Chapter 2

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Chapter 2 IT Support Systems: Concepts and Management 1

Transcript of Chapter 2

Page 1: Chapter 2

Chapter 2

IT Support Systems: Concepts and Management

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Learning objectives

• Define information system

• Types of Information System

• Describe and contrast Transaction Processing

System and Functional Information System

• Identify major enterprise internal support

systems and relate them to managerial functions

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• Describe support of IT along the supply chain in using

ERP and CRM

• Discuss information infrastructure and architecture

• Compare client server architecture, mainframe based

legacy systems and P2P architecture

• Describe different types of web based information

systems and their functionalities

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• Describe Software-as-a-service (SaaS) and

software oriented architecture (SOA)

environments

• describe how Information resources are

managed

• Describe roles of ISD and end users

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Information System: concept and definition

• IS- one that collects, processes, stores analyzes and

disseminates data and information for a specific purpose

• Components:

– Hardware

– Software

– Data

– People

– Procedure

– Application Program

• Collection of application programs in a single department is

usually considered as a departmental Information System 5

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Data, Information and Knowledge

• Data

– elementary description of things, events, activities and

transactions that are recorded, classified and stored

– Not organized to convey any specific meaning

• Information

– organized data so that they have meaning and value to

the recipient

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• Knowledge

– organized and processed data to convey

understanding, experience, accumulated learning and

expertise as they apply to the current problem and

activity

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Classification and types of IS

By type of support provided

Classification of Information System

By Organizational Levels

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Classification by organizational levels

• Can be stand alone but usually they are interconnected

Levels of Information systems 9

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• Personal and productivity systems

– Small systems built to support many individuals

– Known as Personal Information Management (PIM)

– Intend to support the activities of individuals to ease their

work or life

– Through acquisition, organization, maintenance, retrieval

and sharing of information

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– E.g. PDA, calculator

– Designed to increase our productivity and satisfaction

– Abundant in organizations, inexpensive and have

fairly standard capabilities

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• Transaction Processing System

– Supports repetitive information processing tasks such

as

– Periodic financial, accounting and other routine

business activities

– Supports the monitoring, collection, storage,

processing and dissemination of the organization’s

basic business transactions

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– Provides input to other IS

– Critical to success of any organization since they

support core operations

– collects data periodically or in real time

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• E.g. of TPS

– In retail stores, data flows from Point of Sale

to database

– Reduces the level of inventory

– Increases the revenue in company’s cash

position

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• Functional & Management Information Systems

– cover some repetitive and some occasional

activities

– Major functional information systems are

• Accounting

• Finance

• Production/operation

• Marketing &sales

• Human resource management 15

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– FIS ensure that business strategies come to fruition in an

efficient manner

– Provides periodic reports on operational efficiency,

effectiveness and productivity

– Two types of functional Information Systems:

• Those support managers (MIS)

– By providing periodic reports, summaries, comparisons

– Helps to make better decisions

• Those support other employees (analysts, other staff) in

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• Enterprise Information Systems

– EIS support business processes that are performed by

two or more departments

– Business process is a collection of activities performed to

accomplish a clearly defined goal and may cross

departmental / organizational boundaries

– EIS follows such processes and usually integrate tasks

done in different departments

– E.g. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)17

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Process A: Typical TPS

Process B: Procurement

Process C: Customer Services

Process D: Order taking n fulfilling

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• Interorganizational systems

– Connect two or more organizations

– E.g. worldwide airline reservation system

– Most common are those that connect buyers

and sellers

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Departmental, enterprise and inter-organizational information systems

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• Global Information Systems

– IOS that connect companies located in two or more

countries

– E.g. many e-commerce systems

• Very large and special systems

– Include many subsystems of the previous levels

– Industry specific systems

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Classification based on the type of support provided

• MIS

– Middle managers

– Provides routine information for planning, organizing,

and controlling operations in functional areas

• Office Automation System (OAS)

– Office workers

– Increases productivity of office workers

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• CAD/CAM

– Engineers and drafts people

– Allows engineers to design and test prototypes

– Transfers specifications to manufacturing facilities

• Communication and collaboration systems

– All employees

– Enables employees, partners and customers to

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• Desktop publishing systems

– Office workers

– Combines text, photos, graphics to produce

professional quality documents

• Decision support systems (DSS)

– Decision makers, managers

– Combines models and data to solve semi structured

problems with extensive user involvements24

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• Document management systems

– Office workers

– Automates flow of electronic documents

• Group Support Systems (GSS)

– Supports working processes of groups of people

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• Expert systems (ES)

– Knowledge workers, nonexperts

– Provide stored knowledge of experts to non-experts

and decision recommendations based on built-in

expertise

• Knowledge work systems (KWS)

– Managers, knowledge workers

– Supports the gathering, organizing and use of

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• Neural networks, Data mining

– Knowledge workers, professionals

– Learn from historical cases, even with vague or

incomplete information

• Business Intelligence (BI)

– Decision makers, managers, knowledge workers

– Gathers and uses large amount of data for analysis

by business analytics & intelligent systems

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• Mobile computing systems

– Mobile employees

– Supports working outside the physical boundaries of

organization

• Automated Decision Support Systems (ADS)

