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2.1 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall 2 Chapter E-Business: How E-Business: How Businesses Use Businesses Use Information Information Systems Systems
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2.1 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall 2 Chapter E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems.

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Page 1: 2.1 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall 2 Chapter E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems.

2.1 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall

2Chapter

E-Business: How E-Business: How Businesses Use Businesses Use

Information SystemsInformation Systems

E-Business: How E-Business: How Businesses Use Businesses Use

Information SystemsInformation Systems

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2.2 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall

STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

• What are the major features of a business that are important for understanding the role of information systems?

• How do information systems support the major business functions: sales and marketing, manufacturing and production, finance and accounting, and human resources?

• How do systems serve the various levels of management in a business and how are these systems related?

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• How do enterprise applications, collaboration and communication systems, and intranets improve organizational performance?

• What is the role of the information system’s function in a business?

STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES (Continued)

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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2.4 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall

Information Systems Join the Tupperware Party

• Problem: Changing business model caused unnecessary difficulty for Tupperware sales consultants.

• Solutions: Implement Web-based order management system that simplifies order entry and other tasks.

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Information Systems Join the Tupperware Party

• Oracle Collaboration Suite and Oracle Portal also streamlines communication and support.

• Demonstrates IT’s role in centralizing data, improving production processes, and driving growth and profitability.

• Illustrates the importance of automating business processes to reduce workloads and increase productivity.

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Information Systems Join the Tupperware Party

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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2.7 Adapted from © 2007 by Prentice Hall

Components of a Business

• Four basic business functions

• Manufacturing and production

• Sales and marketing

• Finance and accounting

• Human resources

Organizing a Business: Basic Business Functions Organizing a Business: Basic Business Functions

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Business: Formal organization that makes products or provides a service in order to make a profit

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Every business, regardless of its size, must perform four functions to succeed. It must produce the product or service; market and sell the product; keep track of accounting and financial transactions; and perform basic human resources tasks, such as hiring and retaining employees.

The Four Major Functions of a BusinessThe Four Major Functions of a Business

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Components of a Business

• Five basic business entities:

• Suppliers

• Customers

• Employees

• Invoices/payments

• Products and services

Organizing a Business: Basic Business Functions Organizing a Business: Basic Business Functions

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Logically related set of tasks that define how specific business tasks are performed

• The tasks each employee performs, in what order, and on what schedule

• E.g. Steps in hiring an employee

• Some processes tied to functional area

• Sales and marketing: Identifying customers

• Some processes arre cross-functional

• Fulfilling customer order

Business ProcessesBusiness Processes

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Figure 2-2

Fulfilling a customer order involves a complex set of steps that requires the close coordination of the sales, accounting, and manufacturing functions.

The Order Fulfillment ProcessThe Order Fulfillment Process

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Managing a Business and Firm HierarchiesManaging a Business and Firm Hierarchies

• Firms coordinate work of employees by developing hierarchy in which authority is concentrated at top– Senior management

– Middle management

– Operational management

– Knowledge workers

– Data workers

– Production or service workers

• Each group has different needs for information

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Business organizations are hierarchies consisting of three principal levels: senior management, middle management, and operational management. Information systems serve each of these levels. Scientists and knowledge workers often work with middle management.

Levels in a FirmLevels in a Firm

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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The Business EnvironmentThe Business Environment

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Global environment Global environment factors (not limited to)factors (not limited to)

• Technology and Technology and sciencescience

• EconomyEconomy

• PoliticsPolitics

• International International changechange

Immediate environment Immediate environment factors (not limited to)factors (not limited to)

• CustomersCustomers

• SuppliersSuppliers

• Competitors Competitors

• RegulationsRegulations

• StockholdersStockholders

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To be successful, an organization must constantly monitor and respond to—or even anticipate—developments in its environment. A firm's environment includes specific groups with which the business must deal directly, such as customers, suppliers, and competitors as well as the broader general environment, including socioeconomic trends, political conditions, technological innovations, and global events.

The Business EnvironmentThe Business Environment

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Firms invest in information systems in order to:

• Achieve operational excellence

• Develop new products and services

• Attain customer intimacy and service

• Improve decision making

• Promote competitive advantage

• Ensure survival

The Role of Information Systems in a BusinessThe Role of Information Systems in a Business

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Sales and marketing systems

• Manufacturing and production systems

• Finance and accounting systems

• Human resources systems

Systems from a Systems from a FunctionalFunctional Perspective Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Sales and marketing systems • Support activities for selling and marketing firm’s products or

services

• Senior management: • Monitor trends affecting products and sales, planning for new

products and services, monitor performance of competitors

• Middle management: • Support market research, analyze marketing campaigns,

pricing decisions, sales performance

• Operational management and employees: • Locating and contacting prospective customers, process

orders, provide customer service support

Systems from a Functional PerspectiveSystems from a Functional Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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This system captures sales data at the moment the sale takes place to help the business monitor sales transactions and to provide information to help management analyze sales trends and the effectiveness of marketing campaigns.

