Chapter 1 - 18 - 11 - 16
Chapter 1 - 18 - 11 - 16
Chapter 1 - 18 - 11 - 16
Learning Objectives
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
1. Distinguish data from information, discuss the characteristics of useful
information, and explain how to determine the value of information.
2. Explain the decisions an organization makes, the information needed to make
them, and the major business processes present in most companies.
3. Explain how an AIS adds value to an organization, how it affects and is affected
by corporate strategy, and its role in a value chain.
1.1. Introduction
We begin this chapter by explaining important terms and discussing the kinds of
information that organizations need and the business processes used to produce that
information. We continue with an exploration of what an accounting information
system (AIS) is, how an AIS adds value to an organization, how an AIS and
corporate strategy affect each other, and the role of the AIS in the value chain.
Some main concepts:
- A system is a set of two or more interrelated components that interact to achieve
a goal. Most systems are composed of smaller subsystems that support the larger
system. For example, a college of business is a system composed of various
departments, each of which is a subsystem. Moreover, the college itself is a
subsystem of the university. Each subsystem is designed to achieve one or more
organizational goals. Changes in subsystems cannot be made without considering
the effect on other subsystems and on the system as a whole.
- Goal conflict occurs when a subsystem’s goals are inconsistent with the goals of
another subsystem or with the system as a whole.
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- Goal congruence occurs when a subsystem achieves its goals while contributing
to the organization’s overall goal. The larger the organization and the more
complicated the system, the more difficult it is to achieve goal congruence.
- Data are facts that are collected, recorded, stored, and processed by an
information system. Businesses need to collect several kinds of data, such as the
activities that take place, the resources affected by the activities, and the people
who participate in the activity. For example, the business needs to collect data
about a sale (date, total amount), the resource sold (good or service, quantity sold,
unit price), and the people who participated (customer, salesperson).
- Information is data that have been organized and processed to provide meaning
and improve the decision-making process. As a rule, users make better decisions
as the quantity and quality of information increase.
However, there are limits to the amount of information the human mind can
absorb and process. Information overload occurs when those limits are passed,
resulting in a decline in decision-making quality and an increase in the cost of
providing that information. Information system designers use information
technology (IT) to help decision makers more effectively filter and condense
information. For example, Walmart has over 500 terabytes (trillions of bytes) of data
in its data warehouse. That is equivalent to 2,000 miles of bookshelves, or about 100
million digital photos. Walmart has invested heavily in IT so it can effectively
collect, store, analyze, and manage data to provide useful information.
The value of information is the benefit produced by the information minus
the cost of producing it. Benefits of information include reduced uncertainty,
improved decisions, and improved ability to plan and schedule activities. The costs
include the time and resources spent to produce and distribute the information.
Information costs and benefits can be difficult to quantify, and it is difficult to
determine the value of information before it has been produced and utilized.
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Machine-Readable Format
Data is most useful when it is in a machine-readable format that can be read and
processed by a computer. Some examples for machine-readable formats are:
- eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) is an example of a machine-
readable format that can improve many of the characteristics that make information
useful and facilitate providing digital business reporting.
1.2. Information Needs and Business Processes
All organizations need information in order to make effective decisions. In addition,
all organizations have certain business processes in which they are continuously
engaged. A business process is a set of related, coordinated, and structured activities
and tasks that are performed by a person, a computer, or a machine, and that help
accomplish a specific organizational goal.
To make effective decisions, organizations must decide what decisions they
need to make, what information they need to make the decisions, and how to gather
and process the data needed to produce the information. This data gathering and
processing is often tied to the basic business processes in an organization. To
illustrate the process of identifying information needs and business processes, let’s
return to our S&S case study.
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Information Needs
Scott and Susan decide they must understand how S&S functions before they can
identify the information, they need to manage S&S effectively. Then they can
determine the types of data and procedures they will need to collect and produce that
information. They created Table 1-2
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Business Processes
Scott decides to reorganize the business processes listed in Table 1-2 into groups of
related transactions. A transaction is an agreement between two entities to exchange
goods or services or any other event that can be measured in economic terms by an
organization. Examples include selling goods to customers, buying inventory from
suppliers, and paying employees. The process that begins with capturing transaction
data and ends with informational output, such as the financial statements, is called
transaction processing. Transaction processing is covered in more depth in Chapter
2.
