DS 3841 - EXAM #1
Internet and World Wide Web
- Internet: a massive network that connects computers all over the world and allows them to communicate with one another; synonymous with the WWW
challenges to individual privacy
- Privacy vs. Convenience - Organizations vs. Individuals - Internet availability - Tracking website visits, etc - Easy to download, steal
Porter's Competitive Forces Model
1. Threat of Entry of New Competitors 2. Bargaining Power of Suppliers 3. Bargaining Power of Customers/Buyers 4. Threat of Substitute Products or Services 5. Rivalry Among Existing Firms within the Industry
Management Information Systems (MIS)
A business function, like accounting and human resources, which moves information about people, products, and processes across the company to facilitate decision-making and problem-solving
fiber-optic cable
A cable that transmits data at close to the speed of light along glass or plastic fibers.
Slippery Slope
A fallacy that assumes that taking a first step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented
Long-range planning
A formalized process of identifying long-term goals, selecting strategies to achieve those goals, and developing policies and plans to implement the strategies.
programmer
A person who writes and tests computer programs.
key corporate assets
A) intellectual property, core competencies, and financial and human assets
IS's impact on everyday life
Alexa and Siri-based systems are always listening
Wireless Network
Any type of computer network that is not connected by cables of any kind.
computer crime
Any violation of criminal law that involves knowledge of computer technology for its perpetration, investigation, or prosecution.
responsibility
Being responsible for one's actions
twisted-pair cable
Cables made of copper wires that are twisted around each other and are surrounded by a plastic jacket (such as traditional home phone wire).
Non-obvious relationship awareness (NORA)
Combining data from multiple sources to find obscure hidden connections that might help identify criminals or terrorists
Virtual Companies
Companies that rely on a variety of supplier relationships to provide services on demand. Also known as hollow corporations or network companies.
difference between data and information
Data is uninterpreted and information is in a form useful for decision making
ESS Uses
Digital dashboard, portal to deliver the info
golden rule
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you
E-commerce v. e-business
E-commerce and e-business systems blur together at the business firm boundary, at the point at which internal business systems link up with suppliers or customers.
property rights and obligations
How will traditional intellectual property rights be protected in a digital society in which tracing and accounting for ownership are difficult and ignoring such property rights is so easy?
LAN
Local Area Network; a geographic network that covers a relatively small geographic area such as a building or a small campus - no more than a mile distance between computers
MIS Uses
Middle Managers, reports, etc.
DSS Uses
Middle and senior managers to help make decisions
Collaborative systems
One where multiple users or agents engage in a shared activity, usually from remote locations.
analyst
One who analyzes or makes use of the analytical method.
Digital Firm
Organization where nearly all significant business processes and relationships with customers, suppliers, and employees are digitally enabled, and key corporate assets are managed through digital means.
Chief Information Officer (CIO)
Oversees all uses of IT and ensures the strategic alignment of IT with business goals and objectives
Areas impacted by collaborative systems:
Productivity, quality, innovation, customer service, financial profitability.
Chief Knowledge Officer (CKO)
Responsible for collecting, maintaining, and distributing the organization's knowledge
Chief Privacy Officer (CPO)
Responsible for ensuring the ethical and legal use of information systems
Chief Security Officer (CSO)
Responsible for ensuring the security of IT systems
Targeting "vulnerable" audiences
Some ads were criticized because they appeared to target minories, women and/or children. For example, Virginia Slims cigarettes featured women in a way tobacco companies had not done. Uptown Cigarettes, malt liquor and Hennesey brandy targeted African Americans. The beauty industry has long been criticized for targeting young women and pre-teens.
Intranets and Extranets
Technology platforms that increase integration and expedite the flow of information.
quality of life
The idea that life must have some benefits for it to be worth living and which values of life should be preserved
end user
The person or group who will use the product produced by the project.
risk aversion
The tendency to prefer a sure gain of a moderate amount over a riskier outcome, even if the riskier outcome might have a higher expected payoff.
System quality
What standards of data and system quality should we demand to protect individual rights and the safety of society?
accountability and control
Who can and will be held accountable and liable for the harm done to individual and collective information and property rights?