Example of a Sales Information SystemExample of a Sales Information System

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Manufacturing and production systems • Support activities for producing firm’s products or services

• Senior management: • Help plan long-term manufacturing goals, such as technology

investments and locating new plants

• Middle management: • Analyze and monitor manufacturing and production costs and

resources

• Operational management • Manage status of production tasks

Systems from a Functional PerspectiveSystems from a Functional Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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This system provides information about the number of items available in inventory to support manufacturing and production activities.

Overview of an Inventory SystemOverview of an Inventory System

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Finance and accounting systems • Support activities for managing financial assets, firm’s capitalization,

and financial records

• Senior management: • Establish long-term investment goals and provide long-range

forecasts of firm’s financial performance

• Middle management: • Oversee and control firm’s financial resources

• Operational management • Track flow of funds in firm through transactions (paychecks,

payments, securities reports, receipts, etc.)

Systems from a Functional PerspectiveSystems from a Functional Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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An accounts receivable system tracks and stores important customer data, such as payment history, credit rating, and billing history.

An Accounts Receivable SystemAn Accounts Receivable System

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Human resources systems • Support activities for attracting, developing, and maintaining

firm’s workforce

• Senior management: • Identify manpower requirements (skill, education level, types

and numbers of positions, etc.) for meeting long-term business plans

• Middle management: • Monitor and analyze recruitment, allocation, and compensation

of employees

• Operational management • Track recruitment and placement of employees

Systems from a Functional PerspectiveSystems from a Functional Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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This system maintains data on the firm’s employees to support the human resources function.

An Employee Record-Keeping SystemAn Employee Record-Keeping System

Components of a Business

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Transaction processing systems• Keep track of basic activities and transactions of organization

(e.g. sales, receipts, cash deposits, payroll, credit decisions, flow of materials in a factory))

• Management information systems and decision-support systems• Help with monitoring, controlling, decision-making, and

administrative activities

• Executive support systems::• Help address strategic issues and long-term trends, both in

firm and in external environment

Systems from a Systems from a ConstituencyConstituency Perspective Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Transaction processing systems

• Serve operational managers

• Principal purpose is to answer routine questions and to track the flow of transactions through the organization

• E.g. Inventory questions, granting credit to customer

• Monitor status of internal operations and firm’s relationship with external environment

• Major producers of information for other systems

• Highly central to business operations and functioning

Systems from a Constituency PerspectiveSystems from a Constituency Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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• Management information systems

• Provide middle managers with reports on firm’s performance

• To monitor firm and help predict future performance

• Summarize and report on basic operations using data from TPS

• Provide weekly, monthly, annual results, but may enable drilling down into daily or hourly data

• Typically not very flexible systems with little analytic capability

Systems from a Constituency PerspectiveSystems from a Constituency Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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How MIS Obtain Data from Organization’s TPSHow MIS Obtain Data from Organization’s TPS

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

In the system illustrated by this diagram, three TPS supply summarized transaction data to the MIS reporting system at the end of the time period. Managers gain access to the organizational data through the MIS, which provides them with the appropriate reports.

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Sample MIS ReportSample MIS Report

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

This report, showing summarized annual sales data, was produced by the MIS in Figure 2-9.

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• Decision support systems (DSS)

• Support non-routine decision making for middle management

• E.g. What would impact on production schedules be if sales doubled in December?

• Use information from TPS, MIS, and external sources

• Use models to analyze data

• E.g. voyage estimating system of metals company that calculates financial and technical voyage details

• Focus on extracting, analyzing information from large amounts of data

Systems from a Constituency PerspectiveSystems from a Constituency Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Voyage-Estimating Decision Support SystemVoyage-Estimating Decision Support System

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

This DSS operates on a powerful PC. It is used daily by managers who must develop bids on shipping contracts.

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• Executive support systems (ESS)

• Serve senior managers

• Address strategic issues and long-term trends

• E.g. What products should we make in 5 years?

• Address non-routine decision-making

• Provide generalized computing capacity that can be applied to changing array of problems

• Draw summarized information from MIS, DSS and data from external events

• Typically use portal with Web interface to present content

Systems from a Constituency PerspectiveSystems from a Constituency Perspective

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Model of an Executive Support SystemModel of an Executive Support System

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

This system pools data from diverse internal and external sources and makes them available to executives in an easy-to-use form.

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• TPS: Major source of data for other systems

• ESS: Primarily a recipient of data from lower-level systems

• Other systems may exchange data as well

• Exchange of data between functional areas

• E.g. Sales order transmitted to manufacturing system

• In most organizations, systems are loosely integrated

Relationship of Systems to One AnotherRelationship of Systems to One Another

Types of Business Information Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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Interrelationships Among SystemsInterrelationships Among Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

The various types of systems in the organization have interdependencies. TPS are major producers of information that is required by many other systems in the firm, which, in turn, produce information for other systems. These different types of systems have been loosely coupled in most organizations.

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Enterprise ApplicationsEnterprise Applications

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

• Enterprise applications are systems that span functional areas and automate processes for multiple business functions and organizational areas; they include:

• Enterprise systems

• Supply chain management systems

• Customer relationship management systems

• Knowledge management systems

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Enterprise Application ArchitectureEnterprise Application Architecture

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Enterprise applications automate processes that span multiple business functions and organizational levels and may extend outside the organization.

