1 / 76

B. Information Technology (IS) CISB434: Decision Support Systems

B. Information Technology (IS) CISB434: Decision Support Systems. Chapter 8: Enterprise Systems. Learning Objectives. Discuss the concepts, definitions, and issues in Enterprise Information Systems (EIS)

Download Presentation

B. Information Technology (IS) CISB434: Decision Support Systems

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. B. Information Technology (IS)CISB434: Decision Support Systems Chapter 8: Enterprise Systems

  2. Learning Objectives • Discuss the concepts, definitions, and issues in Enterprise Information Systems (EIS) • Discuss the capabilities and charac-teristics of (Web-based) Enterprise Information Portals

  3. Learning Objectives • Discuss the Supply-Chain Management (SCM) issues • How EIS handle them • Describe the following • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) • Supply Chain Management solutions

  4. Learning Objectives • Discuss Customer Relationship Management (CRM) concepts and issues • Describe the emerging EIS of • Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) • Business Process Management (BPM) • Describe how EIS improved frontline decision making

  5. Enterprise Systems Enterprise Information Systems (EIS)

  6. Enterprise Information Systems Concepts & Definitions • Systems that serve an entire enterprise, or at least two functional departments

  7. Enterprise Information Systems Concepts & Definitions • Consists one or more of: • Business Intelligence (BI) • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) • Knowledge Management (KM) • Supply-Chain Management (SCM) • Business Process Management (BPM) • Customer Relationship Management (CRM)

  8. Enterprise Information Systems Enterprise Information Portals • Corporate (enterprise) portals • A system that integrates internal appli-cations • such as database management, document management, and e-mail • with external applications • such as news services, customer Web sites • A Web-based interface that gives users access to such applications

  9. Enterprise Information Systems Enterprise Information Portals • Enterprise (information) portal • A corporate internal Web site • on the company’s intranet • that integrates many internal applica-tions with external ones • Users access this type of portal via a standard Web browser

  10. Enterprise Information PortalsBenefits & Goals • Groupware/collaboration technologies • Presentation • Personalization and customization • Publishing and distribution • Search • Categorization • Integration

  11. Enterprise Information PortalsTypes • Suppliers’ and other partners’ portals • Customers’ portals • Employee portals • Executives’ and supervisors’ portals • Functional portals

  12. Enterprise Information PortalsPortal Applications • Knowledge bases and learning tools • Business process support • Customer-facing (frontline) sales, marketing, and services • Collaboration and project support • Access to data from disparate corporate systems • Personalized pages for various users

  13. Enterprise Information PortalsPortal Applications • Effective search and indexing tools • Security applications • Best practices and lessons learned • Directories and bulletin boards • Identification of experts • News • Internet access

  14. Enterprise Information PortalsIntegration with Enterprise Systems • Organizations deploy portals to support strategic business initiatives • Portals are used as tools for managing enterprise applications

  15. Enterprise Information PortalsIntegration with Enterprise Systems • Portals provide the much-needed ability to integrate and unify access to a firm’s • applications • back-end systems • data sources • content repositories

  16. Organizational DSS (ODSS)Concepts & Definitions • Organizational Decision Support Systems • A networked DSS that serves people at several locations • usually dealing with several decisions

  17. Organizational DSS (ODSS)Characteristics • Focus of an ODSS • Organizational task, activity, or decision that affects several organizational units or corporate problems • An ODSS cuts across organizational functions or hierarchical layers

  18. Organizational DSS (ODSS)Characteristics • An ODSS almost necessarily involves • computer-based technologies, and • communication technologies

  19. Portal examples • Clarian Health Partners, an integrated health care company, developed an enterprise information portal for its three hospitals.The portal directly assists doctors, administrators, and consumers (see Ericson, 2002). • Bank One Corp.developed a foreign currency exchange portal to let its customers examine exchange rates,execute trades of foreign currency,confirm settlement, make cross-currency payments,and view account status (see Boyd,2001).

  20. Enterprise Systems Supply-Chain Management (SCM)

  21. TYPICAL SCM PROBLEMS-EXAMPLE • difficulty of fulfilling orders received electronically for toys during the holiday season of 1999–2000. • During the last months of 1999, online toy retailers, including eToys, Amazon.com, and Toys‘ ’ Us, conducted a massive advertising campaign for Internet orders featuring $20 to $30 discount vouchers. Customer response was overwhelming, but some retailers had underestimated the demand and as a result made incorrect ordering, inventory, and shipment decisions. • they were unable to obtain the necessary toys from manufacturing plants and warehouses and deliver them to customers by Christmas Eve. • Hershey’s Chocolates experienced a similar problem when the foundation of its ERP system for SCM was built on data of low quality and accuracy . This almost bankrupted the firm. Hershey’s finally got it right through a new ERP implementation.

