U01 Information Systems 2022 July 7
U01 Information Systems 2022 July 7
U01 Information Systems 2022 July 7
Information Systems
in Global Business Today
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Information Systems are Transforming
Business
1. IT Innovations
2. New Business Models
3. E-commerce Expanding
4. Management Changes
5. Firms and Organizations Change
Information Systems are Transforming Business
• IT Innovations
– Cloud computing, big data, Internet of Things
– Mobile digital platform
– AI and machine learning
– Use of social networks for business objectives
• New Business Models
– Online streaming and downloadable video
‣ Examples: Netflix, Apple TV Channels, Amazon
Information Systems are Transforming Business
• E-commerce Expansion
– E-commerce worldwide expands to nearly $3.6 trillion in 2019
– Growth in social commerce spurred by growth of mobile platform
– Mobile retail e-commerce growing more than 20 percent a year,
reaching almost $300 billion in 2020
• Management Changes
– Managers becoming more mobile, use social networks,
collaboration tools
– Business intelligence applications accelerate
Information Systems are Transforming Business
• Survival
– Many regulations of the business state to create a legal record for
company and employees
– Industry-level changes e.g. Citibank introduced ATM service
– Government regulations requiring record-keeping e.g. Toxic
Substances Control Act, Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Dimensions and Components
of Information Systems
Information Systems
Information technology: the hardware and software a business
uses to achieve objectives
Information System: “A set of interrelated components that collect
retrieve, process store, and distribute information to support decision
making and control in an organization” (Kenneth C. Laudon, Jane O.
Laudon, 2018)
Data: Stream of raw facts representing events occurring in
organizations or the physical environment before they have been
organized and arranged into a form that people can understand and
use
Information: Data that has been shaped into a form that is
meaningful and useful to the human being
Data and Information
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Difference Between IT and IS
Information Technology (IT)
1. Products
IT People
2. Methods
IS
3. Inventions
4. Standards
Procedure
‣ IT drives development of new IS.
‣ IT components = Hardware + Software + Data
‣ IS = IT + Procedures + People
Copyright © 2022, 2020, 2018 Pearson Education, Ltd. All Rights Reserved
Dimension of Information Systems
• Organization: IS involves issues such as the
organization’s hierarchy, functional specialties, business
processes, culture, and political interest groups.
– Senior, Middle, Operational Management
• Management: manage what exists and create new
product/services re-create the organization from time to
time
• Information Technology: Hardware, Software, data
management technology, Internet, World Wide
Web(WWW), Information Technology Infrastructure.
Business Perspective on IS (1 of 3)
• Information system is the instrument for creating value
• Investments in information technology will result in
superior returns
– Productivity increases
– Revenue increment
– Superior long-term strategic positioning
Business Perspective on IS (2 of 3)
• Business information value chain
– Raw data acquired and transformed through stages that add
value to that information
– Value of information system determined in part by extent to
which it leads to better decisions, greater efficiency, and
higher profits
– Three ways an Information Systems can add value to
business
I. Decision making
II. Help make business process more efficient
III. Increase profitability
Business Perspective on IS (3 of 3)
• Business perspective
– Calls attention to organizational and managerial nature of
• Investing in information technology does not guarantee good
returns
• There is considerable variation in the returns firms receive
from systems investments
• Factors
– Adopting the right business model
– Investing in complementary assets (organizational and
management capital)
Figure: Business Information Value Chain
In a sociotechnical perspective, the performance of a system is optimized when both the technology
and the organization mutually adjust to one another until a satisfactory fit is obtained.
Source: Kenneth C Laudon, Jane P. Laudon, 2020
Learning MIS: Develop Non-Routine Skills
Marketable Skills
• Rapid technological change and increased international
competition
– Requires skills and ability to adapt;
– Non-routine cognitive skills; e.g. able to apply creative
thinking and analytical skills in bridging theories to clarify
problem and provide solution to solve existing problem
– Four dimensions; Abstract Reason, System thinking,
Collaboration, Ability to experiment
Learning MIS: Develop Non-Routine Skills (Cont.)
Abstract Reason
• Ability to make and
manipulate models
• Learn to use and
construct abstract models