mis at dell

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    1/15

    MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM

    AT

    REPORT SUBMITTED BY:

    CHETAN PATIL (27)

    NEHA PARAB (29)

    MOHINI GANDH (32)

    VIJETA DAINE ()

    RONAK HARIHARAN (06)

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    2/15

    MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM

    Definition: Management Information Systems (MIS) is the term given to the discipline

    focused on the integration of computer systems with the aims and objectives on an

    organization.

    The development and management of information technology tools assists executives

    and the general workforce in performing any tasks related to the processing of

    information. MIS and business systems are especially useful in the collation of business

    data and the production of reports to be used as tools for decision making.

    Applications of MIS

    With computers being as ubiquitous as they are today, there's hardly any large business

    that does not rely extensively on their IT systems.

    However, there are several specific fields in which MIS has become invaluable.

    Strategy Support

    While computers cannot create business strategies by themselves they can assist

    management in understanding the effects of their strategies, and help enable effective

    decision-making.

    MIS systems can be used to transform data into information useful for decision making.

    Computers can provide financial statements and performance reports to assist in the

    planning, monitoring and implementation of strategy.

    MIS systems provide a valuable function in that they can collate into coherent reports

    unmanageable volumes of data that would otherwise be broadly useless to decision

    makers. By studying these reports decision-makers can identify patterns and trends that

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    3/15

    would have remained unseen if the raw data were consulted manually.

    MIS systems can also use these raw data to run simulations hypothetical scenarios

    that answer a range of what if questions regarding alterations in strategy. For instance,

    MIS systems can provide predictions about the effect on sales that an alteration in price

    would have on a product. These Decision Support Systems (DSS) enable more

    informed decision making within an enterprise than would be possible without MIS

    systems.

    Data Processing

    Not only do MIS systems allow for the collation of vast amounts of business data, but

    they also provide a valuable time saving benefit to the workforce. Where in the past

    business information had to be manually processed for filing and analysis it can now be

    entered quickly and easily onto a computer by a data processor, allowing for faster

    decision making and quicker reflexes for the enterprise as a whole.

    Management by Objectives

    While MIS systems are extremely useful in generating statistical reports and data

    analysis they can also be of use as a Management by Objectives (MBO) tool.

    MBO is a management process by which managers and subordinates agree upon a

    series of objectives for the subordinate to attempt to achieve within a set time frame.

    Objectives are set using the SMART ratio: that is, objectives should be Specific,

    Measurable, Agreed, Realistic and Time-Specific.

    The aim of these objectives is to provide a set of key performance indicators by which

    an enterprise can judge the performance of an employee or project. The success of any

    MBO objective depends upon the continuous tracking of progress.

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    4/15

    In tracking this performance it can be extremely useful to make use of an MIS system.

    Since all SMART objectives are by definition measurable they can be tracked through

    the generation of management reports to be analysed by decision-makers.

    Benefits of MIS

    The field of MIS can deliver a great many benefits to enterprises in every industry.

    Expert organizations such as the Institute of MIS along with peer reviewed journals such

    as MIS Quarterly continue to find and report new ways to use MIS to achieve business

    objectives.

    Core Competencies

    Every market leading enterprise will have at least one core competency that is, a

    function they perform better than their competition. By building an exceptional

    management information system into the enterprise it is possible to push out ahead of

    the competition. MIS systems provide the tools necessary to gain a better

    understanding of the market as well as a better understanding of the enterprise itself.

    Enhance Supply Chain Management

    Improved reporting of business processes leads inevitably to a more streamlinedproduction process. With better information on the production process comes the ability

    to improve the management of the supply chain, including everything from the sourcing

    of materials to the manufacturing and distribution of the finished product.

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    5/15

    ERP OF DELL

    Dell Computers Vital PLM Processes

    Dell has achieved dramatic success streamlining its product data management

    activities to product life cycle management. Its ability to keep the project focused

    on core business processes has yielded short time to value.

