Lecture Notes - Introduction To Information Systems (PDF) - Course Sidekick
Lecture Notes - Introduction To Information Systems (PDF) - Course Sidekick
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Week 1
What is IS?
● Get right information to the right people, at the right time
➔ Relevant information
● Translates raw data to useful information → process =collect, process,
store, analyse,disseminate
● Information technology is the hardware and software whereas information systems
implement the technology.
● information technology does not include the people and procedures behind the
functioning of the systems
● IT is the Hardware and Software, however the Information systems is basically IT but
including the human side of Procedures and People
● Understanding how the hardware software and users interact makes designing easy
to use software more simple
Software Disruptions
● Replacement of services e.g. Netflix, Opal
● Online transformation
● Machine learning → user customization = better value
● Online shopping, i.e. Afterpay
Software as a service
● Delivering software through a cloud/internet based system
● Instead of installing software, it is stored virtually → virtually sustainable
● Free from complexity
● Cloud computing
● Google, Dropbox
Results
● An increasing number of major businesses and industriesare being run on
software and delivered as online services
● These services includes from motion pictures to agriculture to national
defence.
Psychology of Colours
● Entices audiences → user specification
● Aesthetics
● Influence
Week 2
Data/Information/Knowledge
● Data
Raw fact, unorganised fact that needs to be processed and organised to convey any
specific meaning
● Information
Data that is processed by summing, ordering, averaging, grouping so that they have
meaning and value the recipient
● Knowledge
Data and/or information that have been organised and processed to convey
experience, understanding, accumulating learning and expertise
Components of IS
IT Inside Organisation
Major Capabilities of IS
● Perform high-speed, high-volume computations
● Provide fast, accurate communication and collaboration within and among
organisations
● Store huge amounts of information in an easy-to-access, yet small space
● Allow quick and inexpensive access to vast amounts of information, worldwide
● Interpret vast amounts of data quickly and efficiently
● Automate both semiautomatic business processes and manual tasks
Week 3
Why do companies have Information Systems?
● TPS supports the monitoring, collection, storage, and processing of data from the
organisation's basic business transactions, each of which generates data
● TPS collects data continuously, typically in real time and it provides the input data for
the corporate databases
Side note : the flow of key places of information from one TPS to another for a typical
manufacturing organisation. TPSs can be designed so that the flow of information from one
system to another is automatic and requires no manual intervention or reentering of data.
Such a set of systems is called an integrated information system. Many organisations have
limited or no integration among their TPSs. In this case, data input to one TPS must be
printed out and manually reentered into other systems. Of course, this increases the amount
of effort required and introduces the likelihood of processing delays and errors.
Reports
● All information systems produce three main reports:
1. Routine Reports: are produced at scheduled intervals. They range from
hourly quality control reports to daily reports on absenteeism rates.
2. Ad-hoc (on-demand) reports:
- Drill-down reports
- Key-Indicator reports
- Comparative reports
3. Exception reports include only information that falls outside certain threshold
standards: performance standards
Drill-Down Reports
Key-Indicator Reports
● Key-indicator reports summarise the performance of critical activities. E.g. a chief
financial officer might want to monitor cash flow and cash on hand
Exception Reports
Expert Reports
Components
- Knowledge base
- Inference engine
- UI
Knowledge Representation
Benefits Limitations
Week 4
Competitive Advantage
- Essential to organisation survival and success
- Competitive advantage can be gained by managing business processes → more
profitable compared to competitors
- Cost, quality, speed → not easily imitable by competitors = control and lead in market
and larger profits
Business Process
● Ongoing collection of related activities that create a product or a service of value to
the organisation, business partners or customers.
○ Process is comprised of three fundamental elements:
- Inputs : Materials, service, information that flow and are transformed as
a result of process activities
- Resources : people and equipment that perform process activities
- Outputs : product or service created
Technology Pressures
Technological Innovation & Obsolescence Information Overload
Societal/Legal/Political Pressures
● IS enable organisations to respond to societal/legal/political pressures
● IS support and facilitate
○ Social responsibility
○ Compliance with Govt. regulations
○ Protection against terrorist attacks
Business IT Alignment
● Organisations should provide Business-IT Alignment. Tight integration of the IT
functions with the strategy, missions and goals of the organisation.
