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IT Management Planning Model and the Importance of Planning Horizon

This chapter discusses the IT Management Planning Model, including the ingredients of strategic, tactical, and operational plans. It emphasizes the importance of the planning horizon and its impact on the firm's extended planning horizon.

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IT Management Planning Model and the Importance of Planning Horizon

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  1. Chapter 4 Information Technology Planning

  2. Introduction • Strategy establishes the broad course of action for the firm • Establishes the destination and the general direction, but not the details • Planning encompasses the specific information to reach goals and accomplish objectives • These are the individual specific steps needed to reach the objective

  3. Assignment #2 - Due June 24th • Discuss the IT Management Planning Model from Table 4.1 on page 100.  Briefly discuss each of the ingredients, and select 1 ingredient and illustrate its importance by way of real world application.

  4. The Planning Horizon • There are three general types of plans • Strategic Plans – 5 yr • Tactical Plans – 2 yr • Operational Plans and Controls - < 1 yr • They are distinguished by their time span or planning horizon • The planning horizons of each type of plan added together equals the firm’s extended planning horizon

  5. Strategic Plans • Attempt to convert strategies into plans • Take information found in the strategy statement and add detailed actions and resources necessary to attain the stated goal • They must convert assumptions in the strategy into reality • They must mitigate known risks to the fullest extent possible

  6. Tactical Plans • Intermediate range plans covering the current year in detail and the following in less detail • These plans are used to help assess a manager’s performance • They link near-term actions and long range goals

  7. Operational Plans • Broad based and very detailed • Attempt to deal with important activities occurring in the near-term • Attempt to bridge the gap from the present to the tactical time period • Contain detailed information used in the lower levels in an organization • Provide a basis for taking short-term action and measuring short-term results

  8. The Extended Planning Horizon

  9. Planning Schedules • Planning is a continual process, tied to the calendar • In organizations with well-established planning processes, the new tactical plan revises the second year of the previous plan and adds to it the first year of the previous strategic plan • Revisions reflect changes due to changes in the business environment

  10. Rapid-Response Planning for Internet Applications • The leverage businesses obtain with Internet technologies are maximized when they are deployed quickly • In this climate, detailed plans quickly become dated • Wise managers respond to these changes quickly, with planning keeping up with the current business environment, rather than slavishly being tied to a calendar

  11. Seven Considerations of IT Planning

  12. 1. Application Considerations • An applications portfolio consists of a complete set of application programs a firm uses to conduct its automated business functions • Major difficulties surround project selection for the applications portfolio • Arise from competition for resources • Generally resolution requires intervention of senior executives

  13. 2. System Operations • Running the firm’s applications according to defined processes • Processes may include online ERP systems, network e-commerce systems, scheduling systems, or a combination • IT managers must plan system operations and service levels to satisfy customers both within and outside the firm

  14. 3. Resource Planning • IT resources consist of equipment, space, people, and finances • The IT plan describes the critical dependencies on available resources throughout the planning horizon • The plan must encompass all necessary obligations and expenses including leasing and finance costs, third party services, and capital equipment expenditures

  15. 4. People Plans • The most crucial element of any plan • People management is a necessary condition for success but not sufficient by itself • Planning includes staffing, training and retraining costs, and time • The personnel plan identifies requirements for people according to skill level • At the level of line management, this includes formulation of individual development plans for employees

  16. 5. Financial Plans • For an IT organization, this summarizes the costs of equipment, space, people, and miscellaneous items • Timing of expenditures reflect the rate at which the firm acquires or expends resources consistent with work product • Planning is iterative, with the figures changing due to negotiations and discussions • An IT manager’s performance is often judged against the financial plan

  17. 6. Administrative Actions • The cooperation of managers in adjacent functions must occur to help coordinate the emerging plan • Bringing others in helps develop win-win strategies among the participants • Open lines of communication help to integrate participants across departments • Measurement and tracking mechanisms must be developed to monitor progress and help management assert control

  18. 7. Technology Planning • The IT organization must stay informed about progress in the field • The rate of change in IT is enormous, with many enormous advances and technologic dead ends • In larger organizations, a small advanced technology group is useful to better quantify new technologies and their applicability to the current environment

  19. Technology Areas

  20. The Integrated Approach • Some planning strategies are more suited to certain situations than others • Two factors correlate with planning effectiveness • Infusion – the degree to which IT has penetrated the operation of the firm • Diffusion – the extent to which IT has disseminated throughout the firm

  21. Critical Success Factors in Planning • CSFs are critical tools in creating effective plans • Improve planning by focusing on important managerial issues • Audit the results of the planning process • Four major categories • Long, intermediate, and short range issues • Business management issues

  22. Business Systems Planning • Concentrates on a firm’s data resources and attempts to develop an information architecture that supports a coordinated view of the data needs of the firm’s major systems • Attempts to model the firm’s business through its information resources • Attention is shifted from the firm’s applications to the firm’s data

  23. Forecast-Based • Forecast or extrapolation strategies work in firms in which the technology is limited in terms of its use, and does not have a high impact • These firms tend to use older generations of equipment in very circumscribed roles • Rapid advances in the state of the art can be ignored and as a late or limited adopter, risks and benefits can be well quantified

  24. Eclectic Planning Strategies • Technological approach • Attempts to build an IS-oriented architecture • Administrative approach • Bottom-up resource allocation • Method-Driven approach • Use consultants to critique existing plans • Business-led • Assumes business plans will lead to IT plans