– Frontline employees, middle managers

– Supports customer care employees and sales people

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Relationship between IS

• Each IS has sufficiently unique characteristics

• There is information flow among these entities and

systems

• E.g. MIS extracts information from TPS and BI

receives information from Data warehouse and MIS

• As the technology changes, interrelationship and

coordination among the different types of systems

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Interrelated Support Systems

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How IT supports people and organizational activities

• Organizational activities

– Operational

• Deal with day-to-day activities of an organization

• E.g. assigning task to employees and recording their

working hours

• Short term in nature

• Supporting IS are TPS, MIS and mobile systems

• Used by supervisors, operators and clerical employees

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– Managerial

• Also called tactical activities

• Deal with middle management activities such as

short term planning, organizing and control

• Middle managers can get quick answers to queries

from such systems using BI reporting and query

capabilities

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– strategic

• Activities or decisions that deal with situations that may

significantly change the manner in which business is

done

• Involve long-range planning

• E.g. introducing new product, expanding business by

acquiring supporting businesses, Moving operations to

the foreign countries

• From such long range planning, companies derive their

short range plans, budgeting and resource allocation

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• Strategic activities help organization in other two

ways:

– Strategic response activities

• React quickly to a major competitor’s action or to

any other significant change in the enterprise’s

environment

• e.g. Kodak could beat Japanese company in

developing the disposable camera

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– Innovative strategy (initiator of change)

• Instead of waiting for a competitor to introduce a

major change or innovation, an organization can

be the initiator of change

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Who performs what activities and how IT supports them?

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• Executives and Managers

– Responsible for strategic decisions

– Support systems:

• BI (Business Intelligence)

• Corporate Performance Management (CPM)

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• Middle Managers

– Tactical decisions

– Support systems:

• Functional Information systems

• MIS

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• Staff Support

– Advisors and assistants to top and middle level managers

– Knowledge workers

– Create information and knowledge as a part of their work

and integrate it into business

– E.g. financial and marketing analysts, production

planners, lawyers, accountants

– Support systems:

• Search engines

• Expert systems

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• Lower level managers, frontline employees

– Operational decisions

– Support systes:

• ADS

• Functional IS

• MIS

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• Clerical staff

– Use, manipulate or disseminate information

– Data workers

– E.g. bookkeepers, secretaries

– Support systems:

• Office automation

• Communication systems

• Document management42

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How IT supports supply chain and enterprise systems?

• Supply chain – concept describing the flow of

– materials,

– information,

– money and

– services

from raw material suppliers through factories and

warehouses to the end customers

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A simple supply chain

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• Supply chain is difficult to manage since it needs to

coordinate

– Several business partners

– Internal corporate departments

– Numerous business processes

– Many customers

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• IT support of supply chains is divided according to three

segments of supply chain

– Support of internal supply chain

– Support of upstream supply chain

– Support of downstream supply chain

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Support of internal supply chain

• Involves TPS & other enterprise information

systems & functional information systems

• Special SCM softwares are available

– E.g. inventory management, production scheduling

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Support of upstream supply chain

• To improve procurement activities and relationships with

suppliers

Support of downstream supply chain

•Supports downstream supply chain in two areas

•Customer relationships

•Order taking and shipments to customers

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Information systems infrastructure & architecture

• Information infrastructure

– Consists of

• the physical facilities, services and management that support

all shared computing resources in organization

• Their integration, operation, documentation, maintenance &

management

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– 5 major components

• Computer hardware

• Software

• Network & communication facilities

• Databases and data workers

• Information management personnel

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Information technology architecture

• A high level map or plan of information assets in an

organization including the physical design of the building

that holds the hardware

• On the web, IT architecture includes the content and

organization of the site and the interface to support

browsing and search capabilities

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• Guide for current operations and blueprint for future

directions

• Creating IT infrastructure is a cyclic process which is

driven by business architecture which describes

organizational plans, visions, objectives and problems

and the information required to support them

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Emerging computing environments: SaaS

• SaaS (Software as a Service)

• Popular enterprise model in which computing resources

are made available to the user when they are needed

• Also referred to as SaaS, On demand computing, Utility

computing or hosted services

• Instead of buying and installing expensive and annoying

packaged enterprise applications, user can access them

over a network with a browser

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• No need to buy h/w or s/w

• Paid for through a fixed subscription fees or payable per

an actual usage fee

• Offer standardized, componentized, common & lower

cost s/w services which can be sourced at will from

some type of service provider

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Why SaaS was needed?

• Enterprises are challenged of being able to meet

fluctuating demands efficiently to become an adaptive

enterprise

• To overcome this challenge, SaaS like models were

developed

• enterprise’s demand on computing resources can vary

drastically from time to time

• Maintaining sufficient resources to meet peak

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• If enterprises cut the cost by maintaining only minimal

computing resources, there will not be sufficient

resources to meet the peak requirements

• So to balance the increasing requirements & cost of

resources, SaaS is developed

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Who should be the provider of these services?

