Transcript Folie 1
Next-Generation User-Centered Information Management
Information Management Processes
Snezhana Dubrovskaya,
Master Student in Information Systems
[email protected]
31.03.2005
Software Engineering for Business Applications (sebis)
Ernst Denert Chair (19)
Institute for Informatics
Technical University Munich
wwwmatthes.in.tum.de
Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Life cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
• What is information
• Challenges for IM
• Definition and tasks of IM
• IM as integrated framework
Personal Information Management
Community-Oriented Information Management
Enterprise-Oriented Information Management
• Summary
Information Management Processes
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Information as a Model
„Modell-about what – from whom- for what purpose“
Subject
In order
to affect
A
Subject
disposes of
Information
= Model
Information
about
A
Original
Original
(Quelle: Steinmüller, W.: Informationstechnologie und Gesellschaft:
Eine Einführung in die angewandte Informatik. Darmstadt 1993, S.178.)
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Signs-Data-Information-Knowledge
knowledge
Mechanism
of currency
market
networking
information
Exchange rate
0,87 € = 1 US $
Kontext
data
0, 87
Syntax
sign
„0“, „8“, „7“ und „ , “
Character set
(Quelle: Krcmar, 2004, S.14)
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Challenges for Information Management
• Outbound: customers/environment
live the proximity to costumers
enable mobility of employees, personal mobility
• Inbound: employees and processes
keep processes integrated and simple
enable self-responsibility
deploy and use synergies
support ability to innovate
• Overall: cohesiveness
achieve cohesiveness
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Definition and Tasks of IM
Definition:
“IM is understood as a part of business management. The function of IM is to
ensure optimal use of the resource information with regard to business objectives”
Source: Krcmar, Informationsmanagement, 2004, p. 1
Main tasks:
•management of:
the information economy,
the information systems and
the information and communication technologies of an enterprise.
•IM contains general management functions
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IM - Integrated Framework by Krcmar
Managerial Functions
of Information
Management
Management of
Information
IT-Governance
Strategy
Supply
Demand
Usage
Data
Management of
Processes
Information Systems
Application
life cycle
IT-Processes
Management of
IT-Personnel
Information and
Communication
IT-Controlling
Information Management Processes
Technology
Storage
Processing
Communication
Technology Bundles
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Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Life cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
Personal information management
Communities- Oriented Information Management
Enterprise-oriented inromation management
• Summary
Information Management Processes
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Management of Information - Life Cycle
MANAGEMENT OF INFORMATION DEMAND
requirements
INFORMATION USER
must make a
choice,
to have curiosity
MANAGEMENT
OF INFORMATION SOURCES
SOURCE OF
INFORMATION
1. detect, 2. collect, 3. explain,
4. network, 5. collect, 6. acquire
network
use
interpret
evaluate
OFFER OF INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION USAGE
MANAGEMENT
understand infolr mations,
offer them interpretable
evaluate
infor mations
RESOURCE OF INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT
make it
useable
INFORMATION
PRODUCT | SERVICE
analyze, rearrange,
reproduce, reduce,
consolidate
RESOURCE OF
INFORMATION
1. structure, 2. represent, 3. store,
4. ensure physical access, 5. verify,
6. enable intellectual access
7. maintain, cultivate
Information Management Processes
allocate:
distribute, transmit
adapt to
user
requirements
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Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Lyfe cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
• Information logistic principle
• Information problems
Personal information management
• Input/output factors
Communities-Oriented Information
• InformationManagement
quality
• Information supply
Enterprise-oriented inromation
management
• Information
usage
• Life cycles with further cycles
• Summary
Information Management Processes
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Information logistics
Part of IM, that focuses on information flows and information channels.
Information logistics principle:
Existance of
- the right information
(actual, needed, understood & free of errors)
- at the right momemt
(just in time for the current usage/purpose, sufficient
for decision making)
- in the right quantity
(as much as necessary, as little as possible)
- at the right place
(available for the receiver)
- in the necessary quality
(sufficiently detailled and correct, immediately /
unfiltered).
Source: Krcmar: Informationsmanagement, 2004, p. 55
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Information Problems
1. Flood of data, but (perceived) lack of information
2. Reasons for imperfect information
Half-life period of information relevance
Cost and effort of information acquisition
Complexity of decision
Perception conflicts
3. Differences between subjectively perceived and objectivly existing information
demand
4. Problems of information reception and information processing
5. Other problems in companies become information problems
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Determining the Information Status
Objective
Information
Demand
Info.
