1 / 30

Tuesday April 11, 2006

Mgt 20600: IT Management & Applications Data Warehouses, Business Intelligence, Management Information Systems. Tuesday April 11, 2006. Reminders. Reading For today Fundamentals text, Chapter Six, Information and Decision Support Systems Homework Homework Four Databases

scott-miles
Download Presentation

Tuesday April 11, 2006

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. Mgt 20600: IT Management & ApplicationsData Warehouses,Business Intelligence,Management Information Systems Tuesday April 11, 2006

  2. Reminders • Reading • For today • Fundamentals text, Chapter Six, Information and Decision Support Systems • Homework • Homework Four • Databases • Due this Thursday, April 14th, by 5pm • Homework Five • Decision Support Systems • Due Friday, April 21st by 5pm • Exam 2 • Tuesday, April 25th • 75 points • Similar types of questions as on Exam 1 • Covers Telecom & Networks, Databases, Decision Support Systems • Next week: DSS

  3. Data Warehouses, Data Marts, and Data Mining • Data warehouse: collects business information from many sources in the enterprise • Data mart: a subset of a data warehouse • Data mining: an information-analysis tool for discovering patterns and relationships in a data warehouse or a data mart

  4. Data Warehouses, Data Marts, and Data Mining Elements of a Data Warehouse

  5. Data Warehouse Example • Home Depot in 2002 launched a 48 terabyte IBM DB2 data warehouse • Contains three years of sales history • The warehouse is intended to take the guesswork out of labor scheduling as well as inventory planning • Lowe's has had a Teradata warehouse with that functionality since 2000

  6. Data Warehouse Example • Premier Inc. sells access to clinical data it gathers from 400 hospitals to pharmaceutical manufacturers • Last year, the company's IBM Red Brick data warehouse had grown to 3TB • One table included 3 billion entries • "When you go through 3 billion rows of data, you get long runtimes," says Chris Stewart, director of data warehouse architecture. • The problem wasn't just the size of the database, however, but how clients used the data. • "Our users want to access all of the data from top to bottom," says Stewart • The complex, multipass queries created by Premier's 4,000 users each week were slowing performance. Some wouldn't run at all • Stewart brought in an all-inclusive data warehouse appliance from Netezza Corp. in Framingham, Mass • Some calculations that took one or two days now finish in six to eight minutes on the appliance's 108 processors

  7. Data Mart Example • ACNielsen's Paris offices • Customers are interested in very specific subsets of data and specific aggregations • ACNielson has produced thousands of data marts as part of a project called the Data Mart Factory • 4TB master data warehouse that includes regularly updated data from retailers • Runs it through a system that cranks out 3,000 client-specific data marts that ACNielsen presents to 1,000 customers in the retailing and consumer product manufacturing industries • Each data mart is refreshed weekly

  8. Data Warehouses, Data Marts, and Data Mining Common Data-Mining Applications

  9. Data Mining Example7-Eleven • Keyes' eyes were opened to the strategic importance of IT during a trip he made in 1990 to visit 7-Eleven's licensees in Japan • Stores customized their offerings to local demand and by the assortment of fresh foods they offered, from sushi to sandwiches • The Japanese did it with scanning data, rudimentary data warehouses and a nascent in-store ordering system • When he became CEO, Keyes knew that the U.S. stores had to do the same

  10. Data Mining Example • Online retailer Overstock.com Inc. has begun connecting users to a real-time data warehouse it completed last month • The project's goal is to help employees gain insight into the effectiveness of the company's online and e-mail advertising campaigns. • Overstock is using transactional data management tools from GoldenGate Software Inc. to pull information directly from its business systems into the data warehouse • Now the data warehouse receives Web site clickstream data in real time, financial and product-sales data every 15 minutes and other information hourly. • "When we launch campaigns now, we can look within five minutes and see if they are producing lift or revenue that would not normally have happened," Garcella said. • "You can't wait until the next day or three hours later to get that data."

