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Chapter 17 Managing Information MGMT Chuck Williams Designed & Prepared by B-books, Ltd. 1 Moore’s Law 2 Why Information Matters After reading these sections, you should be able to: 1. explain the strategic importance of information. 2. describe the characteristics of useful information (i.e., its value and costs). 3 Data versus Information • Raw data = facts + figures • Information = useful data that influences choices 4 Strategic Importance of Information First-Mover Advantage Sustaining a Competitive Advantage 1 5 First-Mover Advantage First-Mover Advantage The strategic advantage that companies earn by being the first to use new information technology to lower costs or to differentiate a product. 1.1 6 Cable versus DSL Cable companies have invested $90 billion over the last decade to create a first-mover advantage in delivering highspeed Internet. 7 Fast Facts on First Movers ON AVERAGE: First movers earn a 30% market share. Later movers earn a 19% share. Of market leaders, a whopping 70% were first movers. 8 Sustaining a Competitive Advantage NO Does the information technology (IT) create YES value? Competitive Disadvantage NO Is the IT different across competing YES firms? Competitive Parity NO 1.2 Is it difficult for another firm to create or buy the IT? Temporary Competitive Advantage YES Sustained Competitive Advantage 9 Characteristics of Useful Information • • • • • • • Accurate Verifiable Timely Organized Accessible Relevant Complete 2 10 Costs of Useful Information • • • • • Acquisition Processing Storage Retrieval Communication Costs 2 11 Getting and Sharing Information After reading these sections, you should be able to: 3. explain the basics of capturing, processing, and protecting information. 4. describe how companies can access and share information and knowledge. 12 Capturing Information Manual Bar Codes Electronic Radio Frequency Identification Tags Electronic Scanners 3.1 Optical Character Recognition 13 Processing Information: Data Mining Supervised Data Mining Data Warehouse Unsupervised Data Mining Affinity Patterns Sequence Patterns Predictive Patterns Data Clusters 3.2 14 Unsupervised Data Mining Affinity Patterns Two or more database elements occur together significantly Sequence Patterns One of the elements precedes the other Predictive Patterns Helps identify database elements that are different Data Clusters Three or more database elements occur together 3.2 15 Protecting Information Authentication Authorization Two-factor authentication Firewalls Antivirus software Data encryption Virtual private networks Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption 3.3 16 Protecting Information Firewall - Security system consisting of hardware and/or software that prevents unauthorized intrusion 17 Protecting Information • What is a biometric device? Authenticates person’s identity using personal characteristic Fingerprint, hand geometry, voice, signature, and iris 18 Next Protecting Information • What is encryption? Safeguards against information theft Process of converting plaintext (readable data) into ciphertext (unreadable characters) Encryption key (formula) often uses more than one method To read the data, the recipient must decrypt, or decipher, the data 19 Next Next Tips for Protecting Data Beyond the Book • Rule #1: Understand the real value of data (not just the value of the disk it’s on) and treat it accordingly. • Encrypt data. • Track data that you send to someone else. • Use a coding system to label the value of a disk or a memory stick. Source: B. Worthen, “Workers Losing Computer Data May Lack Awareness of its Value,” The Wall Street Journal, 27 November 2007, B3. 20 Accessing and Sharing Information and Knowledge Internal Access and Information Sharing External Access and Information Sharing 4 Sharing of Knowledge and Expertise 21 Executive Information System (EIS) • Uses internal and external data • Used to monitor and analyze organizational performance • Must provide accurate, complete, relevant, and timely information to managers 4.1 22 Intranets • Private company networks • Allow employees to access, share, and publish information • A firewall permits only authorized internal access 4.1 23 Why Companies Use Intranets • Inexpensive • Increase efficiencies and reduce costs • Intuitive and easy to use • Work across all computer systems • Can be built on top of existing network • Work with software programs that convert to HTML • Software is available at no cost or is less expensive 4.1 24 Corporate Portals Corporate Portals A hybrid of executive information systems and intranets that allow managers and employees to use a Web browser to gain access to customized company information and to complete specialized transactions. 4.1 25 External Access and Sharing Electronic Data Interchange Extranets Web Services Internet 4.2 26 Benefits of External Access and Sharing Reduced costs Increased productivity Reduced data entry errors Improved customer service Faster communications 4.2 27 Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Electronic Data Interchange When two companies convert their purchase and ordering information to a standardized format to enable the direct electronic transmission of that information from one computer system to the other. 4.2 28 Extranet Extranet Allows companies to exchange information and conduct transactions with outsiders by providing them direct, Web-based access to authorized parts of a company’s intranet or information system. 4.2 29 Web Services Web Services Using standardized protocols to describe data from one company in such a way that those data can automatically be read, understood, transcribed, and processed by different computer systems in another company. 4.2 30 Sharing Knowledge and Expertise Decision Support System Helps managers to understand specific kinds of problems and potential solutions, and to analyze the impact of different decision options using “what if” scenarios. Expert System An information system that contains the specialized knowledge and decision rules used by experts so that nonexperts can draw on this knowledge base to make decisions. 4.3 31 Sharing Knowledge and Expertise • What is an expert system? Captures and stores knowledge of human experts and then imitates human reasoning and decision making Consists of two components knowledge base— combined subject knowledge and experiences of human experts inference rules—set of logical judgments applied to the knowledge base 32 Sharing Knowledge and Expertise • What is an example of an expert system? Step 1. A user selects his or her gender Step 2. Select the location on the body where the problem is being experienced Step 3. Select the type of pain. Step 5. Review the possible diagnosis. Step 4. Select other information about the problem. 33