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Management Information System

4. Management Information System. Enterprise e-Business Systems. Judi Prajetno Sugiono jpsugiono@gmail.com (2008). Learning Objectives.

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Management Information System

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  1. 4 Management Information System Enterprise e-Business Systems Judi Prajetno Sugiono jpsugiono@gmail.com (2008)

  2. Learning Objectives • Identify and give examples to illustrate the following aspects of customer relationship management, enterprise resource management, and supply chain management systems: • Business processes supported • Customer and business value provided • Potential challenges and trends

  3. Example:Architecture of an online travel agency

  4. Enterprise Application Architecture

  5. Section I Customer Relationship Management: The Business Focus

  6. Customer Relationship Management • Provides customer-facing employees with a single, complete view of every customer at every touch point and across all channels • Provides the customer with a single, complete view of the company and its extended channels

  7. Customer Relationship Management (continued) • CRM.. • Integrates and automates many of the customer serving processes • Creates an IT framework of Web-enabled software & databases that integrates these processes with the rest of the company’s business operations

  8. Customer Relationship Management (continued) • Includes software modules that provide tools that enable a business & its employees to provide fast, convenient, dependable, consistent service.

  9. Major Application Components

  10. Major Application Components (continued) • Contact & Account Management • Helps capture and track relevant data about past and planned contacts with prospects & customers.

  11. Major Application Components (continued) • Sales • Provides sales reps with software tools & company data needed to support & manage their sales activities. • Helps optimize cross-selling & up-selling

  12. Major Application Components (continued) • Marketing & Fulfillment • Helps accomplish direct marketing campaigns by automating tasks • Helps capture & manage prospect & customer response data • Helps in fulfillment by quickly scheduling sales contacts & providing appropriate information on products & services to them

  13. Major Application Components (continued) • Customer Service and Support • Provides software tools & real-time access to the common customer database • Helps create, assign, & manage requests for service from customers • Call center software • Help desk software

  14. Major Application Components (continued) • Retention and Loyalty Programs • Helps the company identify, reward, and market to their most loyal and profitable customers

  15. Three Phases of CRM

  16. Three Phases of CRM (continued) • Acquire (new customers) • By doing a superior job of contact management, sales prospecting, selling, direct marketing, & fulfillment.

  17. Three Phases of CRM (continued) • Enhance (customer satisfaction) • By supporting superior service from a responsive networked team of sales and service specialists.

  18. Three Phases of CRM (continued) • Retain (your customers) • Help identify and reward your most loyal, profitable customers.

  19. Benefits and Challenges of CRM • Allows a business to identify its best customers • Makes possible real-time customization & personalization of products & services based on customer wants, needs, buying habits, & life cycles • Enables a company to provide a consistent customer service experience

  20. CRM Failures • Due to lack of understanding & preparation. • CRM is not a silver bullet

  21. Operational CRM Analytical CRM Customer touch points Customer feedback Call Center Analysis Process improve-ment information Fax Refined business actions Integrated database Call center Web Access Sales business systems Business Intelligence e-mail AP/AR customers Usage Provisioning Billing Direct sales CRM Architecture

  22. Example: Propensity-to-buy Segment – a cable television company

  23. Trends in CRM

  24. Major CRM Vendors

  25. Section II Enterprise Resource Planning: The Business Backbone

  26. Enterprise Application Architecture

  27. Enterprise Resource Planning • Serves as a cross-functional enterprise backbone that integrates & automates many internal business processes and information systems • Helps companies gain the efficiency, agility, & responsiveness needed to succeed today • Gives a company an integrated real-time view of its core business processes

  28. Major Application component of ERP

  29. Example of Business Process flow

  30. The Business Process supported by ERP at Colgate Palmolive co.

  31. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Benefits and Challenges • Quality and efficiency • Helps improve the quality and efficiency of customer service, production, & distribution by creating a framework for integrating and improving internal business processes

  32. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Decreased Costs • Reductions in transaction processing costs and hardware, software, and IT support staff

  33. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Decision support • Provides cross-functional information on business performance to assist managers in making better decisions

  34. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Enterprise agility • Results in more flexible organizational structures, managerial responsibilities, and work roles

  35. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Costs of ERP • The costs and risks of failure in implementing a new ERP system are substantial.

  36. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued)

  37. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Causes of ERP failures • Underestimating the complexity of the planning, development, and training required • Failure to involve affected employees in the planning & development phases and change management programs

  38. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Trying to do too much, too fast • Insufficient training • Believing everything the software vendors and/or consultants say

  39. Enterprise Resource Planning (continued) • Trends • Flexible ERP • Web-enabled ERP • Interenterprise ERP • E-Business Suites

  40. Section III Supply Chain Management: The Business Network

  41. Enterprise Application Architecture

  42. Supply Chain Management • A cross-functional interenterprise system that uses IT to help support & manage the links between some of a company’s key business processes and those of its suppliers, customers, & business partners. • Goal is to create a fast, efficient, & low-cost network of business relationships.

  43. Supply Chain Management (continued)

  44. Supply Chain Management (continued) • Electronic data interchange • Exchanging business transaction documents over the Internet & other networks between supply chain trading partners

  45. Supply Chain Management (continued) • The Role of SCM

  46. Supply Chain Management (continued) • Benefits and Challenges • Can provide faster, more accurate order processing, reductions in inventory levels, quicker time to market, lower transaction and materials costs, & strategic relationships with suppliers

  47. Supply Chain Management (continued) • Problem causes • Lack of proper demand planning knowledge, tools, and guidelines • Inaccurate or overoptimistic demand forecasts • Inaccurate production, inventory, and other business data • Lack of adequate collaboration

  48. Supply Chain Management (continued) • Trends

  49. Discussion Questions • Should a company become a customer-focused business? • Why would systems that enhance a company’s relationships with customers have such a high rate of failure?

  50. Discussion Questions (continued) • How could some of the spectacular failures of ERP systems have been avoided? • Should companies continue to use EDI systems?

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