  11. Online Analytical Processing (OLAP) • Software that allows users to explore data from a number of different perspectives Comparison of OLAP and Data Mining

  12. OLAP in Depth • One core software tool is online analytical processing (OLAP) • Extracts, structures and stores warehoused data to enable quick, multidimensional analysis • A dimension can be any variable your company tracks: customer locations, sales volumes, product development costs and so on • An OLAP data set is made up of dimensions and measures, which can then be used for queries to elicit detailed data breakdowns and information on associations among variables • For example, a grill manufacturer could use an OLAP query to correlate grill sales with weather conditions across various locations, to determine how heat waves affect its business in different regions.

  13. Business Intelligence • Business intelligence (BI): gathering the right information in a timely manner and usable form and analyzing it to have a positive impact on business • Knowledge management: capturing a company’s collective expertise and distributing it wherever it can help produce the biggest payoff

  14. Business Intelligence Example • Continental Airlines Inc. from worst to first. • BI that Continental gleaned from its customers helped move it from last place in travelers' opinions nine years ago to the winner of this year's award for best airline from London-based OAG Worldwide Ltd. • The first move Continental made to improve frequent-flier relations back in the mid-'90s was to consolidate 55 databases worldwide into a single Teradata data warehouse • "We wanted one voice of the customer “ • The goal was to identify high-yield customers, create loyalty programs and get more immediate data on the cost of each flight • Flight attendants now receive information from the data warehouse about high-value customers on a flight so they can personally express the airline's interest in and knowledge about the customers' recent flying experiences with Continental • The company's financial analysts can get information about the profitability of each flight instantly after "wheels up," Cook says. • In the future, Continental wants the data warehouse to use real-time clickstream data to automatically generate targeted offers to Continental's Web site visitors.

  15. Business Intelligence Example • Data warehouse cuts costs for ...cost-conscious Southwest Airlines Co • The Dallas-based carrier centralized its BI group two years ago around a Teradata data warehouse in order to keep a lid on IT costs through better systems management and more efficient staffing policies • "We're the low-cost airline, so we should have a low-cost infrastructure" • Besides helping to hold down IT spending, the 2TB data warehouse helps business analysts cut corporate costs • Annual savings from ideas generated through use of the data warehouse at between $1.2 million and $1.4 million • As a result of that success, the data warehouse is destined to grow. It will increase to 3TB by next summer and possibly double that volume by 2007. • IT team is developing better ways of handling ad hoc query requests from end users and creating dashboard-style tools for the airline's executives.

  16. Management Information Systems in Perspective • A management information system (MIS) provides managers with information that supports effective decision making and provides feedback on daily operations • The use of MISs spans all levels of management

  17. Management Information Systems in Perspective Sources of Managerial Information

  18. 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; the Internet; extranets

  19. Outputs of a Management Information System • Scheduled report: produced periodically, or on a schedule • Key-indicator report: summary of the 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 report: provides increasingly detailed data about a situation

  20. Functional Aspects of the MIS • Most organizations are structured along functional lines or areas • The MIS can be divided along functional lines to produce reports tailored to individual functions

  21. Functional Aspects of the MIS The MIS is an integrated collection of functional information systems, each supporting particular functional areas.

  22. Financial Management Information Systems • Financial MIS: provides financial information to all financial managers within an organization • Profit/loss and cost systems • Auditing • Uses and management of funds

  23. Financial Management Information Systems Overview of a Financial MIS

  24. Manufacturing Management Information Systems • The manufacturing MIS subsystems and outputs monitor and control the flow of materials, products, and services through the organization • Design and engineering • Production scheduling • Inventory control • MRP (material requirements planning) • Process control • Quality control

  25. Manufacturing Management Information Systems Overview of a Manufacturing MIS

  26. Marketing Management Information Systems • Marketing MIS: supports managerial activities in product development, distribution, pricing decisions, promotional effectiveness, and sales forecasting • Marketing research • Product development • Promotion and advertising • Product pricing

  27. Marketing Management Information Systems Overview of a Marketing MIS

  28. Human Resource Management Information Systems • Human resource MIS: concerned with activities related to employees and potential employees of an organization • Needs and planning assessments • Recruiting • Training and skills development • Scheduling and assignment • Employee benefits • Outplacement

  29. Human Resource Management Information Systems Overview of a Human Resource MIS

  30. 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

More Related