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• Integrate data from key business processes into single system

• Speed communication of information throughout firm

• Enable greater flexibility in responding to customer requests, greater accuracy in order fulfillment

• Enable managers of large firms to assemble overall view of operations

• For example, Alcoa used ERP to eliminate redundancies and inefficiencies in its disparate systems

Enterprise Systems a.k.a. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systemsEnterprise Systems a.k.a. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

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Enterprise SystemsEnterprise Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Enterprise systems integrate the key business processes of an entire firm into a single software system that enables information to flow seamlessly throughout the organization. These systems focus primarily on internal processes but may include transactions with customers and vendors.

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• Manage relationships with suppliers, purchasing firms, distributors, and logistics companies

• Manage shared information about orders, production, inventory levels, etc.

• Goal is to move correct amount of product from source to point of consumption as quickly as possible and at lowest cost

• Type of inter-organizational system:

• Automating flow of information across organizational boundaries

Supply Chain Management SystemsSupply Chain Management Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

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Information from SCM systems helps firms to:

• Decide when and what to produce, store and move

• Rapidly communicate orders

• Track the status of orders

• Check inventory availability and monitor inventory levels

• Reduce inventory, transportation and warehousing costs

• Track shipments

• Plan production based on actual customer demand

• Rapidly communicate changes in product design

How IS facilitate Supply Chain ManagementHow IS facilitate Supply Chain Management

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

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Example of a Supply Chain Management SystemExample of a Supply Chain Management System

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Customer orders, shipping notifications, optimized shipping plans, and other supply chain information flow among Haworth’s Warehouse Management System (WMS), Transportation Management System (TMS), and its back-end corporate systems.

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• Help manage relationship with customers• Coordinate business processes that deal with

customers to optimize revenue and customer satisfaction, and increase sales

• Combine sales, marketing, and service record data from multiple communication channels to provide unified view of customer, eliminate duplicate efforts

• E.g. Saab CRM applications to achieve 360º view of customers resulted in greater follow-up rate on sales leads and increased customer satisfaction

Customer Relationship Management SystemsCustomer Relationship Management Systems

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

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Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Illustrated here are some of the capabilities of Salesforce.com, a market-leading provider of on-demand customer relationship management (CRM) software. CRM systems integrate information from sales, marketing, and customer service.

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Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

• Intangible knowledge assets• Knowledge about producing and delivering products• Source of value and advantage for firms

• Knowledge management systems: • Help capture, storage, distribute, and apply knowledge so

that it can be leveraged for strategic benefit• Include systems for:

• Managing and distributing documents, graphics, other digital knowledge objects

• Creating knowledge directories of employees with specialized expertise

• Distributing knowledge

Knowledge Management SystemsKnowledge Management Systems

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Intranets and ExtranetsIntranets and Extranets

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

• Technology platforms that increase integration and expedite the flow of information

• Intranets:

• Internal networks based on Internet standards

• Typically utilize a portal

• Extranets:

• Intranets extended for authorized use outside the company for partners, customers

• Facilitate collaboration

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Collaboration and Communication Systems: Collaboration and Communication Systems: “Interaction” Jobs in a Global Economy“Interaction” Jobs in a Global Economy

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

• Enterprise-wide information system solutions for interaction

• Internet-based collaboration environments

• E-mail and instant messaging (IM)

• Cell phones and wireless handhelds

• Social networking

• Wikis

• Virtual worlds

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E-Business, E-Commerce, and E-GovernmentE-Business, E-Commerce, and E-Government

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

Systems That Span the Enterprise

• E-business

• Use of digital technology and Internet to drive major business processes e.g. internal management of the firm, coordination with partners.

• E-commerce

• Subset of e-business

• Buying and selling goods and services through Internet including advertizing, marketing, customer support, security, delivery and payment

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• E-government:– Using Internet technology to deliver

information and services to citizens, employees, and businesses

e.g. www.turkiye.gov.tr

E-Business, E-Commerce, and E-GovernmentE-Business, E-Commerce, and E-Government

Systems That Span the Enterprise

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

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The Information Systems DepartmentThe Information Systems Department

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

The Information System’s Function in Business

In most firms, IS departments are formal organizational unit responsible for IT services

• Programmers• Systems analysts

• Principle liaisons to rest of firm• Information systems managers

• Leaders of teams of programmers and analysts, project managers, physical facility managers, telecommunications managers, database specialists, managers of computer operations and data entry staff

• Senior managers: CIO, CSO (a.k.a. CISO), CPO, CKO• End users• External specialists

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Information Systems ServicesInformation Systems Services

Essentials of Business Information SystemsEssentials of Business Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information SystemsChapter 2 E-Business: How Businesses Use Information Systems

The Information System’s Function in Business

• Services provided by the information systems department include:• Computing and telecommunications services• Data management services• Application software services• Physical facilities management services• IT management services• IT standards services• IT educational services• IT research and development services

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