    In 2000, Dell Computer faced these trade-offs as part of its constant efforts to improve

    its supply chain processes. In this case, it improved its product data management

    (PDM) capabilities, most notably its engineering change management (ECM)

    processes, internally and across the supply chain. In addition to streamlining the

    engineering workflow, this IT effort was key to building a foundation that can enable

    more-efficient product life cycle management (PLM). The goal of PLM is to manage the

    stages of a product's life to improve business performance. PLM depends on PDM for

    timely and accurate information about the status of a product definition.

    Problem: Dell determined that it needed to reduce costs associated with managing

    product data and improve its engineering change workflow internally and across the

    supply chain as part of its ongoing efforts to improve business performance. The

    established infrastructure and processes were supported by internally developed

    applications to define products and manage bills of material (BOMs), manage related

    documentation and support ECM. As the enterprise continued to grow, it was becoming

    harder to monitor and control product development and production startup. Dell sought

    to address these issues before they became widespread.

    Objective:As a cornerstone of Dell's strategy, engineering management recognizedthe importance of adopting standard software and processes for the workflow from

    design through manufacturing implementation. The scope of the effort required the

    inclusion of suppliers and manufacturing sites; otherwise, Dell would face increasing

    challenges with the timeliness and accuracy of product data. These problems could, in

    turn, create product quality problems, as well as unacceptable levels of scrap, rework

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    6/15

    and material shortages, resulting in inefficiencies in a highly competitive market. By

    improving these processes, Dell hoped to discover opportunities to further reduce

    material costs. For a company that ships more than 4 million PCs per quarter, small

    material savings per PC can improve the bottom line significantly. Key objectives

    included:

    Enabling consistent engineering change workflow globally across Dell and suppliers

    Improving data integrity, as well as the timeliness and accuracy of product data

    Reducing engineering change cycle times

    Increasing the automatic reuse of product data across multiple applications, while

    eliminating the need for data reentry.

    Reducing the workload required for product configuration management

    Detecting product data errors before they reach manufacturing

    Integrating with established applications, such as Dell's sales configuration tool for

    servers and storage devices in the

    United States

    Reducing system downtime

    Improving user acceptance and use of enterprise-standard software

    Dell was concerned about the time and cost for such an effort. Based on its own

    knowledge and anecdotal evidence, the company was aware that such large-scale

    initiatives typically require more than a year to accomplish. On occasion, they may take

    many years, at great expense, and with the risk of unsatisfactory results. In the fast-

    paced PC industry, failure could have hurt the companys ability to compete.

    Approach: Dell decided to replace its internally developed infrastructure for PDM with

    commercial, Web-based software that would support product definition, configuration

    management, and ECM across the enterprise and the supply chain. During 2000, the

    stewards of product data, Dells Product Group

    Configuration Management (PGCM) team, drove this effort in conjunction with the

    engineering services project team. Meetings with senior executives reaffirmed the need

    for the project, reinforced corporate commitment, and confirmed the goals, scope and

    expected results from this initiative. Enterprise wide awareness of this support from

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    7/15

    senior executives encouraged cooperation from all affected groups. Central to this

    strategy was Dell's decision to focus on the IT capabilities that would be useful to

    improving its infrastructure. It focused on secure document and file management, BOM

    creation, product configuration management, ECM, and the Web based ability to

    coordinate these activities across Dell's global operations and with suppliers. Although

    Dell recognized that supporting multiple types of workflow could be valuable, it decided

    to streamline workflow options during the initial deployment of software. After exploring

    options with major systems integrators (SIs) and suppliers of PDM applications, Dell

    decided to partner with Agile Software and to support the effort with an internal team

    dedicated to the deployment. Dell adopted this approach because:

    Agile addressed the major focus points of this initiative

    During the evaluation process, Agile instilled the greatest confidence that Dell could

    work with it to deploy in the Dell environment

    Given their knowledge of engineering processes and software, an internal deployment

    team from Dell would deliver a more-economical and timely solution than those

    proposed by Sis Figure 1 depicts the upgraded infrastructure. At the core, the ehub and

    the Internet file server provide the backbone for archiving and sharing electronic files

    securely across the Internet. The product data validator and the Agile integration server

    provide the interface between Agile and Dells enterprise resource planning (ERP)

    environments worldwide, as well as to its sales configurator for complex servers and

    storage devices in the United States. By integrating Agile with its sales configuration

    validation tool, Dell enabled its U.S.-based sales department to automatically validate

    server and storage device configurations based on engineering technical attribute data

    housed in the Agile tool. Dell executed the bulk of the deployment in two phases. The

    first enabled Agile as the system of record for 2,500 internal users and 37 of Dell's top

    50 suppliers. More than 250,000 part numbers and 20,000 documents were converted

    from the legacy database into Agile's software environment. This phase lasted seven

    months (from March 2000 through October 2000) and cost between 200 percent and

    250 percent of the software's purchase price. Nonsoftware costs comprised Agile's

    consulting services, the time of internal team members, travel and ancillary software

    support for the Web-based environment, including extranet support. On 1 October 2000,

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    8/15

    Dell went live on Agile as the product change system of record to manage all product

    platforms. During the second phase of the deployment (from October 2000 to June

    2001), Dell added 800 users and 63 suppliers to the system. It improved interfaces with

    ERP systems and developed the data validator with Agile's Software Development Kit.

    The data validator checks product data accuracy, compliance with local manufacturing

    conditions and the compatibility of translated data with local ERP data formats. Further

    steps in this effort will involve refinement of the workflow internally and with suppliers.

    Results: The initiative reduced the product development cost structure by improving the

    timeliness and accuracy of product data and ECM processes across Dell and its

    supplier network. Dell achieved most of these benefits during late product design stage

    (just before manufacturing begins). This is the point in the product life cycle with the

    greatest volume of engineering change to manage internally it is the point in time at

    which suppliers have the greatest risk of error. Dell reduced the resources necessary to

    process engineering changes by more than 30 percent. The average time to process an

    engineering change dropped by 50 percent. Thirty percent fewer people are needed for

    configuration management globally, since employees are able to process four times as

    many engineering changes as they had done previously. This enabled personnel to be

    redeployed to other critical tasks throughout the product's life cycle. Improvements in

    the accuracy and timeliness of data reduced unnecessary scrap and rework. On

    average, Dell processes more than 4,000 changes monthly on more than 20,000 parts.

    The data validator traps more than 8,500 errors each month. This has substantially

    reduced the amount of personnel required to intervene on the translation of product

    data to ERP systems.

    Critical Success Factors/Lessons Learned:An enterprisewide IT project does not

    have to be broad to deliver value. Such an initiative should focus on the business

    processes with the greatest impact. Dell achieved a rapid time to value seen across the

    enterprise because it focused the effort on a vital business process.

    Software tools with the greatest breadth of off-the-shelf functionality do not necessarily

    offer the best solution for the enterprise. Dell compared Agile's Product Collaboration

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    9/15

    module to applications with greater scope and selected Agile because it was the best fit

    for the business processes to be addressed. The user and vendor must coordinate the

    quality assurance effort. More regression testing and greater quality assurance effort

    would have saved additional time and money. Standard, but imperfect, workflow is

    more-efficient than attempting to implement ideal, but complex, workflow. Agile

    supported much of what Dell wanted in workflow as part of its packaged software;

    however, it was not ideal across the enterprise. This standard, but imperfect, workflow

    support significantly contributed to the success of this effort.

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    10/15

    KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT

    Dell Computer Corporation enjoys a reputation for outstanding customer service. This

    expertise has helped the company become one of the fastest growing computer

    manufacturers in the world. But customers in the rapidly evolving information age

    expect even more. To meet its customers demands for faster, better-informed, and

    more responsive service, Dell has developed a host of Microsoft

    Exchange Serverbased knowledge management solutions that has helped the

    company increase productivity and cut costs while improving customer service.

    The concept of direct customer contact has made Dell Computer Corporation one of the

    most successful companies of the 1990s. But to carry their success into the next

    millennium, Dell executives realized they would need to make sure that when customers

    come into contact with Dell, they receive quick, accurate, knowledgeable service.

