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Developing Business/IT Strategies Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Presentation on theme: "Developing Business/IT Strategies Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved."— Presentation transcript:

1 Developing Business/IT Strategies Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

2 11-2 Discuss the role of planning in the business use of information technology, using the scenario approach and planning for competitive advantage as examples Discuss the role of planning and business models in the development of business/IT strategies, architectures, and applications Identify several change management solutions for end user resistance to the implementation of new IT-based business strategies and applications Learning Objectives

3 11-3 Components of Organizational Planning

4 11-4 Strategic Visioning Questions

5 11-5 The Scenario Approach Gaining in popularity as a less formal, but more realistic, strategic planning methodology – Teams of managers and planners participate in microworld or virtual world exercises – Business scenarios are created and evaluated – Alternative scenarios are then created

6 11-6 Trends that Affect Strategic Planning

7 11-7 Planning for Competitive Advantage Strategic business/IT planning – Involves evaluating the potential benefits and risks of using IT-based strategies and technologies for competitive advantage The following models can help generate ideas for the strategic use of IT to support initiatives – Competitive forces – Competitive strategies – Value chain

8 11-8 Strategic Opportunities Matrix

9 11-9 SWOT Analysis SWOT stands for – Strengths: a company’s core competencies and resources – Weaknesses: areas of substandard business performance compared to others – Opportunities: potential for new business markets or innovative breakthroughs that might expand current markets – Threats: anything that has the potential for business and market losses

10 11-10 Business Models and Planning Business model answers vital questions about the fundamental components of a business – Who are our customers? – What do our customers value? – How much will it cost to deliver that value? – How do we make money in this business?

11 11-11 Questions for all Business Models Customer value Are we offering something distinctive or at a lower cost than our competitors? Scope To which customers is this value being offered? What range of products/services offered embody this value? Pricing How do we price the value?

12 11-12 Questions for all Business Models Revenue source Where do the dollars come from? Who pays for what value and when? What are the margins in each market, and what drives them? What drives value in each source? Connected activities What do we have to do to offer this value and when? How connected are these activities?

13 11-13 Planning Fundamentals IT created a seismic shift –Just knowing the importance and structure of e-business is not enough –Must be able to transform an old business design to a new e-business design

14 11-14 Scenario Approach Gaining popularity Less formal Virtual world (microworld) exercises Business scenarios are created and evaluated Alternative scenarios are then created

15 11-15 Balanced Scorecard Measures activities in terms of vision and strategies –Financial performance –Impact on customers –Performance of key business processes –Company’s learning curve and growth Four processes –Translate vision into operational goals –Communicate vision and link to performance –Business planning –Feedback/learning and strategy adjustment

16 11-16 Strategic Matrix Cost and Efficiency Improvements –Low internal and low external connectivity –Recommend – Use the Internet as a fast, low- cost way to communicate and interact with others Performance Improvement in Effectiveness –High internal but low external connectivity –Recommend – Increase use intranets and extranets

17 11-17 Strategic Strategies Global Market Penetration –High external but low internal connectivity –Capitalize with e-commerce websites using value-added information services and extensive online customer support Product and Service Transformation –High external and high internal connectivity –Develop and deploy new Internet-based products and services to create a new strategic position in the marketplace

18 11-18 E-Business Strategy Examples Market Creator Channel Reconfiguration Transaction Intermediary Infomediary: Self-Service Innovator Supply Chain Innovator Channel Mastery

19 11-19 Implementation Challenges Implementation –Do what you planned to do –Critical skill for managers Many companies are good at planning Few are good at executing the plan –Even if senior management consistently identifies e-business as an area of great opportunity and critical need

20 11-20 Implementing Information Technology Developments that have generated organizational change –Business process reengineering –ERP systems –Y2K compliance –Shared service centers –Just-in-time manufacturing –Sales force automation –Contract manufacturing –Introduction of Euro currency E-business is the latest catalyst

21 11-21 End User Resistance and Involvement Change generates resistance Examples: –Customer Relationship Management (CRM) –Knowledge Management Systems (KM) CRM failures –CRM failure rate up to 75 percent –Causes for failure Sales force automation problems Unaddressed cultural issues Sales staffs fearful and thus resistant

22 11-22 Keys to Solving End User Resistance Create relationships –Understand the end-user’s situation Provide education and training Require involvement and commitment –End-users –Top management –All stakeholders Eliminate frustration and inconvenience

23 11-23 Change Management Programs Develop a change action plan Assign managers as change sponsors Develop employee change teams Encourage open communications and feedback about organizational changes

24 11-24 Change Management Tactics Involve as many people as possible in e- business planning and application development Make constant change an expected part of the culture Tell everyone as much as possible about everything, as often as possible, in person Make liberal use of financial incentives and recognition Work within company culture, not around it

25 11-25 Business Models as Planning Tools A business model forces rigorously and systematic thinking about the value and viability of business initiatives – The strategic planning process is then used to develop unique business strategies that capitalize on a business model – The goal is to gain a competitive advantage in an industry or marketplace

26 11-26 The Business/IT Planning Process

27 11-27 The Business/IT Planning Process The business/IT planning process has three major components – Strategic development – Resource management – Technology architecture

28 11-28 Information Technology Architecture The IT architecture is a conceptual design that includes these major components – Technology platform – Data resources – Application architecture – IT organization

29 11-29 Balanced Scorecard The balanced scorecard measures a company’s activities in terms of vision and strategies The system has four processes – Translating vision into operational goals – Communicating the vision and linking it to individual performance – Business planning – Feedback/learning and strategy adjustment

30 11-30 Balanced Scorecard The business perspectives a scorecard measures – Financial: reflects financial performance, such as cash flow or ROI – Customer: measures having a direct impact on customers, such as time to process phone calls – Business process: reflects the performance of key business processes, such as time spent prospecting or process costs – Learning/growth: the company’s learning curve, such as how many hours are spent training staff

31 11-31 Identifying Business/IT Strategies The most valuable Internet applications allow companies to – Transcend communication barriers – Establish connections that enhance productivity – Stimulate innovative development – Improve customer relations

32 11-32 Strategic Positioning Matrix

33 11-33 Strategic Matrix Cost and Efficiency Improvements – Use the Internet as a fast, low-cost way to communicate and interact with others – Use of e-mail, chat systems, discussion groups, and company websites Performance Improvement in Effectiveness – Major improvements in business effectiveness recommended – Increase use of Internet-based technologies, such as intranets and extranets

34 11-34 Strategic Strategies Global Market Penetration – Capitalize on a high degree of customer and competitor connectivity and use of IT – Use e-commerce websites with value-added information services and extensive online customer support Product and Service Transformation – Develop and deploy new Internet-based products and services that strategically reposition it in the marketplace

35 11-35 E-Business Strategy Examples Market Creator: be among the first to market and remain ahead of the competition by continuously innovating Channel Reconfiguration: use the Internet as a new channel to directly access customers, make sales, and fulfill orders Transaction Intermediary: Use the Internet to process purchases

36 11-36 E-Business Strategy Examples Infomediary: use the Internet to reduce the search cost; offer a unified process for collecting the information needed to make a large purchase Self-Service Innovator: provide a comprehensive suite of services that the customer’s employees can use directly Supply Chain Innovator: use the Internet to streamline supply chain interactions Channel Mastery: use the Internet as a sales and service channel

37 11-37 Business Application Planning Process

38 11-38 Comparing Planning Approaches

39 11-39 E-Business Architecture Planning


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