1 / 15

Comprehensive Review

Comprehensive Review . M anagement: allocation of resources I nformation: data analysis S ystems: IT; Organization changes. 70% Rule. Customer-centered approach; your benefit comes from your ability to provide benefit for your clients Thus Enterprise View is the most important step

belva
Download Presentation

Comprehensive Review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Comprehensive Review • Management: allocation of resources • Information: data analysis • Systems: IT; Organization changes

  2. 70% Rule • Customer-centered approach; your benefit comes from your ability to provide benefit for your clients • Thus Enterprise View is the most important step • Without Goals being well-defined, no effectiveness can be determined -- therefore no efficiency

  3. 80/20 Rule • Significant Few vs. Trivial Many • A means of classification and prioritization (e.g., how functions are determined in a DSS) • A means of organization (i.e., frequently accessed pages are placed on top level of Website)

  4. 5% Rule • Reduce the time waiting in queue to increase efficiency • Reduce cost of transportation to allow interactive processing (i.e., reduce the waiting time) • The most prominent benefit of telecommunication is to reduce the transportation cost of information

  5. Modular Combination • Solve problems by combining existing tools and solutions (modules) • Most frequently used tools and solutions usually become “modules” • Innovation (vs. invention) is a new use or new combination of existing tools -- fast and flexible

  6. ER Approach to SDLC • Enterprise View • Requirements Analysis • Logical Design • Physical Design • Implementation/Testing

  7. ER Approach to SDLC • Separation of managerial issues from technological issues. (e.g., have managers determine the Website contents) • The results of Logical Design are portable (cross-platform) and stable (technology changes faster than company goals)

  8. Enterprise View • What is the purpose of the project? • What does the company try to accomplish? (a baseline for project evaluation in the future) • Who are your clients? (recall Optimal Purchasing Decision project)

  9. Requirements Analysis • Use Interview, Documents, and forms to determine the critical success factors • Documents: nouns for potential input/output variables; verbs for potential processes. (recall data dictionary and process specification) • Forms: applications (input attributes) and reports (output attributes)

  10. Requirements Analysis • Study Documents and forms to reduce the time (therefore the cost to management) needed for interview • Managements tend to highlight trivial many and overlook significant few during the interview • It is easier for management to make comments on your assessment than to describe the whole system

  11. Logical Design • Organize Data and Processes by relevance and usage • Logical Layout (e.g., the storyboard in Website design) • Physical Layout (e.g., filenames and directory determination) • A System-on-Paper. A system that makes no sense on paper won’t work in real life (recall annuity table?)

  12. Physical Design • Determine the “right” tool • Modify Logical Design results to fit the selected tool • Tools are determined by availability and expertise • When alternative tools are available, cheaper and better solutions usually emerge

  13. Implementation/Testing • Coding and debugging • Must follow guidelines and standards (recall database project) • Do not change process unilaterally, but do raise question if better alternatives exist

  14. Database Management • Better Database Management allows faster access to vital information -- therefore better decision making • Collect “attributes” • Normalization (Organize by usage) • ER Modeling (modular combination)

  15. Tools Used • Excel • Access • VBA • HTML • IFPS • instant messenger? • UNIX • telnet • ftp • pine (email and newsgroup) • pico • Notetab/Notepad • Mapedit • Web browsers

More Related