Business and IS Performance(IS 6010)
MBS BIS 2010 / 2011
21st October 2010
Fergal Carton ([email protected])Accounting Finance and Information Systems
Last week• Apple reporting exercise
– Steve Jobs about to report results
– You are asked to provide gift card revenue figures for Cork
• Channels used to sell gift cards eg. HMV
• Denominations sold (pre-set values or user definable?)
• Do retailers pay for cards up front?
• At what point are Apple able to recognise revenue from sale?
• What is the impact for sales reporting?
– Make up of actual spend of gift card by product not known
– Inventory impact versus non-inventory?
• Framework for reporting gift card performance?
This week• Co-ordination strategies
• Information sharing
• Basic flows of information
• Integration of demand and supply
• Types of data
• Production planning
• How do managers do their work
• Virtualisation
• Integration framework
• “One version of the truth”
• Integration benefits and downsides
• Control objective is undermined by lack of flexibility
Co-ordination strategies
• Co-ordination consists of:– Protocols, tasks and decision mechanisms to achieve concerted
action between interdependent units (Thompson, 1967)– Decomposing goals to activities (Malone & Crowston, 1990)– People, resources and systems (Hepp & Roman, 07)
• Two key co-ordination strategies:– Centralisation of decision making (purpose agenda)– Standardisation of process (efficiency agenda)
• Inherent tension between individual and organisation• Strategies impact flexibility of organisation differently• IT only provides means of co-ordination, not reason
How can data be shared
– Face to face
– Hard copy
– Soft copy or email
– Interface between applications
– Access to a shared database
– …
Criteria for information sharing
– Integrity – Timing of information exchange– Knowing information is up to date – Ownership of data– Accountability if information is incorrect, incomplete– Decision responsibility
Types of data 1
• Volume data (production)• consumption data (raw material, packaging…)• personnel data• maintenance data• time related measurements• productivity data• …
• All form the basis of the calculations used to monitor manufacturing activities
Type of data 2• Primary data:
– taken straight from the floor (input and output)– e.g. production, consumption, labour, maintenance– ad-hoc reports - e.g. accidents, defects
• Secondary data or calculated data:– allocated costs– productivity– pay bonuses– variances
• High level data:– investigations of variances– soft information about staff morale etc...
Type of data: soft information
• Data collection - – Grapevine– factory tours (talking and observing)
• Data storage -– managers’ minds– special reports
• Data usage:– ad-hoc basis– decision making
Production planning and forecastIn theory, it’s simple– Sales forecast future demand for products– Production plan to meet forecast sales
But, in real life, there are many contingencies:
– Sales tend to be optimistic– Most businesses exhibit seasonality– Customers are unpredictable– Forecasts are based on average prices– Yield may be poor due to quality issues– …
How managers do their work
• What is happening? Actual
• What should be happening? Plan
• What therefore would happen if? What-if?
• Adjust plan and/or change actual Manage
Virtualisation
• Virtualisation: capturing & storing data relating to changes in the physical environment in an information system
• A measure of the degree to which information systems can reflect business reality
• Pre-supposes a structure (database), as data captured is related to a logical entity
Integration framework
Execute Schedule
Measure
Performance control
Supply Demand
Resourcevisibility
Physical
VirtualPlan
PlanPlan
Why is “one truth” so hard?
• Eg. Up to date picture of revenue?
– Easy bit: • all product shipped to date
– Hard bit:• Spares, loaners, replacement machines, …• Deduct any current credit notes• Add any outstanding debts from previous invoices• Apportion revenue from service contract (12 months)• Allow for discount to be applied if paid on time• Currency exchange rate fluctuations …• …
– Revenue recognition “rules”
What does integration mean?• Dearden 72
– As computer use expands, control is vital– Single group of experts design a completely integrated
supersystem = absurd– Specialist expertise is functional by nature– Finance, logistics, sales = different expertise– Centralisation of control of systems = dangerous – Examine the interfaces
• Vizard 06– Data used to be in disparate databases– Data now in databases, file systems, applications, …– “One truth” concerning the state of a business process– Interdependent business processes (eg. sales & service)– Meta-data structures– Enterprise Application Integration vs. BI tools
Who benefits?
• Finance gain greater visibility
• Manufacturing?– Demand may be too unstable for MRP– Production planning needs more “nuance”– ERP is too literal– Much planning still done on Spreadsheets
• Sales: need of integration
Integration downsides• Response times• Vulnerability: single point of failure• Limitations on expansion• Dependence on single vendor• Flexibility to change system• …• …• Access to basic information is complicated