Sunday, October 19, 2008

10.7 Roles of People in Knowledge Management

Managing knowledge typically requires a full-time staff who examines, structures, filters, catalogues, and stores knowledge so that it is meaningful and can be accessed by people who need it.

If they identify specific knowledge that an employee or client might need, they send it directly to them, thus adding value to the organization.

Members of knowledge management teams include:
Chief Knowledge Officer (CKO)
CEO
Other officers and managers
Members and leaders of communities of practice
KMS developers
KMS staff

CKO's must do the following:
Set strategic priorities for knowledge management
Establish a knowledge repository of best practices
Gain a commitment from senior executives to support a learning environment
Teach information seekers how to ask better and smarter questions
Establish a process for managing intellectual assets
Obtain customer satisfaction information in near real time
Globalize knowledge management

The CEO is responsible for championing the KM effort. 

Communities of practice (COP) have appeared within organizations that are serious about their knowledge management efforts. 

A COP is a group of people in an organization with a common professional interest. The community is responsible for the accuracy and timeliness of the knowledge it contributes and for identifying its potential use.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

9.7 Managerial Issues

1) Facilitating global trade - language translation is becoming very important. Very important in e-commerce where the translation of Web pages is a critical success factor. The use of intelligent systems has progressed rapidly. 

2) Selecting a system - Companies have an option to select an IOS infrastructure from several types and vendors.

3) Partner's collaboration - In an IOS, there are at least two parties so collaboration is critical. Many failures result from lack of partner's cooperation.

4) New infrastructures - XML, Web services and other tools are gaining popularity but are not universally excepted. Many smaller companies might be better off to wait and see what infrastructure to implement. Managers need to assess the risk of waiting while competitors are moving.

5) Globalization - The issue of going global depends on what info systems are needed. There are multiple issues that need to be considered, such as multiple languages, different currencies, tax requirements, legal aspects, and cultural differences. 

6) Using exchanges, hubs, and other services - Viable options since the service providers provide the IOS infrastructure. Using third-party providers can be cheaper, but loss of some control may become a problem. Selecting the appropriate system is critical.

7) Partner and supplier relationship management - Modern business is increasingly using partners. The trend for outsourcing means more partners. Cultivating PRM and SRM is not simple and needs to be planned for and organized properly.

Monday, October 6, 2008

8.7 Product Life Cycle Management

Product life cycle management or PLM, is a business strategy that enables manufacturers to control and share product-related data as part of product design and development efforts and to support supply chain operations. 

The core aspect of PLM is the central management of all product data and the technology used to access this information.

4 Phases of the PLM
1) conceive
2) design
3) realize
4) service

PLM can have a significant impact on engineering change, cycle time, design reuse, and engineering productivity.

Studies have shown that electronic based collaboration can reduce product cost and travel expense, as well as reduced costs associated with product-change management. 

PLM's ultimate goal is to move info through an organization as quickly as possible to reduce the time it takes to get a product to market and increase profitability.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Section 5.3 Business-to-Consumer Applications

Electronic retailing or "e-tailing", is the direct sale of products and services through electronic storefronts or electronic malls, usually designed around an electronic catalog format and/or auctions.

Electronic commerce has many advantages over actual in-store shopping:
consumers can shop 24/7/365
wider variety of products and services
lower prices on many items
very detailed product info
easy to compare products and prices with competitors'

Popular shopping mechanisms - electronic storefronts and electronic malls. Electronic storefronts can be an extension of physical stores, each with its own unique URL (Wal-Mart.com, Dell.com). Electronic malls are collections of individual shops under one Internet address (shopping.yahoo.com).

Selling products online may reduce vendors' selling costs by 20 to 40 percent.

Online Service Industries
Cyberbanking
Securities Trading
Job Market
Travel
Real Estate

Customer service with regards to electronic commerce is very important since the two parties do not meet face-to-face. There are 4 phases in the customer service life cycle:
1) Requirements
2) Acquisition
3) Ownership
4) Retirement

Customization and personalization is a major benefit that electronic commerce has taken advantage of, i.e. Dell.

Issues in Electronic Commerce
  Resolving channel conflict
Resolving conflicts within click-and-mortar organizations
Organizing order fulfillment and logistics
Determining viability and risk of online e-tailers
Identifying appropriate revenue models

Saturday, September 13, 2008

One in five employers uses social networks in hiring process

In a survey of more than 31,000 employers, CareerBuilder.com found that more than one in five employers browse social networking sites to screen job applicants. Furthermore, of the employers who use these sites to screen candidates, one-third said they have found information on such sites to have cause to toss the applicant out of consideration.

Such areas of concern include: alcohol and drug abuse information, inappropriate photos, poor communication skills, bad-mouthing of former employers or employees, inaccurate qualifications, unprofessional screen names, notes showing links to criminal behavior, and confidential information about past employers. 

On the other hand, not all social networking searches are used to take an applicant out of consideration. Of the 31,000 employers surveyed, 24% actually found content that helped convince them to hire an applicant. Employers said that profiles that show a professional image and solid references actually help increase the applicant's chances of being hired.

However you look at it, social networking sites have changed the relationship between potential employees and employers. In the past, a resume and an interview was all that an employer had to go on. In today's information thirsty society, there are countless ways in which employers can find information about an applicant, and social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook, only help to fuel the fire. 

In conclusion, in order for an applicant to be safe when it comes to a potential job offer, one should be conscious of the information that is readily available to the public. Be smart about what you display on profiles and remember to keep it as professional as possible.

A link to this article can be found at the bottom of this page.

Monday, September 8, 2008

How TrueCredit Utilizes SOA

1) What were the major reasons the company had to use SOA?

TrueCredit uses SOA in order to develop applications to maintain its competitive advantage in the credit bureau industry. The subsidiary needed an application that could support 50,000 simultaneous users, another application to improve response time to less than a second, as well as a software application development procedure that would take 90 days or less.

2)In what ways did they gain competitive advantage by using SOA?

TrueCredit gained a competitive advantage by combining and reusing their services to create new applications to meet other business needs, keeping software development in-house while not having to start from scratch.

3)What specific "services" can you identify in a business like this?

TrueCredit is able to utilize SOA to help make resources available to their customers via their network. Customers should be able to check their current credit scores, check on interest rates, determine the status of their loans, etc. 

4) Why is it so important to serve 50,000 simultaneous users?

TrueCredit offers credit reporting, scoring, and other financially related services on both its own and its partners' Web sites. If TrueCredit was only concerned with its own customers, then 50,000 simultaneous users would be a superfluous amount of traffic. However, since TrueCredit is the engine behind other company's products, 50,000 simultaneous users is not only important but necessary.

5) Classify this application using the material in Section 2.2.

TrueCredit's SOA system can be classified under several types of information systems. First as an interorganizational system because of its connection to two or more organizations, and second as a transaction processing system because of its ability to support monitoring, collection, storage, processing and dissemination of the company's basic business transactions.