MGMT 339: Quiz #1 & 2
Organizations must clearly define and acknowledge information security accountability and responsibility.
-Accountability principle -Ethics principle -Timeliness principle -Assessment principle -Equity principle
Why is an organizational mission important?
-Directs efforts of individuals in a common direction -Offers sound rationale for allocating resources -Defines critical work areas and jobs that must be accomplished
Disadvantage of outsourcing IS to companies in other countries?
-Integrating domestic and nondomestic workforces -managing multiple languages -defining global work expectations -being perceived as unpatriotic
What to develop in order to increase personal power?
1. A sense of obligation toward the manager 2. A belief that the manager possesses a significant level of expertise within the organization 3. A sense of identification with the manager 4. The perception that they are dependent on the manager
Steps to properly operate Information System (IS)
1. Determining information needs 2. Determining and gathering appropriate data 3. Summarizing data 4. Analyzing data 5. Transmitting information 6. Using the information
Factors that determine the value of information
1. Information appropriateness 2. Information quality 3. Information timeliness 4. Information quantity
Activities to improve Information System (IS) effectiveness
1. Managing user satisfaction 2. Managing the IS workforce 3. Managing IS security
What is total power made up of?
1. Position Power 2. Personal Power
The degree of user satisfaction with the Information System (IS) is determined by what factors
1. The quality of the IS 2. The quality of the information
Five Forces Model
A framework that identifies five forces that determine the profit potential of an industry and shape a firm's competitive strategy.
Service Facility
A person (or crew), a machine (or group of machines), or both, necessary to perform the service for the customer
Priority Rule
A rule that selects the next customer to be served by the service facility
Customer Population
An input that generates potential customers
How to calculate capacity cushion?
C = 100% - Average Utilization rate(%)
Operational Control Decisions
Ensure that specific task are carried out effectively and efficiently
competitor capability
Firm's ability to take an action
Attacker
First firm to make strategic or tactical action
Competitive awareness
How mindful a company is to competitor's actions
Question Mark
In the portfolio matrix, a business unit that has high market growth rate, but low relative market share
Data Contamination
Inaccurate data gathering that makes the data less representative of reality
Advantage of outsourcing IS to companies in other countries?
Lower cost of labor
Equity principle
Management shall respect the rights of all employees when setting policy regarding security measures.
GE Multifactor Portfolio Matrix
Matrix created by Low vs. High Industry Attractiveness and Strong vs. Weak Business Strength
Waiting Line
One or more "customers" waiting for service
Accountability principle
Organizations must clearly define and acknowledge information security accountability and responsibility.
Timeliness principle
Organizations should act in a timely manner to prevent or respond to breaches of and threats to information systems.
Assessment principle
Organizations should periodically assess the risks to information and information systems.
Ethics principle
Organizations should use information and execute information security in an ethical manner.
Capacity gap
Positive or negative difference between projected demand and current capacity
Strategic Planning Decisions
Relate to determining organizational objectives and actions to achieve those objectives
Management Control Decisions
Relate to obtaining and using resources to reach objectives
Defender
Second firm which must choose whether or not to respond to the attacker
Information technology (IT)
Technology focused on the use of information in the performance of work
BCG Growth-Share Matrix
The Boston Consulting Group planning tool that evaluates business units in terms of their growth potential and market share.
Base case
The act of doing nothing and losing orders from any demand that exceeds current capacity, or incur costs because capacity is too large
Cash flow
The difference between the flows of funds into and out of an organization over a period of time, including revenues, costs, and changes in assets and liabilities
Power
The extent to which an individual is able to influence others so that they respond to orders
Internal environment
The level of an organization's environment that exists inside the organization and normally has immediate and specific implications for managing the organization
General environment
The level of an organization's external environment that contains components having broad, long-term implications for managing the organization
Industry environment
The level of an organization's external environment that contains components normally having relatively specific and immediate implications for managing the organization
Service System
The number of lines and the arrangement of the facilities
Data
The process of developing information begins with gathering some type of facts or statistics
Planning Horizon
The set of consecutive time periods considered for planning purposes
Setup Time
The time required to change a process or an operation from making one service or product to making another
Information Overload
Too much information to consider properly which can lead managers to be afraid to make decisions
How to calculate utilization?
Utilization = [Average Output Rate / Maximum Capacity]
Capacity Requirement
What a process's capacity should be for some future time period to meet the demand of customers (external or internal), given the firm's desired capacity cushion.
critical question analysis
What are the purposes and objectives of the organization? Where is the organization presently going? In what kind of environment does the organization now exist? What can be done to better achieve organizational objectives in the future?
