e-business systems chapter 7 copyright © 2010 by the mcgraw-hill companies, inc. all rights...
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: E-Business Systems Chapter 7 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022062321/56649e165503460f94b006a8/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
e-Business Systems
Chapter 7
Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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Learning Objectives
Identify these cross-functional enterprise systems, and give examples of how they can provide business value to a company– Resource planning
– Customer Relationship Management
– Supply chain management
– Enterprise application integration
– Transaction processing systems
– Enterprise collaboration systems
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Learning Objectives
Give examples of how the Internet and other information technologies support business processes within the business functions of– Accounting
– Finance
– Human resource management
– Marketing
– Production
– Operations management
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Learning Objectives
Understand the need for enterprise application integration to improve the support of business interactions across multiple e-business applications
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Enterprise Business Systems
E-businessUsing the Internet, other networks,
and IT to support…
Electronic commerce
Enterprise communicationsand collaboration
Web-enabled business processes
E-commerce Buying, selling, and marketing of products, services, and information over the Internet and other networks
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Case 1: NetSuite, Berlin Packaging, Churchill Downs…
CRM software helps sales and marketing professionals increase sales revenue by providing more and better services to customers and prospects
CRM implementation– Often fails due to difficulty of migrating data
– Is easier to do early in a company’s history
Companies must ensure data are in order before launching any major CRM initiative
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Case Study Questions
What are the business benefits of CRM implementations for organizations such as Berlin Packaging and Churchill Downs? – What other uses of CRM would you
recommend to the latter?
Do you agree that smaller organizations are better positioned to be more effective users of CRM than larger ones?
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Case Study Questions
One of the main issues in the case is the importance of “good” data to the success of CRM implementations
– In Chapter 5, we compared the file processing and database management approaches to data resource management
Which of the problems discussed theredo you see in this case?
How do CRM applications attempt to address them?
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Cross-Functional Systems
Cross-functional systems cross the boundaries of traditional business functions
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Enterprise Application Architecture
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Managing at the Enterprise Level
Getting the whole business to fly in the same direction, as efficiently as possible
– Customer relationships– Back-office operations– Movement of raw materials & finished goods
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Customer Relationship Management
A customer-centric focus– Customer relationships are a company’s
most valued asset– Every company should find and retain the
most profitable customers possible
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What is CRM?
Managing the full range of the customer relationship involves two related objectives
Managing the full range of the customer relationship involves two related objectives
(2) Providing the customer with a single, complete view of the company and
its extended channels
(1) Providing customer-facing employees with a single, complete view of every customer,at every touch point, across all channels
CRM uses IT to create a cross functional enterprise system that integrates and automates customer-serving processes
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Application Clusters in CRM
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Contact and Account Management
CRM helps sales, marketing, and service professionals capture and track relevant data about– Every past and planned contact with
prospects and customers– Other customer business & life-cycle events
Data are captured through touchpoints– Telephone, fax, e-mail, Websites– Retail stores, kiosks, personal contact
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Sales
A CRM system provides sales reps with the tools and data resources they need to– Support and manage sales activities– Optimize cross- and up-selling
CRM also provides the means to check on a customer’s account status and history before scheduling sales calls
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Marketing and Fulfillment
CRM systems help with direct marketingcampaigns by automating tasks
Qualifying leads for targeted marketing
Scheduling and tracking mailings
Capturing and managing responses
Analyzing the business value of a campaign
Fulfilling responses & requests
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Customer Service and Support
CRM helps customer service managers create, assign and manage customers’ requests for service– Call center software– Help desk software– Web-based self-service
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Retention and Loyalty Programs
Boosting customer
retention 5% can boost
profits 85%
It costs 6 times more to sell to
a new customer
An unhappy customer will
tell 8-10 others
The odds of selling to an
existing customer are 50%; a new
one 15%
70% of complaining customers will do business with the
company again if it quickly fixes a
problem
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Retention and Loyalty Programs
Enhancing and optimizing customer retention and loyalty is a primary objective of CRM– Identify, reward, and market to the most loyal
and profitable customers– Evaluate targeted marketing and relationship
programs
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Three Phases of CRM
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Benefits and Challenges of CRM
Real-time customization and personalization of products and services
Track when and how a customer contacts the company
Identify and target the best customers
Provide a consistent customer experience
Provide superior service and supportacross all customer contact points
Benefits of CRM
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CRM Failures
Business benefits of CRM are not guaranteed– 50% of CRM projects did not produce
promised results– 20% damaged customer relationships
Reasons for failure– Lack of understanding and preparation– Not solving business process problems first– No participation on part of involved business
stakeholders
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What is ERP?
