LEARNING OUTCOMES
1.1 Compare
management information systems (MIS) and information technology (IT)
1.2 Describe the relationships among people,
information technology, and information
1.3 Identify four different
departments in a typical business and explain how technology helps them to work
together
1.4 Compare the four different types
of organizational information cultures and decide which culture applies to your
school
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY'S ROLE IN BUSINESS
Information technology is everywhere in
business
Information Technology’s
Impact on Business Operations
-Organizations typically operate by functional
areas or functional silos
-Functional areas are interdependent
-Functional areas are interdependent
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY BASICS
Information
technology (IT) – a field concerned with
the use of technology in managing and processing information
-Information technology is an important enabler of business success and innovation
Management
information systems (MIS) –
- a general name for the business function and academic discipline covering the application of people, technologies, and procedures to solve business problems
- MIS is a business function, similar to Accounting, Finance, Operations, and Human Resources
- When beginning to learn about information technology it is important to understand
-Data, information, and business
intelligence IT resources
-IT cultures
INFORMATION
Data - raw facts that describe the characteristic
of an event
Information - data converted into a meaningful and
useful context
Business
intelligence – applications and technologies that are used
to support decision-making efforts
Data, Information, and BI
- Data in an Excel Spreadsheet
- Data turned into information
- Information turned into Business Intelligence
•Data in an Excel Spreadsheet
•Information turned into Business Intelligence
IT RESOURCES
-People use
-Information technology to work with
-Information
Organizational information cultures include:
Information-Functional
Culture - Employees use information as a means of
exercising influence or power over others. For example, a manager in sales
refuses to share information with marketing. This causes marketing to need the
sales manager’s input each time a new sales strategy is developed.
Information-Sharing
Culture - Employees
across departments trust each other to use information (especially about
problems and failures) to improve performance.
Information-Inquiring
Culture - Employees across departments search for
information to better understand the future and align themselves with current
trends and new directions.
Information-Discovery
Culture - Employees across departments are open to new
insights about crisis and radical changes and seek ways to create competitive
advantages.
END OF CHAPTER ONE
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