Many business activities are pairs of events involved in a give-get exchange.
Most organizations engage in a small number of give-get exchanges, but each type
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of exchange happens many times. For example, S&S will have thousands of sales to
customers every year in exchange for cash. Likewise, S&S will continuously buy
inventory from suppliers in exchange for cash. These exchanges can be grouped into
five major business processes or transaction cycles:
- The revenue cycle, where goods and services are sold for cash or a future promise
to receive cash.
- The expenditure cycle, where companies purchase inventory for resale or raw
materials to use in producing products in exchange for cash or a future promise
to pay cash.
- The production or conversion cycle, where raw materials are transformed into
finished goods.
- The human resources/payroll cycle, where employees are hired, trained,
compensated, evaluated, promoted, and terminated.
- The financing cycle, where companies sell shares in the company to investors
and borrow money, and where investors are paid dividends and interest is paid
on loans. These cycles process a few related transactions repeatedly. For
example, most revenue cycle transactions are either selling goods or services to
customers or collecting cash for those sales.
Figure 1-2 shows the main transaction cycles and the give-get exchange inherent
in each cycle. These basic give-get exchanges are supported by several other
business activities. For example, S&S may need to answer a few customer inquiries
and check inventory levels before it can make a sale. Likewise, it may have to check
customer credit before a credit sale is made. Accounts receivable will have to be
increased each time a credit sale is made and decreased each time a customer
payment is received. Table 1-3 lists the major activities in each transaction cycle.
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Notice that the last activity listed in Table 1-3 for each transaction cycle is
“Send appropriate information to the other cycles.” Figure 1-2 shows how these
various transaction cycles relate to one another and interface with the general ledger
and reporting system, which is used to generate information for both management
and external parties.
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After preparing Tables 1-2 and 1-3 and Figures 1-1 and 1-2, Scott and Susan
believe they understand S&S well enough to begin shopping for an information
system. Susan recalled a previous employer that had several separate information
systems because their software was not designed to accommodate the information
needs of all managers. She also vividly recalled attending one meeting where she
witnessed the negative effects of having multiple systems. The head of marketing
had one report on year-to-date sales by product, the production manager had a
different report that contained different sales figures, and the controller’s report,
which was produced by the general ledger system, had yet a third version of year-
to-date sales. Over an hour was wasted trying to reconcile those different reports!
Susan vowed that she would make sure that S&S did not ever find itself in such a
mess. She would make sure that any system selected would have the capability to
integrate both financial and nonfinancial data about S&S’s various business
processes so that everyone could pull information from the same system.
1.3. Accounting Information Systems
It has often been said that accounting is the language of business. If that is the case,
then an Accounting Information System (AIS) is the intelligence; the information
providing vehicle of that language.
Accounting is a data identification, collection, and storage process as well as
an information development, measurement, and communication process. By
definition, accounting is an information system, since an AIS collects, records,
stores, and processes accounting and other data to produce information for decision
makers.
Accounting information system: A system that collects, records, stores, and
processes data to produce information for decision makers. It includes people,
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accountant’s career success. Interacting with an AIS is one of the most important
activities that accountants perform.
3. Other important AIS-related activities include designing information systems and
business process improvements. Focus 1-2 explains a specialty to designate that
certain CPAs (Certified Public Accountants) have an in-depth knowledge of AIS
topics.
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performance falls outside acceptable quality limits. This helps maintain product
quality, reduces waste, and lowers costs.
2. Improving efficiency. For example, timely information makes a just-in-time
manufacturing approach possible, as it requires constant, accurate, up-to-date
information about raw materials inventories and their locations.
3. Sharing knowledge. Sharing knowledge and expertise can improve operations and
provide a competitive advantage. For example, CPA firms use their information
systems to share best practices and to support communication between offices.
