C3 Information Systems, Organizations, and Strategy
C3 Information Systems, Organizations, and Strategy
IS and the Org.- influences each other
• Organizations need to be aware of influences of IS to benefit from new technologies
• Many factors: organization's structure, standard operating procedures, politics, culture etc.
• IT often change Organizations– organizational balance
of rights, responsibilities. Key elements include• who owns information• who has access to and
can update information• who makes decisions
about whom, what, when and how
Organizational features
• Routines and business processes– standard operating procedures: precise rules to cope with all
expected situations; BPs as collections of routines
• Organizational politics– IT investments bring about significant changes = politically
charged events – managers need to know how to work with the politics
• Organizational culture• Organizational environments• Organizational structure
– Clear division of labour– Hierarchy– Explicit rules and procedures
We will examine business processes to understand how they might be changed or replaced by using IT to achieve greater efficiency
Difference in Organizations
• Size and types– large, small firms
• Environments– government, competitors, customers, financial
institutions• Organizational culture
– set of fundamental assumptions about what products organization should produce
IT resistance
• New technology puts strains on culture, politics and people
• if IT change threatens commonly held cultural assumptions --> resistance
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IS Impact
• Economic impacts– IT can help lower transaction costs e.g. computer
links to external suppliers – reduce agency costs with IT
• Organizational and behavioural impacts– IT flattens organizations
• Post-industrial organizations• Organizational resistance to change• The Internet and organizations
– Implications for the design and understanding of information systems
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Internet changed IS
• The Internet– important impact on relation between firms
and external entities and on the organization of business processes, inside a firm
• Prior to the Internet– business decisions had limited, delayed or
inaccurate knowledge of customers, delivery etc.
– large warehouses of information used
Planning for an IS- Factors
• Organizational environment• Organizational structure
– hierarchy, specialization, routines, and business processes
• Organizational culture and politics• The type of organization and its style of
leadership• Groups affected by the system and the attitudes
of workers who will be using the system• The kinds of tasks, decisions, and business
processes that the IS is designed to assist
Characteristics of IT
• They are flexible and provide many options for handling data and evaluating information
• They are capable of supporting a variety of management styles, skills, and knowledge
• They are sensitive to the organization’s bureaucratic and political requirements
Keep in mind when designing systems:
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IS for Competitive Advantage
Porter’s Competitive Forces Model
Traditional competitors
New market entrants
Substitute products and services
Customers
Suppliers
In Porter’s competitive forces model, the strategic position of the firm and its strategies are determined not only by competition with its traditional direct competitors but also by four forces in the industry’s environment: new market entrants, substitute products, customers, and suppliers.
Porter’s Competitive Forces Model
Figure 3-10 3-18
Using Information Systems to Achieve Competitive Advantage
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IS strategies
Deal with competitive forces• Low-cost leadership • Product differentiation• Focus on market niche• Strengthen customer and supplier intimacy
Competitive Advantage is gained when organizations provide more value to customers or same value at lower price
The Internet’s impact on competitive advantage
Figure 3-11 Value Chain Model 3-19
Primary activities- products and services, value for customers Secondary activities- infrastructure: administration, human ressources, etc.
Value Chain Model
Competitive Advantage …
• Specific activities in the business where competitive strategies can best be applied– Primary activities: sales and marketing, production– Support activities: administration, decision making
about IT, HR
• How can we use information systems to– Improve efficiency, cost– Improve relations with those outside the firm:
customers, suppliers, etc.
Figure 3-13 3-25
The value web
• The value web is a networked system that can synchronize the value chains of business partners within an industry to respond rapidly to changes in supply and demand.
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• Synergies, core competencies, and network-based strategies
• Synergies• Enhancing core competencies
Network-based strategies • network economics
IS and business strategy
Businessa single firm producing a set of related products and services
Firma collection of businesses that make up a single, multidivisional firm
Industrya collection of firms that make up an industrial environment or ecosystem
Firm Level Strategy• firm as collection of
businesses • IT to improve each
business unit • synergies • core competencies
Industry Level Strategy• firms together --> industry • information partnerships:
eg Air Canada, CIBC (Aeroplan)
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Figure 3-5
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