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CHAPTER 13

CHAPTER 13. Acquiring Information Systems and Applications. Planning for and Justifying IT Applications. Organizations must analyze the need for the IT application. Each IT application must be justified in terms of costs and benefits.

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CHAPTER 13

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  1. CHAPTER 13 Acquiring Information Systems and Applications

  2. Planning for and Justifying IT Applications • Organizations must analyze the need for the IT application. • Each IT application must be justified in terms of costs and benefits. • An application portfolio is a prioritized list of both existing and potential IT applications of a company.

  3. Information Systems Planning Process

  4. Information Systems Planning (continued) • Organizationalstrategicplan • ITarchitecture • Both are inputs in developing the ITstrategicplan. • IT steering committee

  5. IT Operational Plan Contains the following elements: • Mission • IT environment • Objectives of the IT function • Constraints of the IT function • Application portfolio • Resource allocation and project management

  6. Evaluating & Justifying IT Investment: Benefits, Costs & Issues • Assessing the costs • Fixed costs • Total cost of ownership (TCO) • Assessing the benefits (Values) • Intangiblebenefits: Benefits from IT that may be very desirable but difficult to place an accurate monetary value on. • Comparing the two (cost-benefit analysis)

  7. Conducting the Cost-Benefit Analysis • Using Net Present Value (NPV) • Return on investment • Breakeven analysis • The business case approach

  8. Strategies for Acquiring IT Applications • Buy the applications (off-the-shelf approach) • Lease the applications • Application Service Provider (ASP) • Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) • Use Open-Source Software • Developing via outsourcing • Developing the applications in-house

  9. Operation of an Application Service Provider (ASP) Customer A Customer B Customer C Application Application Application Database Database Database ASP Data Center

  10. Operation of a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) Vendor Customer A Customer B Customer C Application Customer A Customer B Customer C SaaS Vendor Data Center

  11. Traditional Systems Development Life Cycle • Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC) is the traditional systems development method that organizations use for large-scale IT projects.

  12. Six-Stage Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) with Supporting Tools Business Need Systems Investigation Deliverable: Go/No Go Decision Systems Analysis Deliverable: User Requirement Systems Design Deliverable: Technical Specification Programming and Testing Deliverable: Error-free System Implement System Deliverable: Use of the System Operation & Maintenance Deliverable: Continued System Use

  13. Traditional SDLC Processes • Systems investigation • Systems analysis • Systems design • Programming and testing • Implementation • Operation and maintenance

  14. The SDLC • Major advantages • Control • Accountability • Error detection • Major drawbacks • Relatively inflexible • Time-consuming and expensive • Discourages changes once user requirements are done

  15. SDLC – Systems Investigation • Begins with the business problem (or opportunity) • Main action: feasibility analysis/study • Deliverable: Go/No-Go Decision • OPTION 1: Do nothing and continue to use the existing system unchanged. • OPTION 2: Modify or enhance the existing system. • OPTION 3: Develop a new system.

  16. Feasibility Study • Technical feasibility • Economic feasibility • Behavioral feasibility

  17. SDLC – System Analysis • Examination of the business problem found during System Investigation. • Main action: gather information about the existing system or methods and to determine requirements for a new or improved system. • Deliverable: a set of system requirements, also called user requirements.

  18. SDLC – Systems Design • Describes how the system will accomplish this task. • Deliverable: technical design that specifies: • System outputs, inputs, user interfaces. • Hardware, software, databases, telecommunications, personnel & procedures. • Blueprint of how these components are integrated. • Danger: scope creep (adding functions after the project has been initiated)

  19. SDLC – Programming & Testing • Programming involves the translation of a system’s design specification into computer code. • Testing checks to see if the computer code will produce the expected and desired results under certain conditions. • Testing is designed to delete errors (bugs) in the computer code. • Deliverable: an error-free System that solves the business problem at hand.

  20. SDLC – Systems Implementation • Implementation or deployment is the process of converting from the old system to the new system. • Involves three major conversion strategies: • Direct Conversion • Pilot Conversion • Phased Conversion • Parallel Conversion • Deliverable:organization-wide use of the new System

  21. SLDC – Operation & Maintenance • Audits are performed to assess the system’s capabilities and to determine if it is being used correctly. • Systems need several types of maintenance. • Debugging • Updating • Maintenance • Deliverable:continued use of the new System.

  22. Alternative Methods & Tools for Systems Development • Prototyping • Rapid application development (RAD) • End-user development • Component-based development • Object-oriented development

  23. Vendor & Software Selection • Step 1: Identify potential vendors. • Step 2: Determine the evaluation criteria. • Request for proposal (RFP) • Step 3: Evaluate vendors and packages. • Step 4: Choose the vendor and package • Step 5: Negotiate a contract. • Step 6: Establish a Service Level Agreement (SLA).

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