  22. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Demand chain • The flow of materials from an operation to the final demand • includes order generation, taking, and fulfillment • has been integrated into the supply chain

  23. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Supply chain • The flow of materials, information, money • from the creation of raw materials to their final processing into a product, or service, • and the delivery of the product, or service, to end users • Includes all the organizational units, people, procedures that support the flow

  24. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Supply-chain Management (SCM) • The activities involved in managing supply chains, including • planning, organizing, staffing, and control

  25. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Benefits of SCM • Modern SCM methods and software reduce uncertainty and risks of supply chain • thereby positively affecting inventory levels cycle time, processes, and customer service • which contribute to increased profitability and competitiveness • In today’s competitive environment, • efficient and effective supply chains are critical for the survival of organizations • and are greatly dependent on the supporting information systems

  26. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • The components of the supply • Upstream • Suppliers • e.g. manufacturers, assemblers, their suppliers

  27. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • The components of the supply • Internal • processes used in transforming the inputs from suppliers to outputs • i.e. from the time materials enter an organiza-tion to the time the product(s) goes to distribu-tion outside the organization

  28. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • The components of the supply • Downstream • processes involved in delivering the product to the final customers

  29. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support

  30. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support

  31. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Value Chain • The actual steps an item follows as it moves along the supply chain • describes how value is added when a product moves along the supply chain • primary activities - e.g., manufacturing, testing, storage - add value directly • secondary activities - e.g., accounting, personnel, engineering - support the primary activities • Value system • In a firm’s value chain, the suppliers and other business partners and their supply chains

  32. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Decision making and the supply chain • To maximize the value added along the supply chain, • it is necessary to make decisions and evaluate their potential impact • SCM software is available for decision support • for both primary and secondary activities, • including optimization of manufacturing processes

  33. Supply, Value Chains &Decision Support • Decision making and the supply chain • Special DSS/BA models can determine the costs and benefits of investing in IT in an attempt to create value along the supply chain

  34. Inventory Problems Along The Supply Chain. • Not enough • Too much • Wrong place, Wrong stage

  35. Supply-Chain Problems • Problems along the supply chain stem mainly from • Uncertainties (i.e uncertainty in demand, cost, technology forecast, unforeseen quality problems, delay delivery etc) • the need to coordinate several activities • internal units and business partners

  36. Supply-Chain Problems • The major source of uncertainties • demand forecast • can be influenced by several factors, • such as competition, prices, weather condi-tions and technological developments • Access to accurate, real-time SCM data is critical for a system to succeed

  37. Supply-Chain Solutions • Effective SCM requires • that suppliers and customers • work together in a coordinated manner • by sharing and communicating the information necessary for decision making

  38. Supply-Chain Solutions • Outsource rather than do-it-yourself during demand peaks • Buy rather than make when appro-priate • Configure optimal shipping plans • Optimize purchasing • Strategic partnerships with suppliers

  39. Supply-Chain Solutions • Use just-in-time approach to pur-chasing • so that suppliers quickly deliver small quantities whenever supplies, mate-rials, and parts are needed • Reduce the number of intermediaries • which usually add to supply-chain costs • by using e-commerce for direct marketing

  40. Supply-Chain Solutions • Reduce the lead time for buying and/or selling via automatic processing • by using EDI or extranets • Use fewer suppliers • Improve supplier–buyer relationship

  41. Supply-Chain Solutions • Manufacture only after orders are in • Dell does with its custom-made com-puters • Achieve accurate demand by wor-king closely with suppliers • Apply true optimization and descrip-tive models to SCM

  42. Enterprise Systems MRP, ERP & SCM Systems

  43. MRP, ERP & SCM SystemsWhy Integrate Systems? • Tangible benefits • Inventory reduction • Personnel reduction • Productivity improvement • Order-management improvement • Financial close-cycle improvement • IT cost reduction

  44. MRP, ERP & SCM Systems Why Integrate Systems? • Tangible benefits • Procurement-cost reduction • Cash-management improvement • Revenue and profit increase • Transportation logistics-cost reduction • Maintenance reduction, • On-time delivery improvement

  45. MRP, ERP & SCM Systems Why Integrate Systems? • Intangible benefits • Information visibility • New and/or improved processes • Customer responsiveness • Standardization • Flexibility • Globalization • Business performance

  46. Material Resource PlanningMRP • MRP system • Production plan for 100% capacity • Inventory models • Master production schedule • Component lists

  47. Enterprise Resource PlanningERP • A process that integrates the infor-mation processing activities in an organization • e.g. ordering, billing, production sche-duling, budgeting, staffing • and among business partners • Also known as Enterprise Resource Management (ERM)

  48. ERP & SCM Systems ERP Problems & Failures • ERP implementations report an un-usually high failure rate • Jeopardizing the core operations of the implementing organization • If the business processes do not match those modeled in the ERP • one or two things must be done for the implementation to proceed

  49. ERP & SCM Systems ERP Problems & Failures • The actual business processes must be changed to match the model of the ERP system • Additional, software - generally expensive - must be written, to accommodate the differences

  50. ERP & SCM Systems • There are three primary reasons for the failure of all IT-related projects • Poor planning or poor management • Change in business goals during the project • Lack of business management support

More Related