Facilitates business,supplier, and customer
information flows
Facilitates business,supplier, and customer
information flows
Supports basicinternal business
processes
Supports basicinternal business
processes
An integratedsuite of software
modules
An integratedsuite of software
modules
The backbone ofbusiness processesThe backbone of
business processes
A cross-functionalenterprise systemA cross-functionalenterprise system
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ERP Application Components
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Benefits and Challenges of ERP
ERP Business Benefits
1. Quality & efficiency
2. Decreased costs
3. Decision support
4. Enterprise agility
ERPCosts
1. High risk & cost
2. Hardware and software are a small part of overall project
3. Failure can cripple or kill a business
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Costs of Implementing a New ERP
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Causes of ERP Failures
Common Causes of ERP Failure
Over-reliance on ERP vendor or consultants
Under-estimating the complexity of
planning, development,
training
Failure to involve affected employees in planning and development
Trying to do too much, too fast
Insufficient training
Insufficient data conversion and
testing
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Supply Chain Management (SCM)
Supply chain management helps a company– Get the right products– To the right place– At the right time– In the proper quantity– At an acceptable cost
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Goals of SCM
Forecast demand
Enhance relationshipswith customers,
suppliers, distributors,and others
Receive feedback onthe status of everylink in the supply
Control inventory
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What is a Supply Chain?
The interrelationships– With suppliers, customers, distributors, and
other businesses – Needed to design, build, and sell a product
Each supply chain process should add value to the products or services a company produces– Frequently called a value chain
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Supply Chain Life Cycle
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Electronic Data Interchange
The electronic exchange of business transaction documents between supply chain trading partners
One of the earliest uses of information technologyfor supply chain management
Many transactions occur over the Internet,using secure virtual private networks
The almost complete automation of ane-commerce supply chain process
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Typical EDI Activities
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Roles and Activities of SCM in Business
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Planning & Execution Functions of SCM
Supply chain design
Collaborative demand & supply planning
Planning
Materials management
Collaborative manufacturing
Collaborative fulfillment
Execution
Supply chain event management
Supply chain performance management
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Benefits and Challenges of SCM
Key Benefits
Faster, moreaccurate order
processing
Strategicrelationshipswith supplier
Lowertransaction andmaterials cost
Quicker timesto market
Reductions ininventory levels
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Goals and Objectives of SCM
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Benefits and Challenges of SCM
Key Challenges– Lack of demand planning knowledge, tools,
and guidelines– Inaccurate data provided by other information
systems– Lack of collaboration among marketing,
production, and inventory management– SCM tools are immature, incomplete, and
hard to implement
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Enterprise Application Integration
EAI software connects cross-functional systems Serves as middleware to provide
– Data conversion– Communication between systems– Access to system interfaces
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How EAI Works
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Transaction Processing Systems
Cross-functional information systems that process data resulting from the occurrence of business transactions– Transactions include sales, purchases,
deposits, withdrawals, refunds, and payments
– Online transaction processing (OLTP) is a real-time system that captures transactions immediately
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Transaction Processing Systems
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The Transaction Processing Cycle
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Enterprise Collaboration Systems (ECS)
EC systems are cross-functional information systems that enhance team and workgroup– Communication– Coordination– Collaboration
Systems may include– Networked PC workstations– Servers– Databases– Groupware and application packages
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ECS Tools
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Functional Business Systems
Various types of information systems that support the business functions of…
Accounting
Finance
Marketing
Operations management
Human resource management
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Case 2: OHSU, Sony, Novartis, and Others
Oregon Health & Science University uses Oracle’s iRecruitment application, which is part of its E-Business HR Management System suite
– Managers can request a new employee and process applications electronically
– Handles most administrative work, including routing forms and posting jobs on the Web site
– The university fills job openings two weeks fasterand saves $1,500 per job
More and more HR is being called to be a strategic business partner, and professionals in this area are turning to IT for innovative solutions
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Case Study Questions
What are some of the business benefits of the technologies described in the case? – Provide examples beyond the automation
of transaction-oriented processes
Do you think the business value of these strategic HRM applications depends on the type of business a company is in?– For instance, consulting, manufacturing,
or professional services?