Info.
Status
Demand
Subjective
Information
Demand
Information Supply
Source: Picot 1988, p. 246
in Krcmar 2004,
Informationsmanagement, p. 60
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Information Overflow and Supply of Information
Prepared offer of information
for management
1 report ~ 500 kiloby tes
Total offer of information
production p.a. ~ 5 exabytes
Information Management Processes
decision-relevant
amount of information
10 numbers
~ 500 bytes
with headlines
choice of data media:
printing units, films, optical data carrier,
magnetic data carrier
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Input/Output Factors I
The main input factor: Visualisation
Theory of Paivio:
human information perception and processing are devided into pictorial
and semantic levels
under this dichotomy, the information is stored as two tapes of knowledge
Visualisation – process or activity by which non-visual information is
converted into visual information
Forms:
Simple graphics
3-D graphics
Actual pictures
Animation
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Input/Output Factors II
Output factor: Acceptance
Acceptance:
A measure of the positive influence an object has on its recipient
A phenomenon composed of two dimensions:
1. Attitude
-
permanent cognitive and affective orientation of perception
-
readiness-to-react to the object in question
2. Behaviour
-
reaction of the recipient
-
In the actual use (lack of use) of the technology
Acceptance cannot be measured directly
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Management of Information Quality
Management
Principles
Identification
Evaluation
Allocation
Application
Integration
Activity
Validation
Activity
Context
Activity
Activation
Activity
Accurate
Clear
Applicable
Sound
Information
Concise
Consistent
Correct
Current
Optimized
Process
Convenient
Timely
Traceable
Interactive
Reliable
Infrastructure
Accessible
Secure
Maintainable
Fast
Time Dimension
Format Dimension
Content Dimension
Media Quality
Comprehensive
Content Quality
Relevant
Information
Potential conflict
Source: Eppler (2003): Managing Information Quality, 2003, p. 61
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Management of Information Supply
1. Information is processed before being transferred
its value increases.
2. Analysis, re-arrangement, reproduction, reduction and condensation of
information according to the information logistical principle
3. For the information use it is important to understand different user types and
usage contexts.
User modelling comprises different mechanisms
that allow computers to prepare the information for users
application systems apply user models
for adapting problem solving strategies and user dialogues
individually to each user.
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Characteristics of User Models
Merkmale
Characteristics
Zweck
objective
Gegenstand
object
Individualisierung
individualisation
Art
type
derofInformation
information
Ausprägungenvalues
Characteristic
Selektion
selection
Kunde
customer
presentation
Präsentation
Domäne
domain
System
system
receiv er
Empfänger
Rolle organi
role
Organiss . group
Gruppe
Indiv iduell
indi
idual
weicsoft
he Informationen
informations
Bediener
user
differenzierend
differentiated
harte
hard
Fakten
facts
Veränderbarkeit
convertibility
static
statisch
dydy
nami
nami
s ch
c
Gewinnung
extraction
implizc it
ex
ex pli
plicz itit
Einsichtigkeit
transparency
transparent
intransparent
intransparent
Gültigkeit
validity
long-term
langfristig
short-term
kurzfristig
Wissensakquisition
knowledge acquisition
personnel
personell
adapti
ve
lernend
ex ante
ex post
Source: Mertens/Höhl (1999).
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Management of Information Usage
Information usage (in cognitive psychology) describes the decomposition of
cognitive processes into single steps in which information are being processed.
