: provides aggregate information
on accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll,
and many other applications
• Geographic information system (GIS): capable
of assembling, storing, manipulating, and
displaying geographic information
33Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
An Overview of Decision Support
Systems
• DSS: organized collection of people, procedures,
software, databases, and devices used to help
make decisions that solve problems
• Focus of a DSS is on decision-making
effectiveness regarding unstructured or
semistructured business problems
• Used by managers at all levels
34Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Characteristics of a Decision Support
System
• Provide rapid access to information
• Handle large amounts of data from different
sources
• Provide report and presentation flexibility
• Offer both textual and graphical orientation
• Support drill-down analysis
35Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Characteristics of a Decision Support
System (continued)
• Perform complex, sophisticated analysis and
comparisons using advanced software packages
• Support optimization, satisficing, and heuristic
approaches
• What-if analysis: making hypothetical changes to
problem data and observing impact on results
• Goal-seeking analysis: determining problem data
required for a given result
• Simulation: ability of the DSS to duplicate features
of a real system
36Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Characteristics of a Decision Support System
(continued)
Figure 10.13: With a spreadsheet program, a manager can enter a goal, and
the spreadsheet will determine the input needed to achieve the goal.
37Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Capabilities of a Decision Support
System
• Support problem-solving phases
• Support different decision frequencies
– Ad hoc DSS
– Institutional DSS
• Support different problem structures
– Highly structured problems
– Semistructured or unstructured problems
• Support various decision-making levels
38Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Capabilities of a Decision Support System (continued)
Figure 10.14: Decision-Making Level
39
A Comparison of DSS and MIS
Table 10.3: Comparison of DSSs and MISs
40Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
A Comparison of DSS and MIS (continued)
Table 10.3: Comparison of DSSs and MISs (continued)
41Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Components of a Decision Support
System
• Database
• Model base
• Dialogue manager: user interface that allows
decision makers to:
– Easily access and manipulate the DSS
– Use common business terms and phrases
• Access to the Internet, networks, and other
computer-based systems
42
Components of a Decision Support System (continued)
Figure 10.15: Conceptual Model of a DSS
43Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
The Database
• Database management system
– Allows managers and decision makers to perform
qualitative analysis on data stored in company’s
databases, data warehouses, and data marts
– Can also be used to connect to external databases
44Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
The Model Base
• Model base: provides decision makers with access
to a variety of models and assists them in decision
making
• Model management software (MMS): software
that coordinates the use of models in a DSS
45Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
The User Interface or Dialogue
Manager
• Allows users to interact with the DSS to obtain
information
• Assists with all aspects of communications
between user and hardware and software that
constitute the DSS
46Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Group Support Systems
• Group support system (GSS)
– Consists of most elements in a DSS, plus software
to provide effective support in group decision making
– Also called group decision support system or
computerized collaborative work system
47Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Group Support Systems (continued)
Figure 10.16: Configuration of a GSS
48Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Characteristics of a GSS That
Enhance Decision Making
• Special design
• Ease of use
• Flexibility
• Decision-making support
Brainstorming
– Group consensus approach
– Nominal group technique
49Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Characteristics of a GSS That Enhance Decision
Making (continued)
• Anonymous input
• Reduction of negative group behavior
• Parallel communication
• Automated record keeping
50Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
GSS Software
• Often called groupware or workgroup software
• Helps with joint work group scheduling,
communication, and management
• Examples
– Virtual Office from Groove Networks
– Lotus Notes
– Office Communicator
– IBM’s Workplace
– Microsoft’s NetMeeting
51Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
GSS Software (continued)
• Examples of groupware products available on the
Web
– WebEx, Genesys Meeting Center, GoToMeeting
Corporate
• GSS software incorporated into existing software
packages
52Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
GSS Alternatives
• Decision room
– Decision makers are located in the same building or
geographic area
– Decision makers are occasional users of the GSS
approach
• Local area decision network
– Group members are located in the same building or
geographic area
– Group decision making is frequent
53Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
GSS Alternatives (continued)
Figure 10.18: The GSS Decision Room
54Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
GSS Alternatives (continued)
• Teleconferencing
– Decision frequency is low
– Location of group members is distant
• Wide area decision network
– Decision frequency is high
– Location of group members is distant
55Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Executive Support Systems
• Executive support system (ESS):
– Specialized DSS
– Includes hardware, software, data, procedures, and
people used to assist senior-level executives
– Also called an executive information system (EIS)
56
Executive Support Systems (continued)
Figure 10.19: The Layers of Executive Decision Making
57Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Executive Support Systems in Perspective
• Tailored to individual executives
• Easy to use
• Drill-down capabilities
• Support need for external data
58Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Executive Support Systems in Perspective