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Case Study Questions
What are some of the challenges and obstacles in developing and implementing HRM systems?
– Are these unique to this type of system?
– What strategies would you recommend for companies to meet those challenges?
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IT in Business
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Marketing Systems
Marketing systems are concerned with…
Planning, promotion, and sale of
existing products in
existing markets
Planning, promotion, and sale of
existing products in
existing markets
Development of new
products and new markets
Development of new
products and new markets
Better attracting and
serving present and
potential customers
Better attracting and
serving present and
potential customers
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Marketing Information Systems
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Interactive Marketing
Interactive Marketing– A customer-focused marketing process– Uses the Internet, intranets, and extranets– Establishes two-way transactions between
a business and its customers or potential customers
Goal– Profitably use networks to attract and keep
customers– Get customers to help create, purchase, and
improve products and services
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Targeted Marketing
Advertising and promotion managementconcept with five targeting components
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Sales Force Automation
Outfit sales force with notebook computers, web browsers, and sales contact software– Connect them to marketing websites and
the company intranet
Goals– Increase personal productivity– Speed up capture and analysis of sales data– Gain strategic advantage
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Manufacturing Information Systems
Supports production/operations functions– All activities concerned with planning and
control of the processes tied to producing goods or services
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Computer-Integrated Manufacturing
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CIM Objectives
Simplify… production processes, product designs, and factory organization
Automate… production processes and the business functions that support them
Integrate… all production and support processes using– Networks– Cross-functional business software– Other information technologies
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CIM Objectives
CIM supports the concepts of…
Agilemanufacturing
Total qualitymanagement
(TQM)
Flexiblemanufacturing
systems
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Manufacturing Information Systems
Computers help engineers design products– Computer-aided engineering (CAE)
– Computer-aided design (CAD)
– Computer-aided manufacturing (CAM)
Manufacturing also uses software– Computer-aided process planning
– Material requirements planning (MRP)
– Manufacturing resource planning
– Manufacturing execution systems (MES)
– Process and machine control
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Human Resource Management (HRM)
Information systems support– Planning to meet personnel needs
– Development of employees to their full potential
– Control of all personnel policies and programs
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HRM Systems
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HRM and the Internet
Recruitment viathe company website
& commercialrecruiting services
Posting messagesin selected Internet
newsgroups
Communicating withjob applicants
via e-mail
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HRM and Corporate Intranets
Corporate intranet uses
Disseminate information faster
than previous company channels
Disseminate information faster
than previous company channels
Process common HRM
transactions
Process common HRM
transactionsAround-the-clock
HRM services
Around-the-clock HRM services
TrainingTrainingCollect
information from employees online
Collect information from
employees online
Allow HRM tasks to be performed with little HRM
dept. intervention
Allow HRM tasks to be performed with little HRM
dept. intervention
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Employee Self-Service
Intranet applications can allow employees to
View benefits
Enter travel and expense reports
Verify employment and salary information
Access and update personal information
Enter time-sensitive data
Receive training
Produce automated pay sheets
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Accounting Information Systems
Oldest and most widely used
information system in business
Records and reports business transactions and economic events
Produces financial statements
Forecasts future conditions
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Accounting Information Systems
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Financial Management Systems
Supports business managers and professionals making decisions concerning– Financing of a business
– Allocation and control of financial resources within a business
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Financial Management Systems
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Case 3: Perdue Farms and Others
Even the best companies are challenged by supply chain pressures during holidays
The holiday season is difficult for manufacturers and retailers because they’re making educated guesses and bets on what demand is going to be– They’re not going to get it right every time
Delivering the right number of products to the right customers at the right time is very important – Businesses are turning to forecasting and supply
chain management tools
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Case Study Questions
What key factors determine the success or failure of supply chains during the holiday season?
– Which of these are, or could be, under the control of companies, and which are inherent in the end-consumer business?
Consider the increasing use of gift cards in lieu of gifts during the holiday season
– What effects does this new practice introduce into demand planning and supply chain management?
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Case Study Questions
Consider that virtually nothing is known about the recipients of gift cards – What strategies can retailers and their suppliers
consider to accommodate these effects?
Prof. Brian Tomlin says that smart companies substitute information for inventory – What do you think he means by this?
– How do you think companies can take advantage of more extensive and accurate information to improve their inventory and logistic practices?