1 / 57

Management Information Systems

Management Information Systems. Lecturer: Gareth Jones. What I Expect from You…. If you don’t understand- please tell me! If you want to know more about anything- please ask! If you would like another example- please ask! Don’t copy your class mates’ work- do your own.

jshane
Download Presentation

Management Information 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. Management Information Systems Lecturer: Gareth Jones

  2. What I Expect from You… • If you don’t understand- please tell me! • If you want to know more about anything- please ask! • If you would like another example- please ask! • Don’t copy your class mates’ work- do your own. • In short, make sure you understand and if you don’t- ask! Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  3. A bit of Chinese… • 如果你没有听懂我说的话, 请让我用其他方式解释 • 不懂是不丢脸的 • 如果你需要翻译, 我们可以一起来 • 不要考试作弊 • 好吧? Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  4. Course Structure (I) • Lectures: • 12 lectures at 2 hours 30 minutes each • 1 lecture in presentation skills and examination review • Each lecture will cover things relevant to your case study and examination • The course is intensive so make sure you attend every class- it’s in your best interest! Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  5. Course Structure (II) • Group Project (40%) • You will be put into groups of 4-5 and follow a real life case study from the Chinese Traditional Medicine (中药) Industry • The project should be done day-by-day after each class • Final submission on Tuesday 31st March (30%) • You will give a presentation on your project (10%) • You will be required to assess each of your classmates in your group Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  6. Course Structure (III) • Final Examination (60%) • Your final exam will be based on what we discuss in lectures • It will comprise of 3 sections: • Multiple choice (40%) • Short Answers (40%) • Essay Question (20%) • We will go through exam type questions every lecture Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  7. What you will learn- Lecture 1 • Introduction to MIS • What information systems are. • The need for information systems in running and managing businesses today. • What information systems skills and knowledge are essential. • How to perform a management overview and generate a business case for MIS Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  8. Lecture 2 • Information Systems in the Enterprise • What enterprises are. • Major systems and functions in a business. • How these functions support business processes. • Business process integration. • Enterprise applications. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  9. Lecture 3 • Organisations and Management Strategy • Managements’ understanding and responsibility in the build and use of MIS. • Organisational impact of MIS. • How MIS supports management activities. • How business’ can use MIS to gain competitive advantage. • How to overcome organisational inertia. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  10. Lecture 4 • E-Commerce and Ethics • What is e-commerce? • How e-commerce has changed the way businesses operate. • How e-commerce aligns with business processes. • An introduction to ethics in MIS. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  11. Lecture 5 • Hardware and Software in the Enterprise • Hardware and software capabilities needed for MIS. • The organisation of this hardware and software. • The selection criteria and management of these enterprise assets. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  12. Lecture 6 • Data Resources and Telecommunications • Current problems with information mismanagement • How Database Management Systems (DBMS) can help organisations manage their information. • The tools and techniques to facilitate the above. • How telecoms can support MIS. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  13. Lecture 7 • Networks and Internet • Current network types and organisation. • What internet is. • How the internet works. • Current web technologies. • How computer networks and the internet can support MIS. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  14. Lecture 8 • Business Process Integration and ERP • What enterprise applications are. • How enterprise applications can be used. • Supply chain management, logistics management and customer relationship management (ERP). • The implementation of the above in an organisation. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  15. Lecture 9 • Organisational Redesign • How new MIS’ affects organisations. • How to ensure the new MIS aligns with a company’s strategy and ethos. • The steps and techniques required to undergo the organisational change. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  16. Lecture 10 • Knowledge Management and Decision Making • What is knowledge management • What types of systems are used to facilitate knowledge management • The enterprise wide value of knowledge management systems. • What decision support systems are and how they can support business decisions. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  17. Lecture 11 • Change Management • What is change management? • How change management can assist in providing tangible benchmarks from which to measure the effectiveness of MIS. • Strategies for change management during system implementation. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  18. Lecture 12 • Information Systems Security and Control • Why IS need security and control. • What type of security and control is available? • The techniques required to implement these necessary safe guards. • Lectures over… preparation for presentation and examination Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  19. Advice • Take notes in class- this is very, very important • Review your notes after every class • Translate words you don’t know on the day you come across them (translating 50 new words the day before the exam isn’t a good idea!) • Do the group assignment every day • Ask your class mates, or myself if you don’t know something • Set up a QQ discussion group for this class Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  20. Contact Details • Email: g.jones@gjit.co.uk • Please email any questions that you have outside of the class, in the class feel free to ask as many questions as you need to! • Lets get started! Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  21. Contemporary (当代) MIS (I) • Manchester United win the 2009 Carling Cup Final on penalties… • Assisted by an iPod • How can a football team win a match using an iPod? Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  22. Contemporary MIS (II) • Immediately before the penalty shootout, goal keeper Ben Foster watched videos of Tottenham players taking penalties with the Man. United goalkeeping coach. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  23. Contemporary MIS (III) • Sport today is big business and needs effective MIS to support it- Manchester United are set to reveal record turnover of more than £300 million when they publish their accounts for the year to June 2008 • Football, basketball, athletics, rugby all use MIS to support their business at the top level • Football penalties aside, why and how? Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  24. Why MIS is needed in sports? • Huge salaries (some football players earn 1’000’000元 every week!), travel costs, logistics, marketing and need to increase revenue by improving employee performance. • High resolution, organised video allows teams to review games, study opposition, develop new tactics and scout new players more efficiently. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  25. MIS in the NBA • Synergy Sports Technology’s tools help collect, organize, and distribute video of NBA games as well as enterprises in financial and banking sectors. • Demonstrates IT’s role in reducing cost, organizing data, and increasing efficiency. • Illustrates the emerging digital firm landscape where businesses can use tools to analyse critical data. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  26. MIS in the NBA, Premiership etc… Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  27. MIS for the Clothing Industry • US clothing and home ware giant JCPenny use effective MIS • Shared information with it’s Hong Kong supplier TAL Apparel Ltd. • TAL forecast and ship based on sales • JCPenney have no inventory Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  28. Online MIS • Amazon • Started with books, now sells a huge variety of different stock • No profits for 5 years • 615 million visitors annually by 2008 • $10.7 billion in 2006 • Taobao • Connects buyers and sellers from all over China • eBay • Connects buyers and sellers around the globe Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  29. So why MIS? • Information Systems knowledge is essential for ordinary people and managers • Organisations need information systems to survive and prosper • Information systems connect the globe • Information systems change the way people conduct business Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  30. Globalisation • Internet and global communications has greatly reduced economic and cultural advantages of traditionally more economically developed countries • Drastic reduction of costs of operating and transacting on global scale • Competition for jobs, markets, resources, ideas • Dependence on imports and exports • Requires new understandings of skills, markets, opportunities • Economic crisis has made this globalisation more apparent- China buying more of America’s debt for example Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  31. Information Based Economies • From the beginning of the 20th century to present day the US economy has seen the ‘knowledge based industries’ grow from a mere 15% to around 60% • China is experiencing this change also, despite a huge manufacturing industry, with annual growth in knowledge based industries. Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  32. Business Drivers for MIS • Businesses invests in IT to achieve six important business objectives • Operational excellence • New products, services, and business models • Customer and supplier intimacy • Improved decision making • Competitive advantage • Survival Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  33. Operational Excellence • Improved efficiency results in higher profits • Information systems and technologies help improve efficiency and productivity • E.g. Wal-Mart (沃尔码): • Power of combining information systems and best business practices to achieve operational efficiency—and $348 billion in sales in 2007 • Most efficient store in world as result of digital links between suppliers and stores Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  34. New Products & Disruptive Technologies • iPhone, Google Android, Blackberry • Allow global communications for businesses and consumers • Vastly increasing web based internet usage • Digital cameras, flash memory, Amazon Kindle??? • Replaced analogue cameras and portable CD players • Needed effective R&D through MIS • Flexibility through MIS to survive Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  35. Customer Retention (Keeping customers) • Customers who are served well become repeat customers who purchase more • Mandarin Oriental hotel • Uses IT to foster an intimate relationship with its customers, keeping track of preferences, much the way Amazon does online. • Close relationships with suppliers result in lower costs • JCPenney • IT to enhance relationships with it’s supplier in Hong Kong Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  36. Competitive Advantage • Often results from achieving previous business objectives • Advantages over competitors: • Charging less for superior products, better performance, and better response to suppliers and customers • China’s train system: can you imagine going online to find out how many train tickets were left, and then buy them online?! Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  37. Survival • Businesses may need to invest in information systems out of necessity; simply the cost of doing business • Keeping up with competitors • Citibank’s introduction of ATMs (自动柜员机) • Regulations and reporting requirements • Sarbanes-Oxley Act (tighter controls on public companies) Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  38. MIS Key Terms • Information Technology (技术情报): The hardware and software a business uses to achieve objectives • Information System (信息系统): Interrelated components that manage information to: • Support decision making and control • Help with analysis, visualisation, and product creation • Data: Streams of raw facts • Information: Data shaped into meaningful, useful form Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  39. Data vs. Information Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  40. What is an IS? • Activities in an information system that produce information such as: • Input • Processing • Output • Feedback • In short, interrelated components that modify in some way and distribute information • IT’s not just computers!!! Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  41. Information System Functions Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  42. People in MIS • Information systems literacy • Includes behavioral and technical approach • Computer literacy • Focuses mostly on knowledge of IT • Management information systems (MIS) • Focuses on information systems literacy • Issues surrounding development, use, impact of information systems used by managers and employees Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  43. Business Perspectives on MIS • Three dimensions of information systems: • Organisations • People • Technology Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  44. Organisations • Organisations • Coordinate work through structured hierarchy and business processes • Business processes: Related tasks and behaviors for accomplishing work • E.g. Fulfilling an order • May be informal or include formal rules • Culture embedded in information systems • E.g. UPS’s concern with placing service to customer first Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  45. Management • Management • Information systems require skilled people to build, maintain, use them • Employee attitudes affect ability to use systems productively • Role of managers • Perceive business challenges • Set organizational strategy • Allocate human and financial resources • Creative work: New products, services Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  46. Technology • Technology • IT Infrastructure: Foundation or platform that information systems built on • Computer hardware • Computer software • Data management technology • Networking and telecommunications technology • Internet and Web, extranets, intranets • Voice, video communications Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  47. MIS as more than just computers Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  48. Assets to MIS • Organisation • Distributed decision making • Effective processes • Management • Understanding of the importance of change • Supportive culture • Social • IT Infrastructure • Standards • Education • Regulations Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  49. MIS approach • A ‘socio-technical’ approach • Combination of: • Computer science • Management Science • Sociology • Works holistically () to a goal of organisational improvement Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

  50. Organisational Flattening? • Removing unnecessary layers of management: • Giving more autonomy (power to make decisions) to low level staff • Cultural differences? China vs. UK/US Management Information Systems (BUS-141 MIS)

More Related