History of IS within Organizations
Problems of Functional Systems
Electronic Business * E-Commerce (Chapter 8) the buying and selling , marketing and servicing, delivery and payment of products, services, and information over the Internet, intranets, extranets, and other networks between customers, suppliers, and other business partners. E-Business – includes E-commerce plus the on-line exchange of information. Collaboration and communication Web-enabled business processes
Enterprise Application Architecture *
System Software Vendors Customers Enterprise Resources Products $ $ SCM Baan i2Tech Manugistics Oracle SAP ERP Baan Oracle SAP CRM Kana Siebel SAP Oracle Clarify Pivotal
Enterprise Architecture (1) Facilitate change management by linking strategic requirements to systems that support them and by linking the business architecture to application architecture. Enable strategic information to be consistently and accurately derived from operational data startsmarts and zero delta...
Enterprise Architecture (2) Promote data sharing in hopes of reducing data redundancy and maintenance costs Improve productivity through component and service development, management and reuse Reduce software development cycle time by providing tools, models, catalogs of services, etc
Enterprise Architecture (3) Rigorous and standardized way to evaluate commercial products and services Construct the extended enterprise where customers and business partners interact electronically. Unify regulatory and legal compliance efforts Gain discipline around common IT security practices
THE CONNECTED CORPORATION General audience and purpose of SCM, CRM and ERP
THE CONNECTED CORPORATION Data points where SCM, CRM, and ERP integrate
THE CONNECTED CORPORATION At the heart of all ERP systems is a database, when a user enters or updates information in one module, it is immediately and automatically updated throughout the entire system
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT’S EXPLOSIVE GROWTH Forecasts for CRM Spending (in billions)
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT’S EXPLOSIVE GROWTH CRM Business Drivers
Customer Relationship Management Systems (CRM) CRM uses technology to create a cross-functional enterprise system. Integrates and automates many of the processes in sales, marketing and customer service that interact with customers. Operational CRM – supports traditional transactional processing for day-to-day front-office operations or systems that deal directly with the customers Analytical CRM – supports back-office operations and strategic analysis and includes all systems that do not deal directly with the customers
Analytical CRM
Operational CRM supports customer life cycle
USING IT TO DRIVE ANALYTICAL CRM Personalization – when a Web site knows enough about a persons likes and dislikes that it can fashion offers that are more likely to appeal to that person Analytical CRM relies heavily on data warehousing technologies and business intelligence to glean insights into customer behavior These systems quickly aggregate, analyze, and disseminate customer information throughout an organization
ERP application components Enterprise resource planning – integrates all departments and functions throughout an organization into a single IT system (or integrated set of IT systems) so that employees can make decisions by viewing information on all business operations
Costs of implementing a new ERP *
BASICS OF SUPPLY CHAIN Organizations must embrace technologies that can effectively manage supply chains
Electronic Data Interchange * EDI - The automatic electronic exchange of standard business documents between computers of different organizations.
Marketing Information Systems Interactive marketing Interactive marketing:
HRM Systems
Accounting Information Systems *
Financial Management System Examples