• Either a s/w developer/host such IBM or Oracle

or

• Third party intermediary such as an application

service provider

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Implementing SaaS- a utility computing concept

• Utility computing is computing that have– Computing resources available on demand from

virtual utilities around the globe– Always on and highly available– Secure– Efficiently metered– Priced in a pay-as-you-use basis– Dynamically scaled– Self healing– Easy to manage

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• If utility computing becomes successful, all s/ws will become

a service and be sold as a utility one day

• Limitations

– Cost (can be advantage or disadvantage)

– what the client needs and what the provider offers aren't in alignment

– Reliability

• utility computing company is in financial trouble or goes out of business

– Hard to do in heterogeneous data centers

– Works better for some applications than for others

– Needs extra security (attractive targets for hackers)

– Distribution of software is different from distribution of utilities

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Grid computing

• Conventional networks are designed to provide communication

among devices

• The same n/ws can be used to support the concept of grid

computing in which– Unused processing cycles of all computers in a given network can be

harnessed to create powerful computing capabilities

• Grid computing coordinates the use of a large no. of servers &

storage, acting as one computer

• Saves money and resources

• Candidates for grid computing– Companies doing multi-hour-long processing jobs– Making complex scientific & mathematical computations 60

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Mobile computing & mobile commerce

• Computing paradigm designed for mobile employees and

others who wish to have a real-time connection from anywhere

between a mobile device and other computing environments

• M-commerce is a commerce in a wireless environment such

as through wireless devices like cellular phones & PDAs

• Enables users to access internet without needing to find a

place to plug-in

– E.g. smart phones

• Emerging mobile technology: pervasive computing

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• In pervasive computing, computation becomes

part of environment

• Computation will be embedded in things, not in

computers

• Improves efficiency in work & living tasks

• Enriches the quality of life through art, design &

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Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)

• Enterprises need to be

– adaptive and

– respond more quickly to consumer demands & at the same time

– ensure security, data integrity & regulatory compliance

• Current architecture & infrastructure may not support the

level of flexibility needed in rapidly changing business

environment

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• Solution: don’t form a monolithic rigid solution,

• systems are developed as federation or composite

applications which are tied together only at the point of

execution

• This enables alternative s/w components to be

substituted between each use of a system allowing much

greater flexibility

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• Thus the basic idea behind the SOA is to reuse &

reconnect existing IT assets/ services rather than more

time consuming & costly developments of new systems

• In SO environment, organizations make resources

available to participants via a n/w as independent

services that can be accessed in a standardized way

using web services

• SaaS at its highest level, must be delivered as a SOA &

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• Advantages of SOA

– Reduced integration cost

– Improved business/IT alignment

– Extension & leveraging of existing IT investments

– Faster time to assemble new applications

– Lower IT maintenance cost

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Web services

• Self-contained, self-describing business & consumer

modular applications

• Delivered over internet

• User can select and combine through any device (from

PC to mobile phones)

• By using set of shared protocols & standards these

applications share data & services without requiring

human beings to translate the conversion

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• Results in real time links among the online processes of

different systems & companies

• Fosters new interactions among businesses & create

more user friendly web for consumers

• Provide inexpensive & rapid solutions for application

integration, access to information & application

development

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Components of web services

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• Service

– Means by which the needs of consumer are fulfilled with the

capabilities of s/w provided

• Consumer

– Function that consumes the result of a service provided by provider

• Provider

– Function that performs a service in response to a request by a

consumer

• Registry (directory)

– Contains all the information regarding registered services including

detailed descriptions

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Working of web services

• Step 1: providers of services publish (register) their

services in the registry

• Step 2: consumers search them in registry either private

or public

• Step 3: once consumer finds a match

• Step 4: he sends a request to the service provider to get

the specific programmed service

• Step 5: provider provides the services to the customer

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Virtualization

• Separates business applications & data from h/w

resources

• This allows companies to pool hardware resources

& assign them to applications as needed

• Types of virtualization

– Storage virtualization

– N/w virtualization

– H/w virtualization

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Storage virtualization

• Pooling of physical storage from multiple

n/w storage devices into a single storage

device

• Which is then managed from a central

console

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N/w virtualization

• Combines the available resources in a n/w by

splitting the n/w load into manageable parts

• Each of these parts can be assigned to a

particular server on network

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h/w virtualization

• Use of s/w to emulate h/w or a total computer

environment other than the one in which s/w is

actually running

• It allows a piece of h/w to run multiple OS

images at once

• Sometimes called as virtual machine

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Advantages of virtualization

• Increases the flexibility of IT assets

• Allows companies to merge IT infrastructure

• Reduce maintenance & administration cost

• Prepares for strategic IT initiatives such as grid,

utility computing and SOA

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Managerial Issues

• Which IT resources are managed by whom?

– Responsibility of Information resource management is

divided between two entities

– Information System Department (ISD)

• Responsible for corporate level shared resources

– End users

• Responsible for departmental resources

• The role of the IS Department

– Changing from purely technical to managerial and strategic

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Managerial Issues (contd..)

• The transition to a digital enterprise

• How to deal with the outsourcing and utility

computing trends

• Ethical issues

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