Information Technology for Information Technology for Strategic, Competitive Strategic, Competitive
Advantage: Technologies, Advantage: Technologies, Management and the Real WorldManagement and the Real World
Virginia Franke Kleist, Ph.D.
October 28, 2003
Assistant Professor
Division of MIS/Management
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Welcome to the Technology Welcome to the Technology Part of the ProgramPart of the Program
Purpose of this class is to cover three aspects of information technology:
1. TECHNOLOGIES: Current and new trends in information technologies
2. MANAGEMENT: How can IT be used for strategic, competitive advantage?
3. REAL WORLD: Real world case of electronic commerce applications
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What about your firm?What about your firm?
How are you using information technology (IT) today in your firms and businesses?
How successful has this been for your firm? Do you have problems that are still unresolved
with Information Technology? Can IT give competitive advantage, anyway? How can one identify which technologies will best
give strategic advantage?
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Instructor BackgroundInstructor BackgroundEducational backgroundProfessional backgroundResearch focus:
– Biometrics Industry Cost/Benefit– Biometrics Industry Performance– Metrics in Technology: The ROI– Electronic Markets– Network Security infrastructures
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What are the latest What are the latest technologies of interest?technologies of interest?
TCP/IP and the Internet
CPU’s and hardware
Software and the open source code movement
Client/server computing
Storage area networks
Interactive multimedia
Developments in Electronic Commerce
Databases and Datamining
Handhelds, M-commerce
Knowledge Management tools and Artificial Intelligence
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Technologies: TCP/IP and Technologies: TCP/IP and the Internetthe Internet
Codes, bits and bytesAnalog vs. Digital transmissionPacket switching and circuit switchingThe IP address, TCP/IP layersDomain name resolutionThe world is becoming digitalPhysical vs. Logical connectivity
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Technologies: CPU’s and Technologies: CPU’s and SoftwareSoftware
Hardware components of a computer system Buses, CPUs, MHz, RAM, Gigs and cache Bits and Bytes, storage Moore’s Law and price points per MIPs Mainframes, RISC computers, Parallel processing Open source movement in operating systems Enterprise Resource Planning software Object oriented programming
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Technologies: Client Server Technologies: Client Server ComputingComputing
Distributed processing vs. centralized processing
Network computingServersBridges and routers, gatewaysNetwork managementEthernet and Token Ring
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Technologies: Storage Area Technologies: Storage Area NetworksNetworks
Mirrors and provides redundancyFibre channel connectivityEMC, Compaq, HPFits with trend to pushing density of
corporate data further out into the “cloud” network
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Technologies: Interactive Technologies: Interactive MultimediaMultimedia
Groupware Voice over IP Streaming technology Flash, Maya, sophistication of Electronic
Commerce pages MP3 Peer to peer sharing of applications Seeing corporate uses in training applications
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Technologies: Electronic Technologies: Electronic CommerceCommerce
The client/server/database three tier modelHTML, JavaScriptXML vs. EDIASP and ActiveX, PHP, CGIUltradev, Flash, DW and development toolsSecurity and encryption issuesIntranets and Extranets
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Technologies: Databases, Technologies: Databases, DataminingDatamining
Data is the company’s strategic asset (PWC)
Data warehouses, multidimensional databases and data marts
OLAP vs. OLTP processingInformix, Oracle and Red BrickThe database management system
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Technologies: Handhelds and Technologies: Handhelds and M- CommerceM- Commerce
How does a cell phone work? WAP technology Palm and Visor The Win CE platform Linux in the small devices EPOC operating system What is M-commerce and what does it mean to
me?
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Technologies: Knowledge Technologies: Knowledge Management Tools and Artificial Management Tools and Artificial
IntelligenceIntelligenceExamples of Knowledge Management
systemsExpert systems: the earthenware damNeural NetworksFuzzy logicIntelligent agents
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Management: Information Management: Information Systems PlanningSystems Planning
IS plan maps to the corporate strategic planVariety of IS planning styles: CSF,
Enterprise, other formal structuresPlan itself: What are the components?Organizational change from systems:
TQM, BPR, paradigm shifts or simple automation?
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Management: the Systems Management: the Systems Development Life CycleDevelopment Life Cycle
Systems analysisSystems designProgrammingTestingConversionProduction mode and ongoing maintenance
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Management: ImplementationManagement: Implementation The RFP document Financial issues for IS planning The payback concerns Programming: the mythical man/month Construction issues testing and maintenance end users prototypes and pilots outsourcing
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Management: Security Issues Management: Security Issues
System quality, reliability, accuracyData security controlsThe firewall and internet issues (hackers,
viruses, trojan horses, denial of service attacks)
Encryption, DES, SSL, SETBiometrics
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Strategic Advantage: IT at Strategic Advantage: IT at workwork
IT and changes in the organization of business: flatter, leaner, teams, JIT, global
Datamining and WalmartE-commerce and the supply chain at DellM-commerce and Progressive AutoInternet and EggheadAmerican Airlines, Baxter, Citibank
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Strategic Advantage: How does Strategic Advantage: How does one come up with this idea, one come up with this idea,
anyway?anyway?(Laudon and Laudon, 2000)(Laudon and Laudon, 2000)
Porter’s Value Chain: primary and support activities
The competitive forces model: Threats from new market entrants, suppliers, substitute products and customers
Core competenciesNetwork economics
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Some Problems from IT for Some Problems from IT for Competitive AdvantageCompetitive Advantage
The productivity paradoxTangible vs. intangible benefits from ITFuture cash flows analysisUnique vs. staying even with competitionValue from simple automation projectsValue from highly risky, but strategic IT
projectsRisk vs. return issues
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How can your firm benefit How can your firm benefit from IT?from IT?
In supply chain management through inventory management
In the customer interface via ecommerceIn logistics through GPS/GISIn client management through groupwareIn marketing through dataminingIn internal management through Intranets
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Real World: The Dell CaseReal World: The Dell Case
How did Dell achieve success? What IT technologies did Dell use? How does Dell use ecommerce successfully? What are the ways that Dell uses IT for strategic,
competitive advantage? What is Dell’s business model? Will Dell be able to keep this success going, given
the recent troubles?