More Related Content Similar to NBS8053 Introduction 2012 Similar to NBS8053 Introduction 2012 (20) More from Lee Schlenker (20) NBS8053 Introduction 20121. Introduction
Managing Information
Systems
Lee SCHLENKER – EMLYON
Newcastle Business School
April 17th, 2012
2. What is an information system?
Employees Stockholders
A set of resources designed to
foster organizational learning
Clients Business Partners
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010 EMLYON
3. Dr. Lee Harris SCHLENKER
puts enterprise IT to work in supporting your customers’
success stories
• Focuses today on use scenarios of how innovative forms of IT
can help management engage business differently
• Has directed missions for firms including Apple, Ernst & Young,
IBM, Microsoft, Oracle and SAP in the manufacturing,
telecommunications, public works and service industries
• Author of three books, several dozen articles, has facilitated fifty
corporate workshops and conferences throughout Europe
• Chair of Emerging Economies and Technologies at EMLYON
• Managing Director of LHST sarl
http://leeschlenker.com
www.lhstech.com • Visiting Professor at the University of Newcastle
www.emlyon.com
LHST : The Value Architects™
4. What role does IT play in innovation?
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010 EMLYON
6. Understand the basics
• Study the fundamentals of an
Information System
• Analyze the constraints and possibilites
of « structured » information
• Explore how the potential links between
an IS and organizational learning
• Analyze the potential value of 2.0
technologies
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010 EMLYON
7. Why is studying IS important?
• Understanding the implications
between « structured » and
« unstructured data »
• Analyzing the difference between the
data and reality
• Understanding how the data fits
together
• Exploring the difference between data
and action
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010 EMLYON
8. Evaluation
• Based on a case study
• Focus points indentifying :
– the value proposition,
– IT/Business alignment,
– use of IT concepts/methodologies
10. IT Doesn’t Matter
• Nicolas Carr compares IT to previous tech revolutions such as
railroads and electricity. In what ways is IT different?
• What proof can you offer that information technology in
business no longer provides competitive advantage?
• Does the pervasiveness of IT mean there will be less innovation
now?
• Hasn't competitive advantage come from unique use of the
technology, not just from the technology itself? What examples
can you give?
• Do recent advances in Cloud Computing and Mobile
Applications confirm or contradict Nicolas Carr's claims?
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
11. Technology and Innovation
• Conflict and opportunity – is
there a business problem to
solve?
• Suitability – is it
adjacently possible?
• The Roadmap– how does
technology provide a vision of
Where Good Ideas Come From, by Steven Johnson
« better »
• The Happy End – how do we
best measure the results
12. Commoditisation
• Over the last 70 years we have
repeatly seen proof of innovation in
IT : the spreadsheet, the ERP
system, Social Network
Applications
• In the early days, companies
created their own legacy systems
to put these ideas into practice
• As the technologies matured,
companies editors standardized
these applications in the form of
Simon Wardley, "Cloud Computing - Why IT Matters"
products.
• Inevitably these products become
simple commodities
14. Data, Knowledge and Action
The ladder of initiatives™
Results
Drive Measures
Actions
Require Decisions
Knowledge
Define Interprets
Context
Obtain Process
Data
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010
©2012 EMLYON
15. The defintion of information
• From an objective point of view,
information refers to date in context that
conveys meaning to an individual.
• From a subjective point of view, we
could suggest that it’s the individual’s
perspective of the data that implies
meaning.
• Given these definitions what meaning
do Wikileaks, Twitter, or Facebook
have?
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
16. Structured data
• Structured data refers to data that
cabn be easily represented in
textual/numeric form and stored in a
database.
• Structured data is often logically
organized around a data model or
data object.
• Such models permit companies to
compare and aggregate data in
databases, datamarts and data
warehouses.
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
17. Non-structured data
• Data is considered « non-structured » if we
can’t predefine its attributes and store it in
a table or data base
• Examples of this kind of data include press
clippings, videoclips, and songs
• In reality, this data isn’t « non-structured »
- its just that its attributes involve
« complex » relationships
http://jean.marie.gouarne.online.fr/bi.html
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
18. What meaning do we attach to the
data?