● Characteristics of good business-IT alignment:
○ Organisations view IT as an engine of innovation
○ Organisations rotate business and IT professionals across departments
○ Organisations provide overarching goals that are completely clear to each IT
and business employee
Substitute products/services There are many substitutes There are few substitutes
Week 5
Why System Acquisition and Development
● Where does an organisation start when looking to acquire or develop supporting IS?
● How can you work with IS personnel to get the information systems you need to
succeed on the job or in your own business?
System Development
● Set of activities involved in building IS to meet users' needs
● Projects can range from small to large (e.g. nuclear science research to video game
development)
IS planning process
● Analyse the organisations strategic plan
○ Identify the firm's mission, goals,
and steps required to reach these goals
● Develop the IS strategic plan
○ Develop a set of goals that describe IT
infrastructure, and resources needed to
reach the organisation goals
● Develop IS operational plan
○ Develop a set of IS projects that will be
executed to support the IS strategic plan
IT steering committee
● Comprised of a group of managers and staff who represent the various
organisational units
FURPS+ Requirements
● Functional requirements
● Usability requirements
● Reliability requirements
● Performance requirements
● Security requirements
● Even more categories
SDLC: Implementation
● The process of converting a old computer system to a new one
● Major conversion strategies
○ Direct
○ Pilot
○ Phased
○ Parallel
Week 6
Data and Knowledge Management
● Stay competitive
● An effective Info System need to provide information to stay relevant and organised
○ Accurate info is free of error
○ Information is timely
○ Relevant information - useful and appropriate for types of work and decisions
that require it
Retailing Example
What is a Database?
● A collection of data stored electronically
Hierarchy of Data
Data Cube
● Data are organised by subject - customer, vendor, product, price
● Differs from transactional systems
Big Data
● Large and complex data collections
● Old software, hardware and analysis processes are unable to deal with them
● Four characteristics of Big Data
○ Volume - relates to huge amounts of data generated by IT systems
○ Velocity - speed of transmission around the globe
○ Variety - many types of data generated (financial, social media feed etc)
○ Veracity - messiness of data (speech patterns, tweets with hashtags, typos)
Knowledge Management
The Role of IT in KM
● Knowledge creation, capture, refine, storage manage and disseminate knowledge
● Both explicit and tacit knowledge
Week 7
Managers and Decision Making
All managers perform three basic roles:
● Interpersonal roles: figurehead, leader, liaison
● Informational roles: monitor, disseminator, spokesperson, analyser
● Decisional roles: entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator
● Intelligence phase: managers examine a situation and identify and define the
problem or opportunity
● Design phase: decision makers construct a model for the situation. They do this by
making assumptions that simplify reality and by expressing the relationships among
all the relevant variables. Managers then validate the model by using test data.
● Choice phase involves selecting a solution or course of action that seems best
suited to resolve the problem.
Problem Structure
● Structured : deal with routine and repetitive problems
for which standard solutions exist.
Nature of Decisions
Strategic planning: the long-range goals and policies for
growth and resource allocation.
Business Intelligence
● Data Warehouses & Data Marts BI encompasses not only applications, but also
technologies and processes.
● It includes both "getting data in" (to a data mart or warehouse) and "getting data out"
(through BI applications).
BI Targets
BI Applications
1. Multidimensional Analysis or Online Analytical Processing (OLAP)
○ OLAP involves "slicing and dicing" data stored in a dimensional format,
drilling down in the data to greater detail, and aggregating the data.
2. Data Mining
○ Data mining refers to the process of searching for valuable business
information in a large database, data warehouse, or data mart.
○ Data mining can perform two basic operations:
i. Predicting trends and behaviors,
Sensitivity Analysis
● Decision variables: "What is our reorder point for these raw materials?
● Environmental variables: (external to the organisation): "What will the rate of
inflation be?"
What-If Analysis
● A model builder must make predictions and assumptions regarding the input data,
many of which are based on the assessment of uncertain futures.
● The results depend on the accuracy of these assumptions, which can be
highly subjective.
● Attempts to predict the impact of a change in the assumptions (input data) on the
proposed solution.
Goal-Seeking Analysis
● Goal-Seeking Analysis represents a "backward" solution approach.
● It attempts to calculate the value of the inputs necessary to achieve a desired level of
output.
Week 8
Management
Marketing
Mathematics
Sociology
Statistics
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