FOUNDATION OF DOING BUSINESS
In the United States over 23 million managers and over
113 million workers in the labor force rely on information systems every day to
conduct business (Statistical Abstract, 2003). In many industries, survival and
even existence without extensive use of information systems is inconceivable.
Obviously, all of e-commerce would be impossible without substantial IT
investments, and firms such as Amazon, eBay, Google, E*Trade, or the world’s
largest online university, the University of Phoenix, simply would not exist.
Today’s service industries—finance, insurance, real estate as well as personal
services such as travel, medicine, and education—could not operate without IT.
Similarly, retail firms such as Wal-Mart and Sears and manufacturing firms such
as General Motors and General Electric require IT to survive and prosper. Just
like offices, telephones, filing cabinets, and efficient tall buildings with
elevators were once of the foundations of business in the twentieth century,
information technology is a foundation for business in the twenty-first
century.
There is a growing interdependence between a firm’s
ability to use information technology and its ability to implement corporate
strategies and achieve corporate goals (see Figure 1-2). What a business would
like to do in five years often depends on what its systems will be able to do.
Increasing market share, becoming the high-quality or low-cost producer,
developing new products, and increasing employee productivity depend more and
more on the kinds and quality of information systems in the organization. The
more you understand about this relationship, the more valuable you will be as a
manager.
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FIGURE 1-2 The interdependence between organizations and information systems. In contemporary systems there is a growing interdependence between a firm’s information systems and its business capabilities. Changes in strategy, rules, and business processes increasingly require changes in hardware, software, databases, and telecommunications. Often, what the organization would like to do depends on what its systems will permit it to do. |
PRODUCTIVITY
Today’s managers have very few tools at
their disposal for achieving significant gains in productivity. IT is one of the
most important tools along with innovations in organization and management, and
in fact, these innovations need to be linked together. A substantial and growing
body of research reported throughout this book suggests investment in IT plays a
critical role in increasing the productivity of firms, and entire nations (Zhu
et al., 2004).
For instance, economists at the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank estimate
that IT contributed to the lowering of inflation by 0.5 to 1 percentage point in
the years from 1995 to 2000 (Greenspan, 2000). IT was a major factor in the
resurgence in productivity growth in the United States, which began in 1995 and
has continued until today at an average rate of 2.7 percent, up from 1.4 percent
from 1973 to 1995 (Baily, 2002). Firms that invested wisely in information
technology experienced continued growth in productivity and efficiency.
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