Frame
Cloud
Figure (s)
Oracle
Antonello da Messina
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010
©2012 EMLYON
20. Defining an Information System
A business information system is an organized set of
resources (platforms, applications, procedures, data and
people) that capture the meaning of work
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
21. The objectives of an IS
Actionnaires
Actifs
Demandes en temps réel
...
Employées Société
Compétition
Mobilité
“made in” “made by”
Valorisation des tâches
...
...
L’organisation
Clients Partenaires
Fidélité ? Peu de barrières d’entrée
Vrai coûts Acquisitions, OPA
... ...
To help us understand the motivations, experience and objectives of the
internal and external clients of the organization
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
23. Are information systems mirrors of the
organizational chart ?
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
25. Are information systems mirrors of
organizational skills and competencies?
Technicity
Method Reflection
Action Imagination
Cooperation
John Holland
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010 EMLYON
26. Information Systems are a question of
perspective
• The financial perspective
(entreprise resource planning)
• The logistics perspective
(supply chain management)
• The client perspective(client
relationship management)
• The community
perspective(social media)
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
27. Different sides of the coin
ERP SCM CRM
History MRP Total Quality Client contact
Management systems
Measure Quantitative Quantitative Qualitative
Static Dynamic
Perimeters Inside a firm Between firms Between firms
and clients
ROI 5 to 7 years 1 to 3 years 6 months to 1
year
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2010 EMLYON
29. The Internet
500 million users
more than 3 billion pages
WWW
URL HTML, HTTP
Internet: "The Big Picture"
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
30. Programming the Web
I. Static web pages (HTML)
II. Web enabled applications
(Dynamic Web Pages,
ASP, JSP, PHP, ...)
III. Web services
Towards the semantic Web
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
31. The Web as a set of information flows
• The Internet is only one
component of the Web
• Web sites and portals are
only isolated endpoints of
information flows
• We capture the information
flows on Twitter, Deezer,
Facebook and Netvibes
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
32. Digital footprints and clickstreams
• Before the Web we assumed that our
digital footprint was as ephemeral as a
phone
• Clickstreams can provide a level of
intelligence about how people use the
Web
• Innovative companies have figured out
how to deliver great Web-based services
by divining clickstream patterns
• We have yet to aggregate the critical mass
of clickstreams in a database of intentions
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
Prof. Lee SCHLENKER
©2012 EMLYON
33. How does IT improve Productivity?
Focus Improve Knowledge Leverage Measure
Organization Processes Explicit Transactions Efficiency
Services Delivery Implicit Interactions Effectiveness
Networks Relationships Emerging Interactions Innovation
Search Relevancy Connected Proximity CTR
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
35. How would you build a workspace?
• Cecile Balmond – Informal
• (Work) spaces aren’t bound by
technology but by vision
• Rules aren’t boundaries, just
considerations
• Vision, actors, events,
outcomes, gateways
©2012 EMLYON
36. A Mashup
Main features Dashboards
What is a Dashboard? Private & Public
Registration Dashboards
Simple Registration App View
Facebook Connect Reader View
Profile Settings
Sign In Themes
Edit your account info Keyboard Shortcuts
Change profile image Sharing
Email settings Mobile Versions Specifics
Change password Sign-in
Manage Dashboards iPhone, Android
Netvibes is a mash-up that allows you to Backup Feeds version
construct a personalised page filled with Third Party Services Wap version
near real time content on the subject of
your choice
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
37. Add in information flows
• Five groups : Vision, actors,
events, outcomes, gateways
• Five pages : Group page,
conflict, skills and aptitudes,
roadmap, metrics
• Each page : HTML page,
Twitter, Documents, News,
Videos, Link to Public page
• Communicate the URL of the
public page to
research@lhstech.com
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
38. Become a value architect™
Mobile and tablet version
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON
40. Collaborative Platform
• Administrative details
• Recommended readings
• Course support
• Current events
• Discussion forum/help desk
http://www.valuearchitect.org/
Objectives Problem IS Information Internet
©2012 EMLYON