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E. Wainright Martin Carol V. Brown Daniel W. DeHayes Jeffrey A. Hoffer William C. Perkins MANAGINGINFORMATIONTECHNOLOGY FIFTH EDITION CHAPTER 14 S ETTING.

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Presentation on theme: "E. Wainright Martin Carol V. Brown Daniel W. DeHayes Jeffrey A. Hoffer William C. Perkins MANAGINGINFORMATIONTECHNOLOGY FIFTH EDITION CHAPTER 14 S ETTING."— Presentation transcript:

1 E. Wainright Martin Carol V. Brown Daniel W. DeHayes Jeffrey A. Hoffer William C. Perkins MANAGINGINFORMATIONTECHNOLOGY FIFTH EDITION CHAPTER 14 S ETTING A D IRECTION FOR I NFORMATION R ESOURCES

2 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 2 W HY S ET A D IRECTION FOR I NFORMATION R ESOURCES? Page 559 To share information among diverse parts of the organization To communicate the future to others To provide a consistent rationale for making individual decisions Planning discussions help business managers and IS professionals in making decisions about how the “business” of IS will be conducted

3 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 3 T HE O UTPUTS OF THE D IRECTION- S ETTING P ROCESS Page 560 Information Resources Assessment Information resources assessment – includes inventorying and critically evaluating these resources in terms of how well they are meeting the organization’s business needs

4 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 4 O UTPUTS OF THE D IRECTION- S ETTING P ROCESS Page 560 Information Vision and Architecture Is an ideal view of the future Not the plan on how to get there Must be flexible enough to provide policy guidelines for individual decisions More than just fluff Must focus on the long term

5 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 5 O UTPUTS OF THE D IRECTION- S ETTING P ROCESS Page 560 Information Vision and Architecture Information vision – a written expression of the desired future about how information will be used and managed in the organization

6 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 6 O UTPUTS OF THE D IRECTION- S ETTING P ROCESS Page 560 Information Vision and Architecture Information vision – a written expression of the desired future about how information will be used and managed in the organization Information technology architecture – depicts the way an organization’s information resources will be deployed to deliver that vision

7 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 7 O UTPUTS OF THE D IRECTION- S ETTING P ROCESS Page 560 Information Resources Plans Strategic IS plan – contains a set of longer-term objectives that represent measurable movement toward the information vision and technology architecture and a set of associated major initiatives that must be undertaken to achieve these objectives

8 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 8 O UTPUTS OF THE D IRECTION- S ETTING P ROCESS Page 560 Information Resources Plans Strategic IS plan – contains a set of longer-term objectives that represent measurable movement toward the information vision and technology architecture and a set of associated major initiatives that must be undertaken to achieve these objectives Operational IS plan – is a precise set of shorter-term goals and associated projects that will be executed by the IS department and by business managers in support of the strategic IS plan

9 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 9 T HE P ROCESS OF S ETTING D IRECTION Assessment Vision Strategic Planning Operational Planning Page 561 Figure 14.1 The Information Resources Planning Process

10 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 10 T HE P ROCESS OF S ETTING D IRECTION Strategic Planning – the process of constructing a viable fit between the organization’s objectives and resources and its changing market and technological opportunities Page 561 Figure 14.1 The Information Resources Planning Process

11 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 11 T HE P ROCESS OF S ETTING D IRECTION Operational Planning – lays out the major actions the organization needs to carry out in the shorter term to activate its strategic initiatives Page 561 Figure 14.1 The Information Resources Planning Process

12 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 12 T HE P ROCESS OF S ETTING D IRECTION Page 562 Needs-based IS planning or project-oriented IS planning:   Bottom-up, immediate approach to information resources planning   Used when a specific, urgent business need called for a new system   Emphasis on project planning rather than overall organizational planning Traditional Planning in the IS Organization

13 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 13 A SSESSING C URRENT I NFORMATION R ESOURCES Page 563 Information resources assessment:   Must measure current levels of information resources use within the organization and compare it to a set of standards Standards can come from:   Past performance   Technical benchmarks   Industry norms   “Best of class” estimates from other companies Measuring IS Use and Attitudes