(continued)
• Can help with situations that have a high degree of
uncertainty
• Future-oriented
• Linked to value-added business processes
59Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Capabilities of Executive Support
Systems
• Support for defining overall vision
• Support for strategic planning
– Determining long-term objectives through analysis of
current organization and prediction of future trends
• Support for strategic organizing and staffing
• Support for strategic control
• Support for crisis management
60Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Summary
• Decision-making phase: includes intelligence,
design, and choice stages
• Problem-solving process: includes decision-making
phase, and implementation and monitoring stages
• Management information system (MIS): provides
managers with information that supports effective
decision making and provides feedback on daily
operations
• Financial MIS: provides financial information to
executives and others
61Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Summary (continued)
• Manufacturing MIS: monitors and controls flow of
materials, products, and services through the
organization
• Marketing MIS: supports managerial activities in
product development, distribution, pricing
decisions, and promotional effectiveness
• Human resource MIS: concerned with activities
related to employees and potential employees
62Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Summary (continued)
• Accounting MIS: provides aggregate information on
accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll,
and other applications
• Geographic information system (GIS): capable of
assembling, storing, manipulating, and displaying
geographic information
• DSS: organized collection of people, procedures,
software, databases, and devices used to help
make decisions that solve problems
63Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition
Summary (continued)
• Group support system (GSS): consists of most
elements in a DSS, plus software to provide
effective support in group decision making
• Executive support system (ESS): specialized DSS;
includes all hardware, software, data, procedures,
and people used to assist senior-level executives

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Week 7 8 & 10 ch10 c

  • 1. Principles of Information Systems Eighth Edition Chapter 10 Information and Decision Support Systems
  • 2. 2Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Principles and Learning Objectives • Good decision-making and problem-solving skills are the key to developing effective information and decision support systems – Define the stages of decision making – Discuss the importance of implementation and monitoring in problem solving
  • 3. 3Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Principles and Learning Objectives (continued) • The management information system (MIS) must provide the right information to the right person in the right format at the right time – Explain the uses of MISs and describe their inputs and outputs – Discuss information systems in the functional areas of business organizations
  • 4. 4Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Principles and Learning Objectives (continued) • Decision support systems (DSSs) are used when the problems are unstructured – List and discuss important characteristics of DSSs that give them the potential to be effective management support tools – Identify and describe the basic components of a DSS
  • 5. 5Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Principles and Learning Objectives (continued) • Specialized support systems, such as group support systems (GSSs) and executive support systems (ESSs), use the overall approach of a DSS in situations such as group and executive decision making – State the goals of a GSS and identify the characteristics that distinguish it from a DSS – Identify the fundamental uses of an ESS and list the characteristics of such a system
  • 6. 6Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Decision Making and Problem Solving • Every organization needs effective decision making • In most cases, strategic planning and overall goals of the organization set the course for decision making • Information systems can assist with strategic planning and problem solving
  • 7. 7Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Decision Making as a Component of Problem Solving • Decision-making phase: first part of problem- solving process – Intelligence stage: potential problems or opportunities are identified and defined – Design stage: alternative solutions to the problem are developed – Choice stage: requires selecting a course of action
  • 8. 8 Decision Making as a Component of Problem Solving (continued) Figure 10.1: How Decision Making Relates to Problem Solving
  • 9. 9Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Decision Making as a Component of Problem Solving (continued) • Problem solving: goes beyond decision making to include implementation and monitoring stages • Implementation stage: a solution is put into effect • Monitoring stage: decision makers evaluate the implementation
  • 10. 10Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Programmed Versus Nonprogrammed Decisions • Programmed decision – Decision made using a rule, procedure, or quantitative method – Easy to computerize using traditional information systems • Nonprogrammed decision – Decision that deals with unusual or exceptional situations – Not easily quantifiable
  • 11. 11Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Optimization, Satisficing, and Heuristic Approaches • Optimization model: find the best solution, usually the one that will best help the organization meet its goals • Satisficing model: find a good—but not necessarily the best—problem solution • Heuristics: commonly accepted guidelines or procedures that usually find a good solution
  • 12. 12 Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Optimization, Satisficing, and Heuristic Approaches (continued) Figure 10.2: Optimization Software
  • 13. 13Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition An Overview of Management Information Systems • Management information system (MIS) – Integrated collection of people, procedures, databases, and devices – Provides managers and decision makers with information to help achieve organizational goals – Can give the organization a competitive advantage – Providing the right information to the right people in the right format and at the right time