Steps of Information processing (in the broader sense):
Information acquisition
Information storage
Information processing
Information storage
Information transmission
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Management of Information - Life cycle with further cycles
new level / cycle
MANAGEMENT OF INFORMATION DEMAND
INFORMATION USER
requirements
MANAGEMENT OF INFORMATION
SOURCES
SOURCE OF
INFORMATION
1. detect, 2. collect, 3. explain,
4. network, 5. collect, 6. acquire
make it
useable
must make a
choice,
to have curiosity
network
use
interpret
evaluate
MANAGEMENT OF INFORMATION
SUPPLY
INFORMATION
PRODUCT | SERVICE
MANAGEMENT OF INFORMATION
RESOURCES
RESOURCES OF INFORMATION
1. structure, 2. represent, 3. store,
4. ensure physical access, 5. verify,
6. enable intellectual access
7. maintain, cultivate
Information Management Processes
provision:
distribute, transmit
analyze, rearrange,
reproduce, reduce,
consolidate
adapt to
user
requirements
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Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Life cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
Personal information management
Communities-Oriented Information Management
• Definition and Tasks
Enterprise-oriented inromation management
• Information objects
• Summary
Information Management Processes
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Personal Information Management (PIM) I
Definition:
the collecting and handling of information (such as files, email and contacts) by an
individual, for that individual's own use
Tasks of PIM:
Support of the following processes:
Integration of information from different sources
Thematical classification of information objects
Context organisation of information objects (e.g. time, place, things,
person)
Personal assessment and annotation of information objects
Contextualisation of information objects (tasks, projects, roles)
Role-based and task-oriented common use of information objects in
public nets (e.g. Internet)
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Personal Information Management (PIM) II
Examples of Information Objects:
My Knowledge/Information
My Possession
Knowledge/Information
about me
• Personal Contacts, Meetings
and tasks with the links to
perosns, organisations,
enterprises
• Books, magazines, skripta,
guidelines
• My documents (e.g
diploma) and certificates
• Correspondence for me
and documents of my
projects
• Presse messages
• literature and link tipps
• Ideas and personal notes
• CVs
• My artefacts
(publications,audio notes,
videos, pics, software)
• my correspondence
(post, e-mail, fax, chat)
• Downloads (programms,
pics)
• Audio-notes
• Results of medical
examination
• Abonemetns, contracts,
memberships
• User profiles and accounts
• Pics and videos
• Tools (PC/ handheld
software, hardware)
• Further information
(finance, immobile, …)
Source: Matthes/Lehel (2002).
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Personal Information Management (PIM) III
Assessments
Professional
interests
Memeberships
Logged
user
Source: wwwmatthes.in.tum.de
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Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Life cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
Personal information management
Communities-Oriented Information Management
Enterprise-oriented infomation management
• Summary
Information Management Processes
• Defintion
• Personal vs. Community IM
• Information Sources
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Community IM/ Definition of Community:
Community in terms of knowledge management – INFORMAL
COMMUNITY:
Informal, self-organised groups of people
who have common interests
and, thus, to have access to common information
Community in terms of organisations – FORMAL COMMUNITY:
Groups, like function departments or project teams
who have always relied on often incomplete information
from above (directions), from below (status data) and from other parts of
organisation (e.g. updated marketing plans to be used by manufacturing
function)
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Personal vs. Community IM System
Personal IM System:
User can configurate and (re)arrange up to his/her individual habits and
demands the following information sources:
Applications (office tools, email, image processing tools,...)
Web-sites (weblogs)
Discussion forums
E-mail-tools
Etc.
Community IM System:
Serves for information exchange in a group:
Groupware (CSCW)/collaborative work
Discussion forums
References to a person, contexts and processes
Support of ad-hoc processes
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Information Sources
Communities
Data
Human-computer
interaction
Internet
Portal
Data
User
Data
Local
infromation
repositories
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Personal IM System
Private
User
Personal End-Device
Personal Information/
Knowledge System
Audio
Project
documents
Downloads
Contracts
Pics
Assets of a user
(digital documents, no metadata)
Source: Matthes/Lehel (2002).
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Community IM System
Employees
Fellow students
Family
Communities
of Practice
Private
User
Personal End-Device
Corporate usage
Personal Information/Knowledge System
Intergation and formal inclusion
Audio
Project
ocuments
Downloads
Contracts
Pics
Source: Matthes/Lehel (2002).
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Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Lyfe cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
Personal information management
Communities-oriented information management
Enterprise-oriented inromation management • Instruments of IM
• Portals
• Summary
• Weblogs
Information Management Processes
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Instruments of IM
Portals
Enterprise Information Portals
E-Learning Systems
Community Systems
Groupware-Systems
Content-Management-Systems
Document-Management-Systems
DBMS, Datawarehouses
Workflow-Systems
Weblogs
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Personal Information/Knowledge Portals
Definition:
A personal information/knowledge portal is:
an online service that provides a personalized, single point of access (single
sign on) to resources
that support the end-user in one or more tasks (resource discovery, learning,
research etc).
The resources made available via a portal are typically brought together from
more than one source.
