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Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

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Page 1: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

Chapter 8

Information SystemsDevelopment &

Acquisition

Page 2: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

Chapter 8 Objectives

• Understand the process of IS management• Understand the system development life

cycle (SDLC)• Understand alternative approaches to

system development• Understand in-house system development• Understand external acquisition,

outsourcing, and end-user development

Page 3: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

The Need for Structured Systems Development

• Systems analysis and design – the process of designing, building, and maintaining information systems– The individual who performs this task is called

Systems analyst– Organization wants to hire System analyst because

they have both technical and managerial expertise.

Page 4: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

The Need for Structured Systems Development

• Evolution of IS development– From “art” to a “discipline”: In the early days of computing it

was considered an art that a very few people could master– Standardized development methods: The techniques used

to build an IS varies greatly from individual to individual. It was very difficult to integrate and maintain. To address this problem, info. Sys. professionals decided to use a disciplined approach of introducing common methods, techniques, and tools for building information systems

– Software engineering: This evolution led to the use of the term software engineering to define what system analyst & programmer do.

Page 5: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

The Need for Structured Systems Development

Options for Obtaining Information Systems1. Build your own

2. Buy a prepackaged system from a software development company or consulting firm. Example: Payroll system.

3. Outsource development to a 3rd party: outside organization custom build a system to an organization’s specifications. Good option when an organization does not have adequate resources or expertise.

4. End user development: Individual users and departments build their own custom systems to support their individuals. Example MS. Excel.

Page 6: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

The Need for Structured Systems Development

Page 7: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

The Need for Structured Systems Development

System Construction Process1. Identify a large IT problem to solve

2. Break the large problem into several smaller, more manageable pieces

3. Translate each “piece” (small problem) into computer programs

4. Piece together each program into an overall comprehensive IS that solves the problem

Page 8: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

The Need for Structured Systems Development

• The Role of Users in the Systems Development Process– It is important for all members of the organization to

understand what is meant by system development and what activities occur.

– Effective partnership: A close and mutually respectful working relationship between analysts and users is a key to project success.

Page 9: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 10: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) - describes the life of an information system from

conception to retirement.1. System identification, selection, and planning2. System analysis3. System design4. System implementation5. System maintenance

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 11: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 1: System Identification, Selection, and Planning– Undertake only those projects critical to mission,

goals, and objectives– Select a development project from all possible

projects that could be performed– Different evaluation criteria used to rank potential

projects

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 12: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 1: System Identification, Selection, and Planning– Evaluation criteria

• Strategic alignment: The extent to which the project is viewed as helping the organization achieve its strategic objectives an d long-term goal.

• Potential benefits: The extent to which the project is viewed as improving profits, customer service, and the duration of the benefits

• Potential costs and resource availability: The number and types of resources the project requires and their availability

• Project size / duration: The number of individuals and the length of time needed to complete the project

• Technical difficulty / risks: The level of technical difficulty involved to complete the project within a given time and resources

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 13: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 2: System Analysis– Collecting System Requirements: Requirement collection is

process of gathering and organizing information from users, managers, business processes, an documents to understand how a proposed system should work

• System analysts use a variety of techniques to collect system requirements

– Interviews: analysts interview people

– Questionnaires: analysts design and administer surveys.

– Observations: analysts observe workers at selected times

– Document analysis: analysts study business documents

• Critical Success Factors (CSF): analysts ask each person to define her own personal CSFs.

• Joint Application Design (JAD): Special type of a group meeting where all users and analysts meet at the same time

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 14: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 2: System Analysis– Modeling Organizational Data: To construct an

information system, systems analysts must understand what data the information system needs in order to accomplish the intended tasks. To do this they use data modeling tools to collect and describe data to users.

• Entity Relationship Diagram (ERD)

– Modeling Organizational Processes and Logic• Data flows

• Processing logic

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 15: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

A sample ERD for students

Page 16: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 3: System Design– Designing forms and reports– Designing interfaces and dialogues– Designing databases and files– Designing processing and logic

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 17: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 4: System Implementation– Software programming– Software testing

• Developmental: Programmers test the correctness of individual modules and the integration of multiple modules

• Alpha: Software tester tests whether it meets design specifications

• Beta: Actual system users test the capability of the system in the user environment with actual data

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 18: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 4: System Implementation– System conversion

• Parallel• Direct• Phased• Pilot

– System documentation, training, and support• User and reference guides• Training and tutorials• Installation procedures and troubleshooting guides

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 19: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition
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• Phase 5: System Maintenance– Maintenance process steps:

1. Obtain maintenance request

2. Transform requests into changes

3. Design changes

4. Implement changes

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 21: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Phase 5: System Maintenance– Maintenance types:

1. Corrective maintenance

2. Adaptive maintenance

3. Perfective maintenance

4. Preventive maintenance

Steps in the Systems Development Process

Page 22: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition
Page 23: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Prototyping• Rapid Application Development (RAD)• Object-Oriented Analysis & Design (OOA&D)

Other Approaches to Designing and Building Systems

Page 24: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

Prototyping

Page 25: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

1. Limited IS staff

2. IS staff has limited skill set

3. IS staff is overworked

4. Problems with performance of IS staff

Need for Alternatives to Building Systems Yourself

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• External acquisition1. System identification, selection and planning

2. Systems analysis

3. Development of a request for proposal (RFP)

4. Proposal evaluation

5. Vendor selection

Common Alternatives to In-house Systems Development

Page 27: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Outsourcing – the practice of turning over responsibility of some to all of an organization’s information systems development and operations to an outside firm

Common Alternatives to In-house Systems Development

Page 28: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Why Outsource? – Cost and quality concerns– Problems in IS performance– Supplier pressures– Simplifying, downsizing, and reengineering– Financial factors– Organizational culture– Internal irritants

Common Alternatives to In-house Systems Development

Page 29: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• Managing the IS outsourcing relationship

– Strong CIO oversight– Measurement of milestones, costs, and benefits– Customer relationship management

• Not all outsourcing relationships are the same

– Basic relationship– Preferred relationship– Strategic relationship

Common Alternatives to In-house Systems Development

Page 30: Chapter 8 Information Systems Development & Acquisition

• End-user development– Benefits of end-user development– Encouraging end-user development– End-user development pitfalls

Common Alternatives to In-house Systems Development