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Accounting systems design & evaluation

Accounting systems design & evaluation. 9434SB 8 April 2002. Exercises. TB Chapter 4 – Questions 4, 11 and 13 ACCA Paper 5, Dec 1998 Question 1: Describe 3 advantages to Caet Textiles of outsourcing the IT functions. This lecture. System analysis and selection criteria

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Accounting systems design & evaluation

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  1. Accounting systems design & evaluation 9434SB 8 April 2002

  2. Exercises • TB Chapter 4 – Questions 4, 11 and 13 • ACCA Paper 5, Dec 1998 Question 1: • Describe 3 advantages to Caet Textiles of outsourcing the IT functions

  3. This lecture • System analysis and selection criteria • Approaches & documentation • Vendor selection criteria • Application software • Hardware selection criteria • software selection criteria • Security requirements • Quality standards • Commercial vs non-profit organisations

  4. System analysis • System analysis is the methodical investigation of a problem and the identification and ranking of alternative solutions to the problem. • Structured system analysis will lead to the generation of a specification for a new accounting information system

  5. Objectives of system analysis • Define the problem precisely • Devise alternative design solutions • Develop logical specifications for the selected design • Develop the physical requirements for the selected design • Define budget for the next two system development phases ie. Design and implementation

  6. Steps involved in system analysis System analysis Preliminary survey System Design Implementation & conversion Operation & maintenance Feasibility study

  7. Preliminary surveys • Scope will include: • Data flows within the system and across interfaces • Effectiveness of the existing system • Efficiency of the existing system • Internal controls

  8. Approaches • Documentation review • Organisational • Individual • Processing • Interviews • Data modeling • Process modeling • Questionnaire

  9. Executive summary System analysis summary User requirements for the new system Operating requirements Information requirements Control requirements Logical specifications for the new system Data flow diagrams and narrative describing the new logical system Summary of improvements brought about by new logical design Typical contents of a system analysis document

  10. Description of future physical system DFDs, flowcharts, and narrative Summary of cost/benefit improvements New system constraints Hardware and software constraints Interface constraints Contractual and legal requirements Design phase budget and schedule Physical requirements Workload and volume Response time Functional layouts of computer inquiry screens and reports System growth Typical contents of a system analysis document

  11. Recommendations Approvals Attachments Approved feasibility document Analysis memos, summaries, tables, graphs Cost/effectiveness schedules. Typical contents of a system analysis document

  12. Application software • Bespoke solution is a software system developed specifically to fulfill a defined business requirement for a specific organisation • A software package is a generalised software solution usually developed by a software house for sale to an unrestricted business community • Advantages of commercial applications • Cost savings • Time savings • Guaranteed quality • Ongoing maintenance and upgrade

  13. Application system (cont’d) • Risks of using application systems • Reliance on an external supplier • Lack of competitive edge • Failure of the business to adapt to the package

  14. Vendor selection • Age • R&D capability • Financial positions • Number of technical and non-technical staff • Release status • Industry specific template • Quality Assurance

  15. Hardware selection criteria • Performance • Benchmarking • Adaptability • Expandability • Compatibility • Vendor support • Availability • Cost • One off (eg. License, lease, installation) • Ongoing (eg. maintenance)

  16. Steps in software selection • Review the requirements • Identify available packages • Narrow the choices • Perform a detailed comparison • Talk to users • Conduct benchmark tests • Select a package

  17. Software selection criteria • Functionality • General (eg. report writing, Web-enablement, Use of Chinese) • Specific (modular) capability • Technical capability • Security and control • Scalability • Architecture flexibility • Customisation • Integration • Programming language integration ability

  18. Software selection criteria (cont’d) • Support capability • Site support (# of staff and site) • Technical support (Breadth and depth) • Standard documentation • Patch program • Training programs • Vendor capability • Reference sites

  19. Security requirements • Structured methodology and detailed documentation • Detailed specification for inputs, outputs, processes, programs and stored data • Planned, tested, controlled and approved conversion to the new system • Secure operating environment to restrict unauthorised access • Segregation of duties within the Information System Function • Contingency plan for increases in required capacity and losses of usable resources

  20. Quality Standards • Quality assurance (QA) addresses the prevention and detection of errors, especially defects in software that may occur during the system development process. • Directed at: • Detecting errors • Testing developed systems to eliminate defects • Sources of guidance for QA include: • ISO 9003 • Capability Maturity Model

  21. Commercial vs non-profit organisations

  22. In summary • System analysis and selection (Notes 6:4 –7): • Approaches (Notes 6:8-11) • Application software (Notes 6:12-3; ACCA Jun 99 Q 1) • Vendor selection criteria (Notes 6:14) • Hardware selection criteria (Notes 6:15; Boockholdt pg 193-5) • Software selection criteria (Notes 6:16-8) • Security requirements (Notes 6:19) • Quality standards (Notes 6:20; Gelinas, pg 532-4) • Commercial vs non-profit organisations (Notes 6:21, TB 6.2)

  23. Exercises • TB Chapter 4 – Question 12 • Additional question: • During the Systems Development Life Cycle, the analyst usually participates in a stage where user requirements are identified and defined. This normally begins at the end of the Feasibility Study and culminates in a Requirements Specification document. During this investigation the analyst might conduct fact-finding interviews, distribute and analyse questionnaires, analyse existing documents and construct system prototypes.Briefly explain each of the following, emphasising their contribution to the requirements analysis processes: • Fact-finding interviews • Questionnaires • Prototypes • Analysis of existing documents

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