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Enterprise-oriented Information/Knowledge Portals
Definition:
Enterprise-oriented portals grant
the organised role-specific access
to relevant information
for employees, customers, partners and service providers of an enterprise
through internet-technologies
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Corporate IM through Personal Information Portal
Employees
Fellow students
Family
Communities
of Practice
Private
User
Personal End-Device
Corporate usage
Personal Information/Knowledge Portal
Intergation and formal inclusion
Audio
Project
ocuments
Downloads
Contracts
Pics
Source: Matthes/Lehel (2002).
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Duality of Pers. and Corp. Information Portals
Users of portal systems have today
end-device (e.g. Web-browser)
Personal tools (DBMS, DMS, CMS, KMS),
- which could be used also to work offline and independently upon their rights in
the system
- to work on relevant information objects long-term
Users possess valuable personal Collections of Information Objects, which
could be managed:
on the one hand decentrally
on the other hand (task-oriented and time-limited) through corporate
portal to grant an access to the colleagues
Only one person is the user of several portal systems (e.g. his/her own
enterprise, an enterprise of project partners, e-learning providers, publishers)
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Motivation of Weblogs
• Problem with the acceptance of portals by employees
• Portals are not used frequently by employees
• Weblogs consider the individual demands of a user
• Weblogs are acceptable
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A brief History of Weblogs
Definition – 1997 by Jorn Barger
First weblogs – home-grown by web designers and software developers
In the early years – handful of them
1999 – weblogging services PITAS, Livejournal, Blogger, EditThisPage.com
Mid-2000 – 1.000 weblogs
Mid-2002 – 500.000 weblogs
Nowadays – 60.000/months, where many of them are only online diaries
Conversational medium
Blogrolling
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Weblogs
Weblogs are Web sites which:
reverse chronologically sorted notes
are updated frequently
are written from the point of view of an individual
usually expose an RSS feed for syndicating the content into various forms
of aggregators
are managed on Web-Community Server
have additional functions to interact with other webloggers and guests
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Weblogs for Personal Knowledge Publishing
User-oriented and informal form for:
registration
publishing
distribution
usage
of knowledge and information
spontaneous information and knowledge forwarding
quick dustribution of knowledge (ideas, observations, cognitions) within the
organisation
Impartion of expert knowledge
Feedback for knowledge carrier through comments
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Example of a Weblog
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Weblogs & RSS-Feeds
User groups
Persons („Blogger“) (privat,
professional)
[Teams]
Organisations, partic.
Mass media
Variants
Photoblog
RSS-Export
Audioblog (Podcast)
Videoblog
RSSImport
Information Management Processes
Quelle: http://20six.de/matthes
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Weblogs: Personal
Community
Enterprise
Discussion about specific Themes
Publication of notes, ideas, thoughts,actual developments in work area
Weblog is a personal asset and is maintained by owner
For an enterprise is an advantage to motivate its employees to team work
Continuous interaction without time and space limitations
Communication with customers and suppliers
Examples:
www.microsoft.com
www.adobe.com
www.nytimes.com
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Teamlogs
Definition:
Teamlogs are
weblogs, which
concern with a specific theme and
are maitained by a group of authors
optional: release workflow by moderators
Examples:
Project diary
Communication support for customers
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Uses of Weblogs
Selection of material
Particular domain of interest
Relevant tailored material
„more personal relevance per unit volume“
Personal information/knowledge management
Chronological record of thoughts, references, notes
Look up the weblog´s content using a search engine
Conversation
Medium of public dicussion
Social networking
Information routing
Information Management Processes
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Agenda
•
An overview of the main aspects of Information Management (IM)
Why information management (IM)?
Management of Information – Life cycle
Information Logistics
• Types of Information Management
Personal information management
Communities-oriented information management
Enterprise-oriented inromation management
• Summary
Information Management Processes
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Summary
We have got acquainted with:
the main aspects of IM as part of the business processes
We have given one of the definitions of IM
analysed the involved processes
different perspectives of IM:
personal (user-centered),
community- and
enterprise-oriented view
different instruments of IM
web portals
weblogs
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Thank you for your attention!!!
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Outlook, Discussion, Questions
How have you understood the difference between information management
and management of the information?
How do you organize your personal information (files, file names, time
management, calender, diaries, idea publishing)?
Do you think it is mostly time waste or time usage to organise your personal
information? Do you need to organise it actually?
Examples
Case Study „ASHA Knowledge Exchange“
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