Management Information Systems and Dss Unit-Iv: Disha Technical Campus
Management Information Systems and Dss Unit-Iv: Disha Technical Campus
Management Information Systems and Dss Unit-Iv: Disha Technical Campus
DESIGNING PHASE
The Business application system demands designing of systems suitable to the application in project. While designing MIS, a general approach has to be followed to cater to the needs of different organizations as per their functions and decisions making requirements. The major steps involved in the design are the following:
Identifying Information needs at all levels of Management: Listing objectives of MIS and anticipated benefits:
a) b) c) d) What is the purpose of the system? Why is it needed? What is it expected to do? Who are the users and what are their objectives?
Identifying systems constraints. Internal : The internal constraints are viewed in terms of:
a) b) c) d) e) Top management support. Organization policy Man power needs and availability Cost and resources Acceptance.
1. Top down approaches: Here top management takes the lead in formulating objectives, policies and plans and communicates them down the line to middle and supervisory management for translating them into reality. 2. Bottom up approaches: This approach consist of the following steps:
i. Individual functional applications are planned separately consisting of transaction processing, updating of files and simple reports. ii. Files of various functional applications are integrated by means of indexing and chaining into a database. iii. Various functions are added to operate on the database at management level.
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Integration of models into a model base having a wide variety of analysis, decision and planning models. Strategic planning data and planning models are added to the information system.
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Identify requirements. Locate, evaluate and secure software development. Locate, evaluate and secure hardware. Implement the systems.
Data warehouse systems that allow the manipulation of data by computerized tools tailored to a specific task and setting or by more general tools and operators provide additional functionality.
Executive Information Systems are examples of data-driven DSS (Power, 2002). Initial examples of these systems were called dataoriented DSS, Analysis Information Systems (Alter, 1980) and retrieval-only DSS by Bonczek, Holsapple and Whinston (1981).
File drawer systems that provide access to data items. Data analysis systems that support the manipulation of data by computerized tools tailored to a specific task and setting or by more general tools and operators. Analysis information systems that provide access to a series of decisionoriented databases and small models. Accounting and financial models that calculate the consequences of possible actions. Representational models that estimate the consequences of actions on the basis of simulation models. Optimization models that provide guidelines for action by generating an optimal solution consistent with a series of constraints. Suggestion models that perform the logical processing leading to a specific suggested decision for a fairly structured or well-understood task.