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Management Information Systems

Management Information Systems. Managing Information Technology in the Business Enterprise. Chapter 2. Competing with Information Technology. Objectives. Identify basic competitive strategies and explain how IT may be used to gain competitive advantage.

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Management Information Systems

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  1. Management Information Systems Managing Information Technology in the Business Enterprise

  2. Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology

  3. Objectives • Identify basic competitive strategies and explain how IT may be used to gain competitive advantage. • Identify strategic uses of information technology. • How does business process engineering frequently use e-business technologies for strategic purposes?

  4. (Objectives – continued) • Identify the business value of using e-business technologies for total quality management, to become an agile competitor, or to form a virtual company. • Explain how knowledge management systems can help a business gain strategic advantage.

  5. Section I Fundamentals of Strategic Advantage

  6. Fundamentals of Strategic Advantage • Competitive Forces (Porter) • Bargaining power of customers • Bargaining power of suppliers • Rivalry of competitors • Threat of new entrants • Threat of substitutes

  7. Competitive Strategies & the Role of IT • Cost Leadership (low cost producer) • Differentiation • Innovation • Growth • Alliance • Other Competitive Strategies

  8. Cost Leadership (low cost producer) • Reduce inventory (JIT) • Reduce manpower costs per sale • Help suppliers or customers reduce costs • Increase costs of competitors • Reduce manufacturing costs (process control)

  9. Differentiation • Create a positive difference between your products/services & the competition. • May allow you to reduce a competitor’s differentiation advantage. • May allow you to serve a niche market.

  10. Innovation • New ways of doing business • Unique products or services that include IT • New ways to better serve customers • Improve quality or efficiency • Reduce time to market • New distribution models

  11. Growth • Expand production capacity • Expand into global markets • Diversify • Integrate into related products and services.

  12. Alliance • Broaden your base of support with new linkages and alliances with customers, suppliers, competitors, and consultants • Mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures, virtual companies • Marketing, manufacturing, or distribution agreements.

  13. Other Competitive Strategies • Locking in customers or suppliers • Build value into your relationship • Creating switching costs • Extranets • Proprietary software applications

  14. Other Competitive Strategies (continued) • Raising barriers to entry • Improve operations or promote innovation • Leveraging investment in IT • Allows the business to take advantage of strategic opportunities

  15. The Value Chain • Views a firm as a series, chain, or network of activities that add value to its products and services. • Improved administrative coordination • Training • Joint design of products and processes • Improved procurement processes • JIT inventory • Order processing systems

  16. Value Chain (continued)

  17. Section II Using Information Technology for Strategic Advantage

  18. Strategic Uses Of Information Technology • Develop a focus on the customer • Business Process Reengineering (BPR) • Improve business quality • Become agile • The virtual company • Build learning organizations

  19. Develop a Focus on the Customer • Customer value • Best value • Understand customer preferences • Track market trends • Supply products, services, & information anytime, anywhere • Tailored customer service

  20. Business Process Reengineering (BPR) • Rethinking & redesign of business processes • Combines innovation and process improvement • There are risks involved. • Success factors • Organizational redesign • Process teams and case managers • Information technology

  21. Improve Business Quality • Total Quality Management (TQM) • Quality from customer’s perspective • Meeting or exceeding customer expectations • Commitment to: • Higher quality • Quicker response • Greater flexibility • Lower cost

  22. Become Agile • Four basic strategies • Customers’ perception of product/service as solution to individual problem • Cooperate with customers, suppliers, other companies (including competitors) • Thrive on change and uncertainty • Leverage impact of people and people’s knowledge

  23. The Virtual Company • Uses IT to link people, assets, and ideas • Forms virtual workgroups and alliances with business partners • Interorganizational information systems with Internet, extranets, and intranets

  24. The Virtual Company (continued) • Strategies • Share infrastructure & risk with alliance partners • Link complementary core competencies • Reduce concept-to-cash time through sharing

  25. The Virtual Company (continued) • Strategies (continued) • Increase facilities and market coverage • Gain access to new markets and share market or customer loyalty • Migrate from selling products to selling solutions

  26. Build Learning Organizations • Create, disseminate, and incorporate knowledge into products • Exploit two kinds of knowledge • Explicit documented knowledge • Tacit internal knowledge

  27. Build Learning Organizations (continued) • Knowledge Management

  28. Build Learning Organizations (continued) • Knowledge management systems • Help create, organize, and share business knowledge wherever and whenever needed within the organization

  29. Summary • Information technology has strategic value • Customer focused e-Business is key strategy • Re-engineer business processes radically • Improve quality from customer viewpoint • Agile companies capitalize on change • Virtual companies combine talents of others • Knowledge creation and incorporation are major competitive strategies

  30. Discussion Questions • You have been asked to develop e-business & e-commerce applications to gain competitive advantage. What reservations might you have about doing so? • How could a business use IT to increase switching costs and lock in its customers and suppliers?

  31. Discussion Questions (continued) • How could a business leverage its investment in IT to build strategic IT capabilities that serve as a barrier to entry by new entrants into its markets? • What strategic role can information technology play in business process reengineering and total quality management?

  32. Discussion Questions (continued) • How can Internet technologies help a business form strategic alliances with its customers, suppliers, and others? • How could a business use Internet technologies to form a virtual company or become an agile competitor?

  33. Discussion Questions (continued) • IT can’t really give a company a strategic advantage, because most competitive advantages don’t last more than a few years & soon become strategic necessities that just raise the stakes of the game. Discuss. • MIS author & consultant Peter Keen says: “We have learned that it is not technology that creates a competitive edge, but the management process that exploits technology.” What does he mean?

  34. Real World Case 1 - Royal Bank Financial • Which of the strategic uses of information technology does RBFG use? • Is IT a strategic advantage or a strategic necessity for financial firms like RBFG? • What additional IT support do you suggest for RBFG’s customer service?

  35. Real World Case 2 – WESCO International, Inc. • Business-to-Business • Describe WESCO’s original system. • Describe WESCO’s new system.

  36. Real World Case 2 (continued) • What are the business benefits to WESCO and its suppliers of its new e-procurement system? • Is WESCO’s new system a strategic use of IT?

  37. Real World Case 2 (continued) • Does WESCO’s new system give the company a competitive advantage? • What other strategic moves could WESCO implement to gain competitive advantage?

  38. Real World Case 3 – Staples, Inc. • What is the strategic business value to Staples and their large business clients of the new web-based procurement system? • What is the strategic business value to Staples and the value proposition to their customers of their new bricks-and-clicks capabilities?

  39. Real World Case 3 (continued) • Is an integrated bricks-and-clicks strategy the Internet strategy that most businesses, large and small, should adopt? • What competitive strategies is Staples pursuing?

  40. Real World Case 3 (continued) • What other e-business or e-commerce strategy would you recommend to Staples to help them gain a competitive advantage in their industry?

  41. Real World Case – Ford, Dow Chemical, IBM, et al. • What is Six Sigma? • What do critics of Six Sigma see as its shortcomings?

  42. Real World Case (continued) • Is Six Sigma “an enterprise-wide business strategy?” • What role does information technology play in Six Sigma business initiatives?

  43. Real World Case (continued) • What are the benefits and limitations of Six Sigma as a business strategy? • Can Six Sigma make up for poor management and faulty vision?

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