  • 14. 14Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Management Information Systems in Perspective • Management information system (MIS) (continued) – Provides managers with information that supports effective decision making and provides feedback on daily operations • Use of MISs spans all levels of management
  • 15. 15Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Management Information Systems in Perspective (continued) Figure 10.3: Sources of Managerial Information
  • 16. 16Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Inputs to a Management Information System • Internal data sources – TPSs and ERP systems and related databases – Data warehouses and data marts – Specific functional areas throughout the firm • External data sources – Customers, suppliers, competitors, and stockholders whose data is not already captured by the TPS – Internet – Extranets
  • 17. 17Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Outputs of a Management Information System (continued) • Scheduled report: produced periodically, or on schedule, such as daily, weekly, or monthly • Key-indicator report: summary of previous day’s critical activities • Demand report: developed to give certain information at someone’s request • Exception report: automatically produced when a situation is unusual or requires management action • Drill-down reports: provide increasingly detailed data about a situation
  • 18. 18Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Outputs of a Management Information System (continued) Figure 10.5: Reports Generated by an MIS
  • 19. 19Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Outputs of a Management Information System (continued) Table 10.1: Guidelines for Developing MIS Reports
  • 20. 20Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Characteristics of a Management Information System • Provide reports with fixed and standard formats • Produce hard-copy and soft-copy reports • Use internal data stored in computer system • Allow users to develop custom reports • Require user requests for reports developed by systems personnel
  • 21. 21Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Functional Aspects of the MIS • Most organizations are structured along functional lines or areas • MIS can be divided along functional lines to produce reports tailored to individual functions
  • 22. 22Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Functional Aspects of the MIS (continued) Figure 10.6: An Organization’s MIS
  • 23. 23Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Financial Management Information Systems • Financial MIS: provides financial information to executives and others • Some financial MIS subsystems and outputs – Profit/loss and cost systems: profit and revenue centers – Auditing: internal and external – Uses and management of funds
  • 24. 24Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Financial Management Information Systems (continued) Figure 10.7: Overview of a Financial MIS
  • 25. 25Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Manufacturing Management Information Systems • Manufacturing MIS subsystems and outputs monitor and control the flow of materials, products, and services through the organization • Design and engineering: CAD systems • Master production scheduling and inventory control – Methods: MRP, JIT • Process control – Techniques: CAM, CIM • Quality control and testing
  • 26. 26 Manufacturing Management Information Systems (continued) Figure 10.8: Overview of a Manufacturing MIS
  • 27. 27Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Marketing Management Information Systems • Marketing MIS: supports managerial activities in product development, distribution, pricing decisions, and promotional effectiveness • Subsystems – Marketing research – Product development – Promotion and advertising – Product pricing – Sales analysis
  • 28. 28 Marketing Management Information Systems (continued) Figure 10.9: Overview of a Marketing MIS
  • 29. 29 Marketing Management Information Systems (continued) Figure 10.10: Reports Generated to Help Marketing Managers Make Good Decisions
  • 30. 30Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Human Resource Management Information Systems • Human resource MIS: concerned with activities related to employees and potential employees • Subsystems – Human resource planning – Personnel selection and recruiting – Training and skills inventory – Scheduling and job placement – Wage and salary administration
  • 31. 31Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Human Resource Management Information Systems (continued) Figure 10.11: Overview of a Human Resource MIS
  • 32. 32Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Other Management Information Systems • Accounting MIS: provides aggregate information on accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll, and many other applications • Geographic information system (GIS): capable of assembling, storing, manipulating, and displaying geographic information
  • 33. 33Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition An Overview of Decision Support Systems • DSS: organized collection of people, procedures, software, databases, and devices used to help make decisions that solve problems • Focus of a DSS is on decision-making effectiveness regarding unstructured or semistructured business problems • Used by managers at all levels
  • 34. 34Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Characteristics of a Decision Support System • Provide rapid access to information • Handle large amounts of data from different sources • Provide report and presentation flexibility • Offer both textual and graphical orientation • Support drill-down analysis
  • 35. 35Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Characteristics of a Decision Support System (continued) • Perform complex, sophisticated analysis and comparisons using advanced software packages • Support optimization, satisficing, and heuristic approaches • What-if analysis: making hypothetical changes to problem data and observing impact on results • Goal-seeking analysis: determining problem data required for a given result • Simulation: ability of the DSS to duplicate features of a real system
  • 36. 36Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Characteristics of a Decision Support System (continued) Figure 10.13: With a spreadsheet program, a manager can enter a goal, and the spreadsheet will determine the input needed to achieve the goal.