WAN
Wide Area Network; largest type of network in terms of geographic area; largest WAN is the Internet
Business Intelligence (BI)
a broad category of applications, technologies, and processes for gathering, storing, accessing, and analyzing data to help business users make better decisions
Value Web
a collection of independent firms that use information technology to coordinate their value chains to produce a product or service for a market collectively
Information System
a group of components that interact to produce information. started off as word of mouth, then to storytelling, and progressed to data and storage repositories.
core competency
a set of knowledge and skills that make the organization superior to competitors and create value for customers
Business Process
a standardized set of activities that accomplish a specific task, such as processing a customer's order
accountability
ability to answer for one's own actions
ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning)
allows an order or bill to to proceed through all segments of the organization
mobile device issues
anybody in public can be taped or filmed, huge privacy issues
Flattening the organization
better and more efficient business practices reduce the need for employees, causing the hierarchal structure to flatten out and widen
Management Decisions
bottom up, bottom down, feedback, authoritative, group, etc.
life insurance rates
calculated based on your life expectancy, health, and family history
Primary Value Chain Activities
contribute directly to the production, sale, and service of the product: inbound logistics, operations/manufacturing, outbound logistics, sales and marketing, customer service
Disruptive Technology
displaces an existing business process, market, industry, or product
Due Process
fair treatment through the normal judicial system, especially as a citizen's entitlement.
internal politics
forces within the organization that influence decision making
smart groups
groups of professionals from the same field
sales and marketing
inducing buyers to purchase the products and providing a means for them to do so
System Processes
input, process, output, feedback
CRM (Customer Relationship Management)
involves managing all aspects of a customer's relationship with an organization to increase customer loyalty and retention and an organization's profitability
Types of MIS workers
knowledge workers, data workers, middle managers, operational managers, senior manager
Bureaucracy Structure
layers of management, typical business set-up
cloud storage issues
less control and more potential comprimises
human resources
maintains policies, plans, and procedures for the effective management of employees
secondary value activities
makes primary activities possible firm infrastructure, human resource management, technology development, procurement
impact of MIS on economics
minimizes transaction costs, agency theory (contracts that serve self interest)
5 components of a system
people/users, info/data, processes, hardware, software
hinderances to sharing
power, selfishness, more work to mentor
insurance rates
rates you pay for insurance that are based on risk; risk is the chance that you may lose something.
liability
responsibility with actual damages
Chief Data Officer (CDO)
responsible for determining the types of information the enterprise will capture, retain, analyze, and share
entrepreneurial structure
small, agile, simple structure
issue with technology's rapid rate of change
social and legal standards lag behind as a result
Organizaton
stable, formal social structure that transforms resources into products or services
KMS (Knowledge Management System)
supports creation, organization and dissemination of business expertise throughout the organization. an electronic library of best practices organized by specific business domain
Transaction Processing System (TPS)
supports the monitoring, collection, storage, and processing of data from the organization's basic business transactions, each of which generates data
Adhocracy Structure
task force-style
motivators to sharing
team building and bonding, mentoring, fulfillment
Opt-out & opt-in
the U.S. has a more opt-out based model, Europe has a more opt-in based model.
manufacturing and production
the activities and processes used in making tangible products
no-free-lunch principle
the idea that every choice involves tradeoffs; a restatement of the scarcity-forces-tradeoffs principle
the more we work together...?
the more successful we are.
Ethics
the principles of right and wrong that guide an individual in making decisions
Information Rights
the rights that individuals and organizations have with respect to information that pertains to themselves
Morals
the rules people develop as a result of cultural values and norms
Value Chain
the series of internal departments that carry out value-creating activities to design, produce, market, deliver, and support a firm's products
organizational culture
the set of values, ideas, attitudes, and norms of behavior that is learned and shared among the members of an organization
organizational structure
the ways in which power and authority are distributed within an organization
Finance and Accounting
tracks how well the organization is doing, pays bills, collects the money
predictive policing
using data on past crimes to predict where future crimes are likely to occur. dangerous for minority-type reports.
Growing MIS fields
· IT Innovations · New Business Models · E-Commerce Expanding · Management Changes · Changes in Firms & Organizations