14 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 14 A SSESSING C URRENT I NFORMATION R ESOURCES Page 563 IS mission statement:   Should set forth the fundamental rationale (or reason to exist) for activities of the IS department   Can vary substantially from one organization to another Reviewing the IS Organizational Mission

15 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 15 Page 565 Reviewing the IS Organizational Mission Figure 14.3 IS-Prepared Mission Statement Example Example IS Mission Statement

16 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 16 A SSESSING C URRENT I NFORMATION R ESOURCES Page 565 Traditional goal:   Reduce cost by increasing operating efficiencies Scope of IS goals has expanded to include:   Systems to assist in decision making   Ways to help with competitive advantage Assessing Performance versus Goals

17 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 17 Page 565 Assessing Performance versus Goals Table 14.1 Objectives for the IS Department

18 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 18 Page 566 Information Vision: Represents how senior management wants information to be used and managed in the future Starts with speculation on how the business’s competitive environment will change and how the company should take advantage of it Business vision is specified and written Implications for information use are outlined C REATING AN I NFORMATION V ISION

19 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 19 Page 567 D ESIGNING THE A RCHITECTURE IT architecture – specifies how the technological and human assets and the IS organization should be deployed in the future to meet the information vision

20 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 20 Page 568 D ESIGNING THE A RCHITECTURE Components of Architecture Figure 14.5 Elements of an Information Technology Architecture

21 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 21 Page 569-570 T HE S TRATEGIC IS P LAN Strategic IS Plan – statement of the major objectives and initiatives that the IS organization and business managers must accomplish over some time period in order to: move toward the information vision fit the business strategic plan

22 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 22 Page 570 T HE S TRATEGIC IS P LAN The Strategic IS Planning Process The planning process includes: Setting objectives Conducting internal and external analyses Establishing strategic initiatives

23 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 23 Page 572-573 Critical success factors Analysis of Competitive Forces Value Chain Analysis T HE S TRATEGIC IS P LAN Tools for Identifying IT Strategic Opportunities

24 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 24 Page 575 Value Chain Analysis Figure 14.11 Strategic Information Systems Opportunities in the Value Chain

25 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 25 Page 576 After the strategic plan, initiatives must be:   Identified   Translated into a set of defined IS projects with: Precise expected results Due dates Priorities Responsibilities T HE O PERATIONAL IS P LAN

26 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 26 Page 576 Developed for a 3-to-5 year time period Focuses on project definition, selection, and prioritization T HE O PERATIONAL IS P LAN The Long-Term Operational IS Plan

27 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 27 Page 576 T HE O PERATIONAL IS P LAN The Long-Term Operational IS Plan Table 14.2 IS Long-Range Operational Plan Project Portfolio

28 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 28 Page 576 T HE O PERATIONAL IS P LAN Table 14.3 Sample 2004 Operational IS Plan

29 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 29 Page 577 T HE O PERATIONAL IS P LAN The Short-Term Operational IS Plan Developed for a 1-year time period Focuses on specific tasks to be completed on projects that are currently underway or ready to be started

30 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 30 Page 577-578 1. 1.Early clarification of the purpose of the planning process 2. 2.Planning effort should be iterative 3. 3.Plan should reflect realistic expectations 4. 4.Process of setting expectations should involve business management 5. 5.Plans should integrate all applications of IT 6. 6.Plan will take into consideration the barriers and constraints facing all organizations G UIDELINES FOR E FFECTIVE P LANNING

31 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 31 Page 578-579 Better IS resource allocation Communicating with top management Helping vendors Creating a context for decisions Achieving integration and decentralization Evaluating options Meeting expectations of management B ENEFITS OF I NFORMATION R ESOURCES P LANNING

32 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 32 Page 579 Active participation Accept most of responsibility for identifying specific projects that contribute to vision Stay involved in planning and system development activities Regularly provide feedback and necessary input R OLES IN THE I NFORMATION R ESOURCES P LANNING P ROCESS Role of the Business Manager

33 © 2005 Pearson Prentice-Hall Chapter 14 - 33 Page 579-580 R OLES IN THE I NFORMATION R ESOURCES P LANNING P ROCESS Role of the IS Professional Act more in consulting and planning role Help business managers understand how their ideas for competitive advantage can get built into a new information system Create a project plan Combine technical and organizational skills


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