    Dell has a two-part sales force, an internal sales-support team and a fleet of field sales

    representatives. Historically, the groups were challenged to keep their information about

    customers in synch and up-to-date, often resulting in needless duplication of efforts and

    missed sales opportunities.

    Dell also needed a way to respond to customers whether they contacted the company

    by letter, fax, phone call, or e-mail. Complicating that communication was the fact that

    the people who needed to respond to customer issues were dispersed among the

    companys more than 33,000 employees in 33 different countries.

    As Dell and its customer base began to experience explosive growth, it became

    increasingly difficult for Dell employees to provide high-quality service using non-

    automated processes, says Arnie Panella, Dell senior manager for global messaging

    infrastructure.We needed to create an infrastructure to support development of

    workflow-based applications that would enable us to efficiently organize, share, and

    disseminate information throughout Dell, so we could better serve our customers.

    Uniting a Disparate Sales Force

    By May 1998, Dell had standardized on Microsoft Exchange Server and the

    Microsoft Outlook messaging and collaboration client, which the company chose not

    only for their reliability and scalability, but also as a knowledge-management platform.

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    11/15

    Exchange gives us more than a messaging system, says Panella. It gives us a stable,

    scalable platform we can also use for collaboration, data storage, application

    development, and knowledge management. To help better connect its internal sales

    support team and its field sales representatives, Dell created a universal contact-

    management system that sales reps can update and synchronize easily, whether they

    were accessing the system from an internal desktop computer or an offline laptop. Dell

    found the solution simple to implement, thanks to Exchange Public Folders on the

    server side, and Outlook Contacts on the desktop. Now, with the universal contact

    repository in place, sales, management, marketing, and executive staff can access any

    customers full history, including the most recent activity at a customer site, order status,

    and relationship or competitive details, all from their standard Outlook Contacts

    interface. The contact information is stored in Exchange Public Folders, so it is

    automatically synchronized every time an employee logs on to his or her e-mail

    account. This system has standardized the customer information corporate wide and

    united the inside and outside sales forces into a single team because of the timely

    information sharing. Its also helped with sales productivity because of the ability in

    Outlook to plan meetings, assign tasks and manage follow up.

    Responding to Customers Promptly and Accurately

    Dell has also used Exchange to create a workgroup document-management system

    called Customer Recovery. With these system customer service representatives, who

    handle incoming customer issues and orders, enter inquiries into a custom Outlook

    form. The Keyfile Keyflow automated workflow application then automatically routes the

    form to the appropriate person within Dell. Dell managers can quickly check to see if a

    customer service representative has officially closed the inquiry or not, and they can

    track who is resolving issues and how theyre being resolved.

    Customer Recovery makes sure that weve addressed whatever issues the customer

    has raised in a timely and efficient manner, Panella says. With this knowledge

    management solution, we make sure that the correct people see the complaint, resolve

    it, and close the loop with the customer, and that gives our customers a better

    experience with Dell. Dells order-fulfillment and tracking process has also improved.

    The company receives many orders by fax, and customer service representatives used

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    12/15

    to write down additional information or customer questions on the actual hard fax copy.

    These records were very difficult to track, manage, and follow up on. In fact, it could

    take weeks for Dell employees to find the correct fax order and respond to a customer

    inquiry. Dell IT staff made a number of changes that help make these fax orders more

    manageable. First, they installed the Omtool Fax Sr. fax server to receive all incoming

    faxes and send them directly to employees desktops via Exchange Public Folders.

    Then, they designed a knowledge management solution that makes it easy for

    employees to find the order information they need. Now, when a fax order arrives at

    Dell, an employee enters all the relevant information into a custom Outlook form, and

    the fax and form are sent to a Microsoft SQL Server-based database. Any Dell

    employee can then find the order almost instantly and answer questions or update

    information.

