Chapter 2 Information Systems for Competitive Advantage

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Transcript Chapter 2 Information Systems for Competitive Advantage

Chapter 2
Information Systems for
Competitive Advantage
Information Systems Today
Leonard Jessup and Joseph Valacich
Chapter 2 Objectives
• Understand the IS in automation, organizational
learning, and strategic support
• Understand IS for strategic organizational success
• Understand the need for making an IS business case
• Understand technological innovations to improve
competitive advantage
Why Use Information
Systems?
• Automating: doing things faster
• Organizational learning: doing things better
• Supporting Strategy: doing things smarter
Automating:
Doing Things Faster
• Technology is used to automate a manual
process
– Doing things faster, better, cheaper
– Greater accuracy and consistency
• Loan application example
– Manual processing
– Technology-supported process
– Completely automated
Organizational Learning:
Doing Things Better
• Going beyond automation
– Involves learning to improve the day-to-day activities
within the process
– Looking at patterns and trends
• Organizational Learning
– Using acquired knowledge and insights to improve
organizational behavior
• Total Quality Management (TQM)
– Monitoring an organization to improve quality of
operations, products, and services
Supporting Strategy:
Doing Things Smarter
Strategic Planning
1. Create a vision: setting the direction
2. Create a standard: performance targets
3. Create a strategy: reaching the goal
Types of Competitive Advantage
• Low-Cost Leadership
– Best prices on goods/services
– Examples: Dell, Target
• Differentiation
– Best products or services
– Examples: Porsche, Nordstrom, IBM
• Best-Cost Provider (middle-of-the-road)
– Reasonable quality, competitive prices
– Example: Wal-Mart
Information Systems for
Competitive Advantage
• A clear strategy is essential
• Sources of competitive advantage:
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Best-made product
Superior customer service
Lower costs
Superior manufacturing technology
Shorter lead times
Well-known brand name
High value per cost
Information Systems for
Competitive Advantage
• IS and Value Chain Analysis
– VC Analysis: adding value within an organization
– Organizations as big input/output processes
– IS can automate many value chain activities:
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Purchased supplies inbound logistics
Operations
Outbound logistics
Sales and marketing
Service
Organizational Value Chain
Information Systems for
Competitive Advantage
• The Role of IS in Value Chain Analysis
• IS competitive advantage in VCA:
– Internet link with suppliers, dealers
• Extranets: using the Internet for B2B interactions
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Computer-aided manufacturing systems
Web site with online product ordering
Customer service response system
Computer-aided design
Information Systems for
Competitive Advantage
• The Technology/Strategy Fit
– An IS implementation should create a significant
organizational change consistent with the
business strategy
• Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
Making the Business Case for a
System
• The Productivity Paradox (how to quantify gains?)
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Measurement problems
End-user development
Decision support systems (DSS)
Strategic systems
Time lags
Redistribution
Mismanagement
Making the Business Case for a
System
• Making a Successful Business Case
– Arguments Based on Faith
– Arguments Based on Fear
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Industry factors
Stage of maturity
Regulation
Nature of competition or rivalry
– Arguments Based on Facts
• Cost-benefit analysis for a web-based system
– Recurring/nonrecurring costs
– Tangible/intangible costs
– Tangible/intangible benefits
Presenting the Business Case
• Know the Audience
– The IS Manager
– Company Executives (VPs and higher)
– Steering Committee
• Convert Benefits to Monetary Terms
Presenting the Business Case
• Devise Proxy Variables
– Measure changes in terms of perceived value
• Develop a Work Profile Matrix
– Time spent on each job, each type of work
• Measure What Is Important to Management
• Conoco: Making a Business Case
• Changing Mindsets About Information
Systems
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
• Deploying new technologies faster, better, and
cheaper than competitors
• Using new technology in innovative ways
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
• The Need for Constant IS Innovation
• On the lookout for new technologies that
impact business
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
• E-Business Innovation Cycle
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Choosing enabling/emerging technologies
Matching with economic opportunities
Executing business innovation for growth
Assessing client value
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
• Implications of E-Business Innovation Cycle
– Begin with technology when considering
successful business strategies
– Marketing is secondary to IT
– Emerging technology cycle is ongoing
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
Terms and Concepts
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E-commerce (Internet-related)
E-business (any IT that supports business)
Enabling technologies
Economic opportunities
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
The Cutting Edge vs. The Bleeding Edge
• Information systems are often bought from, or
built by, someone else
• An organization typically cannot patent an IS
• Rivals can copy emerging information systems
• Therefore, one’s IS competitive advantage can be
short-lived
Competitive Advantage
in Being at the Cutting Edge
Requirements for Being at the Cutting Edge
• Consider Porter’s competitive forces
• To deploy emerging systems well:
– Organization must adapt well to change
– Human capital available for deployment (knowledge,
time, skills)
– Tolerance of risk and uncertainty