  • 37. 37Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Capabilities of a Decision Support System • Support problem-solving phases • Support different decision frequencies – Ad hoc DSS – Institutional DSS • Support different problem structures – Highly structured problems – Semistructured or unstructured problems • Support various decision-making levels
  • 38. 38Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Capabilities of a Decision Support System (continued) Figure 10.14: Decision-Making Level
  • 39. 39 A Comparison of DSS and MIS Table 10.3: Comparison of DSSs and MISs
  • 40. 40Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition A Comparison of DSS and MIS (continued) Table 10.3: Comparison of DSSs and MISs (continued)
  • 41. 41Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Components of a Decision Support System • Database • Model base • Dialogue manager: user interface that allows decision makers to: – Easily access and manipulate the DSS – Use common business terms and phrases • Access to the Internet, networks, and other computer-based systems
  • 42. 42 Components of a Decision Support System (continued) Figure 10.15: Conceptual Model of a DSS
  • 43. 43Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition The Database • Database management system – Allows managers and decision makers to perform qualitative analysis on data stored in company’s databases, data warehouses, and data marts – Can also be used to connect to external databases
  • 44. 44Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition The Model Base • Model base: provides decision makers with access to a variety of models and assists them in decision making • Model management software (MMS): software that coordinates the use of models in a DSS
  • 45. 45Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition The User Interface or Dialogue Manager • Allows users to interact with the DSS to obtain information • Assists with all aspects of communications between user and hardware and software that constitute the DSS
  • 46. 46Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Group Support Systems • Group support system (GSS) – Consists of most elements in a DSS, plus software to provide effective support in group decision making – Also called group decision support system or computerized collaborative work system
  • 47. 47Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Group Support Systems (continued) Figure 10.16: Configuration of a GSS
  • 48. 48Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Characteristics of a GSS That Enhance Decision Making • Special design • Ease of use • Flexibility • Decision-making support Brainstorming – Group consensus approach – Nominal group technique
  • 49. 49Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Characteristics of a GSS That Enhance Decision Making (continued) • Anonymous input • Reduction of negative group behavior • Parallel communication • Automated record keeping
  • 50. 50Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition GSS Software • Often called groupware or workgroup software • Helps with joint work group scheduling, communication, and management • Examples – Virtual Office from Groove Networks – Lotus Notes – Office Communicator – IBM’s Workplace – Microsoft’s NetMeeting
  • 51. 51Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition GSS Software (continued) • Examples of groupware products available on the Web – WebEx, Genesys Meeting Center, GoToMeeting Corporate • GSS software incorporated into existing software packages
  • 52. 52Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition GSS Alternatives • Decision room – Decision makers are located in the same building or geographic area – Decision makers are occasional users of the GSS approach • Local area decision network – Group members are located in the same building or geographic area – Group decision making is frequent
  • 53. 53Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition GSS Alternatives (continued) Figure 10.18: The GSS Decision Room
  • 54. 54Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition GSS Alternatives (continued) • Teleconferencing – Decision frequency is low – Location of group members is distant • Wide area decision network – Decision frequency is high – Location of group members is distant
  • 55. 55Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Executive Support Systems • Executive support system (ESS): – Specialized DSS – Includes hardware, software, data, procedures, and people used to assist senior-level executives – Also called an executive information system (EIS)
  • 56. 56 Executive Support Systems (continued) Figure 10.19: The Layers of Executive Decision Making
  • 57. 57Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Executive Support Systems in Perspective • Tailored to individual executives • Easy to use • Drill-down capabilities • Support need for external data
  • 58. 58Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Executive Support Systems in Perspective (continued) • Can help with situations that have a high degree of uncertainty • Future-oriented • Linked to value-added business processes
  • 59. 59Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Capabilities of Executive Support Systems • Support for defining overall vision • Support for strategic planning – Determining long-term objectives through analysis of current organization and prediction of future trends • Support for strategic organizing and staffing • Support for strategic control • Support for crisis management
  • 60. 60Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Summary • Decision-making phase: includes intelligence, design, and choice stages • Problem-solving process: includes decision-making phase, and implementation and monitoring stages • Management information system (MIS): provides managers with information that supports effective decision making and provides feedback on daily operations • Financial MIS: provides financial information to executives and others
  • 61. 61Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Summary (continued) • Manufacturing MIS: monitors and controls flow of materials, products, and services through the organization • Marketing MIS: supports managerial activities in product development, distribution, pricing decisions, and promotional effectiveness • Human resource MIS: concerned with activities related to employees and potential employees
  • 62. 62Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Summary (continued) • Accounting MIS: provides aggregate information on accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll, and other applications • Geographic information system (GIS): capable of assembling, storing, manipulating, and displaying geographic information • DSS: organized collection of people, procedures, software, databases, and devices used to help make decisions that solve problems
  • 63. 63Principles of Information Systems, Eighth Edition Summary (continued) • Group support system (GSS): consists of most elements in a DSS, plus software to provide effective support in group decision making • Executive support system (ESS): specialized DSS; includes all hardware, software, data, procedures, and people used to assist senior-level executives