    Business-Critical Results

    According to Panella, the document-management system is helping Dell in a few very

    important areas. The system has cut the material costs of printing faxes and has saved

    the company for each page not printed. In addition, the time it takes to service requests

    has been reduced dramatically from a number of days to the number of minutes it takes

    to service online image retrieval. The document management system has dramatically

    improved Dells responsiveness to order inquiries. Because accounts receivable can

    also find payment information almost immediately, it has helped Dell to come up with

    the correct document quickly. Because Dell employees can invoice customers more

    quickly and follow up on payment status easily, Panella considers this a business-

    critical solution. In addition to increasing sales productivity, the shared-contact

    management system has also given the Dell sales force a competitive advantage. If a

    Dell employee learns that a competitor is courting a Dell customer, he or she can target

    and quickly contact the appropriate people at the customer site. Then the representative

    can update the contact information immediately, so other Dell employees know about

    the situation and the action taken. Dell has many plans to refine and expand its use of

    knowledge management solutions. For example, its IT staff is developing reporting tools

    that will help managers record, track, and analyze the success of systems such as

    Customer Recovery. In addition, the company is in the process of developing an

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    13/15

    automated approval system that will reduce the time it takes to fulfill employee requests,

    whether for new equipment or a change in benefits. Employees will enter their requests

    in a custom Outlook form that will then automatically be routed to the correct managers

    for approval. And the efforts wont stop there. Dell executives have embraced

    knowledge management as an integral component of running an efficient business.

    Says Panella, Very soon after migration, weve gone from using Exchange just as our

    messaging system, to using it for business-critical knowledge management

    applications.

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    14/15

    DELL UPS SOFTWARE

    REMOTE MONITORING AND CONTROL OF UPS PRODUCTS

    Dell UPS Management Software supports Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) products

    connected to an individual computer as well as UPS models connected to a network

    using the Network Management Card (NMC). The Dell UPS Management Software

    allows you to monitor and manage several UPS products through one intuitive graphical

    user interface. In addition to monitoring the UPS products the software also safeguards

    computer systems from uncontrolled shutdowns due to power failure.

    With the Dell UPS Management Software, you can configure UPS products on any

    computer within the same LAN and monitor their status. Using the UPS software, you

    can manage the power to multiple computers on a network as well as shut systems

    down in the event of a utility power failure, saving vital application data. The Dell UPS

    Management software also supports different UPS products in redundant

    configurations1through the same user interface.

    DELL UPS MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE COMPONENTS

    Dell UPS Management Software has three components. Of these, the first is the Agent,

    which is the core component and runs in the background as a system service. It

    communicates with the UPS, logs events, notifies users of events, arranges actions

    according to the users specifications, and initiates shutdown when necessary. The

    Agent can be managed by the Monitor.

    The Monitor is the graphical user interface application of the Dell UPS Management

    Software. Communicating with the Agent, it gathers real-time UPS information, UPS

    status, and server information, and allows the user to tailor the UPS working

    parameters. It can run on any computer on the LAN or on a standalone computer. The

    final component, the Tray Icon, is the management tool of the Dell UPS Management

  • 7/28/2019 mis at dell

    15/15

    Software, and it appears in the status area of the system task bar. It is available only for

    the Microsoft Windows platform.

    DELL UPS MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE FEATURES

    Dell UPS Management Software features include:

    User-friendly GUI showing status of all locally connected and networked Dell UPS

    products

    Remote control and configuration of Dell UPS products through network

    Redundant UPS configurations support even with different Dell UPS products Automatic closing of applications and initiation of multiple server shutdowns in the

    event of power failures

    Wake on LAN server action enablement after power outage

    Energy-saving design: Manages timed (on/off) control of UPS

    Allows customized messaging upon power events

    Easy access to historical data logs and events

    Automatic local and network discovery of all Dell UPS products

    Self test and power on/off scheduling calendar

    ADDITIONAL ADVANTAGES

    The Dell UPS Software is bundled free of charge with every Dell UPS, so you can

    manage multiple servers and UPS products without buying additional software. The

    software also includes information in English, German, Spanish, French, Russian,

    Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. Finally, you have the

    assurance that the Dell UPS Software is Dell tested, approved, and supported.