Employees can search the corporate database to identify experts to provide
assistance for a particular client; thus, a CPA firm’s international expertise can be
made available to any local client.
4. Improving the efficiency and effectiveness of its supply chain. For example,
allowing customers to directly access inventory and sales order entry systems can
reduce sales and marketing costs, thereby increasing customer retention rates.
5. Improving the internal control structure. An AIS with the proper internal control
structure can help protect systems from fraud, errors, system failures, and disasters.
6. Improving decision making. Improved decision making is vitally important and is
discussed below in more detail.
Decision making is a complex, multistep activity: identify the problem, collect
and interpret information, evaluate ways to solve the problem, select a solution
methodology, and implement the solution. An AIS can provide assistance in all
phases of decision making. Reports can help to identify potential problems. Decision
models and analytical tools can be provided to users. Query languages can gather
relevant data to help make the decision. Various tools, such as graphical interfaces,
can help the decision maker interpret decision model results, evaluate them, and
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choose among alternative courses of action. In addition, the AIS can provide
feedback on the results of actions.
An AIS can help improve decision making in several ways:
- It can identify situations requiring management action. For example, a cost report
with a large variance might stimulate management to investigate and, if necessary,
take corrective action.
- It can reduce uncertainty and thereby provide a basis for choosing among
alternative actions.
- It can store information about the results of previous decisions, which provides
valuable feedback that can be used to improve future decisions. For example, if a
company tries a particular marketing strategy and the information gathered indicates
that it did not succeed, the company can use that information to select a different
marketing strategy.
- It can provide accurate information in a timely manner. For example, Walmart has
an enormous database that contains detailed information about sales transactions at
each of its stores. It uses this information to optimize the amount of each product
carried at each store.
- It can analyze sales data to discover items that are purchased together, and it can
use such information to improve the layout of merchandise or to encourage
additional sales of related items. For example, Amazon uses its sales database to
suggest additional books for customers to purchase.
1.5. The AIS and Corporate Strategy
Since most organizations have limited resources, it is important to identify the AIS
improvements likely to yield the greatest return. Making a wise decision requires an
understanding of the organization’s overall business strategy. To illustrate, consider
the results of a CIO magazine survey of 500 Chief Information Officers. Asked to
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identify the three most important skill sets for a CIO, over 75% put strategic thinking
and planning on their list.
Figure 1-4 shows three factors that influence the design of an AIS:
developments in IT, business strategy, and organizational culture. It is also important
to recognize that the design of the AIS can also influence the organization’s culture
by controlling the flow of information within the organization. For example, an AIS
that makes information easily accessible and widely available is likely to increase
pressures for more decentralization and autonomy.
IT developments can affect business strategy. For example, the Internet has
profoundly affected the way many activities are performed, significantly affecting
both strategy and strategic positioning. The Internet dramatically cuts costs, thereby
helping companies to implement a low-cost strategy. If every company used the
Internet to adopt a low-cost strategy, then the effects might be problematic. Indeed,
one possible outcome may be intense price competition among firms, with the likely
result that most of the cost savings provided by the Internet get passed on to the
industry’s customers, rather than being retained in the form of higher profits.
Moreover, because every company can use the Internet to streamline its activities, a
company is unlikely to gain a sustainable long-term competitive advantage.
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suppliers can more efficiently plan their production schedules. Part of the resultant
cost reduction can be passed on to S&S in the form of lower product costs.
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Questions
Choose the correct answer
1. Data differ from information in which way?
a. Data are output, and information is input.
b. Information is output, and data are input.
c. Data are meaningful bits of information.
d. There is no difference.
10. A report telling how well all approved vendors have performed in the prior 12
months is information that is MOST needed in which business process?
a. paying vendors
b. acquiring inventory
c. selling merchandise
d. paying employees
11. Information is ________ when two knowledgeable people independently
produce the same information.
a. verifiable
b. relevant
c. reliable
d. complete
12. Information that does not omit important aspects of the underlying events or
activities that it measures is
a. complete.
b. accessible.
c. relevant.
d. timely.
13. Inventory information for Sun Corp. is provided in real time by a firm's
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