Chapter 1: The Systems Analyst and Information Systems Development
break-even point
(number of years of negative cash flow)+[(that year's net cash flow - that year's cumulative cash flow)/(that year's net cash flow)]
Return on Investment
(total benefits-total costs)/total costs
DCF Technique
PV=(Cash flow amount)/(1 + rate of return)^n
first mover
a company that develops business strategies that leverage the capabilities of emerging technologies by being the first ones to introduce them into the marketplace
systems request
a document that describes the business reasons for building a system and the value that the system is expected to provide
business process management (BPM)
a methodology used by organizations to continuously improve end-to-end business processes
stakeholder (analysis)
analysis of a person, group or organization that can affect or be affected by a new system
analysis phase
answers the questions of who will use the system, what the system will do, and where and when it will be used
intangible benefits/intangible costs
based on intuition and belief rather than on "hard numbers"
tangible value
can be quantified and measured (e.g. 2% reduction in operating costs)
business process reengineering (BPR)
changing the fundamental way in which the organization operates
design strategy
clarifies whether the system will be developed by the company's own programmers or outsourced to another firm
system specification
collection of deliverables (architecture design, database and file specifications, and program design) that is used by the programming team for implementation
design phase
decides how the system will operate in terms of hardware, software and network infrastructure
approval/steering committee
decides whether the information systems project should be undertaken
database and file specifications
defines exactly what data will be stored and where they will be stored
program design
defines the programs that need to be written and exactly what each program will do
project plan
describes how the project team will go about developing the system
business value
describes the benefits that the organization should expect from the system
architecture design
describes the hardware, software and network infrastructure that will be used
economic feasibility/cost-benefit analysis
determined by identifying costs and benefits associated with the system, assigning values to them, calculating future cash flows, and measuring the financial worthiness of the project
Net present value
difference between the total present value of the benefits and the total present value of the costs
system proposal
document that combines analyses, system concept, requirements, and models
project manager
ensures that the project is completed on time and within budget and that the system delivers the expected value to the organization
feasibility analysis
examines key aspects of the proposed project (technical, economic and organizational feasibility)
implementation phase
final phase in the SDLC during which the system is actually built (or purchased and installed if the design calls for a prewritten software package)
requirements analyst
focuses on eliciting the requirements from the stakeholders associated with the new system.
infrastructure analyst
focuses on technical issues surrounding the ways the system will interact with the organization's technical infrastructure
systems analyst role
focuses on the IS issues surrounding the system; this person develops ideas and suggestions for ways that IT can support and improve business processes, helps design new business processes supported by IT, designs the new information system, and ensures that all IS standards are maintained
business analyst
focuses on the business issues surrounding the system; this person helps to identify the business value that the system will create, develops ideas for improving the business processes and helps design new business processes and policies
change management analyst
focuses on the people and management issues surrounding the system installation
planning phase
fundamental process of understanding why an information system should be built and determining how the project team will go about building it
feasibility analysis
guides the organization in determining whether to proceed with the project
champion
high-level executive and is usually the project sponsor
organizational feasibility
how well the system will be accepted by its users and incorporated into the ongoing operations of the organizations
tangible benefits
include revenue that the system enables the organization to collect, such as increased sales
analysis strategy
includes studying the current system, its problems and envisioning ways to design a new system
organizational management
management encourages people in the organization to use the system and to accept the many changes that the system will likely create
project sponsor
person/department generating systems request; primary contact for the project
support plan
plan usually includes a formal or informal post-implementation review
business need
presents the reasons prompting the project
business requirements
refer to the business capabilities that the system must have
intangible value
results from an intuitive belief that the system provides important, but hard-to-measure benefits to the organization (e.g. improved customer service, a better competitive position)
business process improvement (BPI)
results from studying the business processes, creating new, redesigned processes to improve the process workflows and/or utilizing new technologies enabling new process structures
interface design
specifies how users will move through the system
system users
stakeholders who ultimately use the system once it has been installed in the organization
system construction
system is built and tested to ensure that it performs as designed
emerging technology
technology that is in the early stages of widespread business use
technical feasibility
the extent to which the system can be successfully designed, developed and installed by the IT group
strategic alignment
the fit between the project and business strategy
installation
the process by which the old system is turned off and the new one is turned on
systems development life cycle(SDLC)
the process of determining how an information system (IS) can support business needs, designing the system, building it and delivering it to users
project initiation
the system's business value to the organization is identified
operational costs
those tangible costs that are required to operate the system
development costs
those tangible expenses that are incurred during the creation of the system