  25. Management Feedback Mechanisms • Control consists of knowing who, what, why, where, and when for all essential activities • Control processes must be designed to compare the organization’s actual performance to plan predicted performance

  26. Summary • Sound planning is critical for success • Planning is divided into time periods of differing lengths • Plans are only as good as their implementation and control mechanisms • Control is a fundamental management responsibility • Measurements are key to gauging planning success and deviation

  27. Chapter 5 Hardware and Software Trends

  28. Introduction • Four key areas have fueled the advances in telecommunications and computing • Semiconductor fabrication • Magnetic recording • Networking and communications systems • Software development

  29. Exponential Growth • Gordon Moore (a founder of Intel) observed a trend in semiconductor growth in 1965 that has held firm for close to 40 years • Moore’s Law states that the number of transistors on an integrated circuit doubles every 18 months • Similar performance curves exist in the telecommunication and magnetic recording industries

  30. Semiconductor Technology • The transistor was invented at Bell Labs in 1947 by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley • Semiconductors form the foundation upon which much of the modern information industry is based • Advances in process have allowed system designers to pack more performance into more devices at decreased cost

  31. Trends in Semiconductor Technology • Diminishing device size • Increasing density of devices on chips • Faster switching speeds • Expanded function per chip • Increased reliability • Rapidly declining unit cost

  32. Semiconductor Performance • As device size shrinks, performance improves and capability increases (more logic elements in the same size package and those elements operate faster) • During the period from 1960 to 1990 density grew by 7 orders of magnitude • 3 circuits to 3 million • By 2020, chips will hold between 1 to 10 billion circuits

  33. Roadblocks to Device Shrinkage • As the minimum feature size decreases, components are closer together and the number of components per unit area increases • Both these factors increase the amount of waste heat needed to be removed from a device • Effectively removing this heat is a big challenge

  34. Industry Success • Success of the semiconductor industry is driven by huge budgets for scientific research, process design, and innovation • Since the semiconductor was invented, the industry has experienced a growth rate of 100 times per decade

  35. Industry Innovation • Increases in device processing power comes not only from increased clock rates and decreased device sizes • Innovation in physical computer architecture also drives performance • Bus widths have increased from 8 to 16 to 32 and now are growing to 64-bit wide • With wider busses, more data can be transferred from place to place on the chip simultaneously, increasing performance

  36. Industry Innovation • Cache Memory – Fast, high speed memory used to buffer program data near the processor to avoid data access delays • Super scalar designs – designs that allow more than one instruction to be executed at a time • Hyperthreading – adding a small amount of extra on-chip hardware that allows one processor to efficiently act as two, boosting performance by 25 %

  37. Semiconductor Content • Microprocessors comprise less than 50% of total chip production • Memory, application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), and custom silicon make up the bulk of production • The telecommunications industry is a huge driver worldwide as cell phone penetration increases

  38. Summary • The invention and innovation of the semiconductor industry has been enormously important • Chip densities will continue to increase due to innovation in physics, metallurgy, chemistry, and manufacturing tools and processes • Semiconductors will continue to be cheaper, faster, and more capable

  39. Recording Technologies • As dramatic as the progress in semiconductor development is, progress in recording technologies is even more rapid • Disk-based magnetic storage grew at a compounded rate of 25% through the 1980s but then accelerated to 60% in the early 1990s and further increased to in excess of 100% by the turn of the century

  40. Exploding Demand • As personal computers have grown in computing power, storage demands have also accelerated • Operating systems and common application suites consume several gigabytes of storage to start with • The World Wide Web requires vast amounts of online storage of information • Disk storage is being integrated into consumer electronics

  41. Recording Economics • At current rates of growth, disk capacities are doubling every six months • Growth rates are exceeding Moore’s Law kinetics by a factor of three • Price per megabyte has declined from 4 cents in 1998 to 0.07 cent in 2002

  42. Hard Drive Anatomy • Data is stored on hard drives in concentric circles called “Tracks” • Each track is divided into segments called “Sectors” • A drive may contain multiple disks called “Platters” • Writing or reading data is done by small recording heads supported by a mobile arm

  43. Hard Drive Performance • Drive performance is commonly measured by how quickly data can be retrieved and written • Two common measures are used • Seek Time • Rotational Delay

  44. Hard Drive Performance • Seek Time is the amount of time it takes the heads to move from one track to another • This time is commonly measured in milliseconds (ms or thousandths of a second) • For a processor operating at 1 Ghz, 1 ms is enough time to execute one million instructions • Common seek times of inexpensive drives are from 7 to 9 ms

  45. Rotational Delay • The delay imposed by waiting for the correct sector of data to move under the read / write heads • Current drives spin at 7200 RPM. • Faster rotational speeds decrease rotational delay • High end server drives spin at 15000 RPM, with surface speeds exceeding 100 MPH • Heads float on a cushion of air 3 millionths of an inch thick

  46. Other Performance Issues • Data transfer interfaces are constantly evolving to keep pace with higher drive performance. • New standards include: • Firewire • USB 2 • InfiniBand

  47. Fault-Tolerant Storage • Data has become a strategic asset of most businesses • Loss of data can cripple and sometimes kill an enterprise • Fault-tolerant storage systems have become more important as data availability has become more critical

  48. RAID Storage • RAID is an acronym that stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Drives • RAIDs spread data across multiple drives to reduce the chance that the failure of one drive would result in data loss • RAID levels commonly range from 0 to 5 with some derivative cases

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