WHY INFORMATION SYSTEMS ARE IMPORTANT
An
understanding of the effective and responsible use and management of
information systems is important for managers and other business knowledge
workers in today’s global information society.
Information systems and technologies have become a vital component of
successful businesses and organizations.
Information systems constitute an essential field of
study in business administration and management, as they are considered a major
functional area in business operations.
THE REAL WORLD OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Analysing BellSouth Corp.
We can learn a lot about the importance of information technology and
information systems from this case. Take
a few minutes to read it, and we will discuss it (See BellSouth Corporation: The Business Payback of Information Technology
in Section IX).
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Managerial end users need to know how information systems can be
employed successfully in a business environment. The important question for any business end
user or manager is: What do you need to know in order to help manage the
hardware, software, data, and network resources of your business, so they are
used for the strategic success of your company?
An IS Framework for Business Professionals:
Managers or business professionals are not required to know the complex
technologies, abstract behavioral concepts, or the specialized applications
involved in the field of information systems. It illustrates a
useful conceptual framework that outlines what a manager or business
professional needs to know about information systems. It emphasizes five areas of knowledge:
·
Foundation Concepts
·
Information Technologies
·
Business Applications
·
Development Processes
·
Management Challenges
What is an Information System?
An information system (IS) can be any organized
combination of people, hardware, software, communications networks, and data
resources that collect, transforms, and disseminate information in an
organization.
Information Technologies:
Business professionals rely on many types of information systems that
use a variety of information technologies.
For example:
Types of IS -
Manual (paper-and-pencil) information systems
-
Informal (word-of-mouth) information systems
-
Formal (written procedures) information systems
-
Computer-based information systems
Computer-based information systems (IS) use
hardware, software, the Internet, and other telecommunications networks,
computer-based data resource management techniques, and other forms of information
technologies (IT)
to transform data resources into a variety of information products for
consumers and business professionals.
SYSTEM CONCEPTS - A FOUNDATION
System concepts underlie the field of information systems. Understanding system concepts will help you
understand many other concepts in the technology, applications, development,
and management of information systems. System concepts help you understand:
·
Technology. That computer networks are
systems of information processing components that uses a variety of hardware,
software, data and telecommunication technologies.
·
Applications. That electronic business and
commerce involves interconnected business information systems.
·
Development. That developing ways to use
information technology n business includes designing the basic components of
information systems.
·
Management. That managing information
technology emphasizes the quality, strategic business value, and security of an
organization’s information systems.
What is a System?
Question: What is a
system as it applies to the concept of an information system?
Answer: A system
is a group of interrelated components working together toward a common goal by
accepting inputs and producing outputs in an organized transformation process.
A system (sometimes called a dynamic system) has three basic
interacting components or functions.
These include:
·
Input involves capturing and assembling elements that enter the system to be
processed.
·
Processing involves transformation processes that convert input into output.
·
Output involves transferring elements that have been produced by a
transformation process to their ultimate destination.
Feedback and Control:
Two additional components of the system concept include feedback and
control. A system with feedback and
control components is sometimes called a cybernetic system, that is, a
self-monitoring, self-regulating system.
·
Feedback is data about the performance of a system.
·
Control involves monitoring and evaluating feedback to determine whether a
system is moving toward the achievement of its goals. The control function then makes necessary
adjustments to a system's input and processing components to ensure that it
produces proper output.
Other System Characteristics:
A system does not exist in a vacuum; rather, it exists and functions in
an environment containing other systems.
Subsystem: A system that is a component of a larger
system, where the larger system is its environment.
System Boundary: A system is separated from its environment and other systems by its
system boundary.
Interface: Several systems may share the same
environment. Some of these systems may
be connected to one another by means of a shared boundary, or interface.
Open System: A system that interacts
with other systems in its environment is called an open system (connected to
its environment by exchanges of inputs and outputs).
Adaptive System: A system that has the ability
to change itself or its environment in order to survive is called an adaptive
system.
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