Strategy
a broad and general plan developed to reach long-term objectives
Information System (IS)
a network of applications established within an organization to provide managers with the information that will assist them in decision making
Symptom
a sign that a problem exists
strategic business unit (SBU)
a significant organizational segment that is analyzed to develop organizational strategy aimed at generating future business or revenue
Growth
a strategy adopted by management to increase the amount of business that an SBU is currently generating
Stability
a strategy adopted by management to maintain or slightly improve the amount of business that an SBU is generating
Divestiture
a strategy adopted to eliminate an SBU that is not generating a satisfactory amount of business and that has little hope of doing so in the near future
Differentiation
a strategy in which a firm seeks to be unique in its industry along a dimension or a group of dimensions that are valued by consumers
Focus
a strategy that emphasizes making an organization more competitive by targeting a particular segment of customers
Cost leadership
a strategy that focuses on making an organization more competitive by producing products more cheaply than competitors can
retrenchment
a strategy where management attempts to strengthen or protect the amount of business an SBU is currently generating
Mission Statement
a written document developed by management, normally based on input by managers as well as nonmanagers, that describes and explains the mission of the organization
business portfolio analysis
an organizational strategy formulation technique that is based on the philosophy that organizations should develop strategy much as they handle investment portfolios
Problem
any factor within an organization that is a barrier to organizational goal attainment
Technology
any type of equipment or process that organization members use in the performance of their work
Information
details about a project or the set of conclusions derived from data analysis
Control
ensuring that an event occurs as it was planned to occur
Information appropriateness
how relevant the information is to the decision-making situation that the manager faces. If the information is quite relevant, then it is said to be appropriate. Generally, as the appropriateness of the information increases, so does the value of that information
SWOT analysis
identifying internal strengths (S) and weaknesses (W) and also examining external opportunities (O) and threats (T)
Cash Cow
in the portfolio matrix, a business unit that generates more cash than it needs to maintain its market share
Dog
in the portfolio matrix, a business unit that has low growth potential and a small market share
Star
in the portfolio matrix, a business unit that is a fast-growing market leader
Strategic Planning
long-range(5 years into the future) planning that focuses on the organization as a whole
Corrective Action
managerial activity aimed at bringing organizational performance up to the level of performance standards
Commitment Principle
managers should commit funds for planning only if they can anticipate, in the foreseeable future, a return on planning expenses as a result of long-range planning analysis
Strategic control
monitoring performance to ensure that strategic plans are being implemented and taking corrective action as needed
Personal Power
power derived from a manager's relationships with others
Positional Power
power derived from the organizational position that a manager holds
Strategy implementation
putting strategies into action
Tactical planning
short-range[1 year or less into the future] planning that emphasizes the current operations of various parts of an organization
What does "Threat of new entrants" refer to in the Five Forces Model?
the ability of new firms to enter an industry; as the threat of new entrants increases, the attractiveness of the industry decreases
Organizing skills
the ability to create throughout the organization a network of people who can help solve implementation problems as they occur
Interacting skills
the ability to manage people during implementation
Allocating skills
the ability to provide the organizational resources necessary to implement a strategy
Monitoring skills
the ability to use information to determine whether a problem has arisen that is blocking strategy implementation
information quantity
the amount of decision-related information that managers possess
Information Quality
the degree to which information represents reality. The more closely information represents reality, the higher the quality and the greater the value of that information
What does "threat of substitute products" refer to in the Five Forces Model?
the extent to which customers use products or services from another industry instead of the focal industry
Information timeliness
the extent to which the receipt of information allows decisions to be made and action to be taken so that the organization can gain some benefit from possessing the information.
Competitor motivation
the incentives that drive an organization to take action
What does "intensity of rivalry" refer to in the Five Forces Model?
the intensity of competition among the organizations in an industry. As the intensity of rivalry increases, the attractiveness of the industry decreases
Standard
the level of activity established to serve as a model for evaluating organizational performance
What does "Buyer Power" refer to in the Five Forces Model?
the power that customers have over the firms operating in an industry; as buyer power increases, the attractiveness of the industry decreases
What does "Supplier Power" refer to in the Five Forces Model?
the power that suppliers have over the firms operating in an industry
Competitive dynamics
the process by which firms undertake strategic and tactical actions and how competitors respond to these actions
Strategy formulation
the process of determining appropriate courses of action for achieving organizational objectives and thereby accomplishing the organizational purpose
Strategic management
the process of ensuring that an organization possesses and benefits from the use of an appropriate organizational strategy
Organizational mission
the purpose for which—the reason why—an organization exists
Social values
the relative degrees of worth that a society places on the ways in which it exists and functions
Economics
the science that focuses on understanding how people of a particular community or nation produce, distribute, and use various goods and services
Demographics
the statistical characteristics of a population
Environmental analysis
the study of the organizational environment to pinpoint environmental factors that can significantly influence organizational operations