P1 - Explain how
organisations use information
Qualitative
Data used to describe certain information by giving your own
opinion and is data that can be observers but cannot be measured. For example
colour, texture, smell, taste and appearance of a painting.
Quantitative
Is information that can be measured and is also factual
information. It is also a reliable source of information as the information
will be factual data. For example a painting measurement will be quantitative
information as it is exampling the painting in a factual way by giving you the
information of the size of it.
Primary
It is information that you collect yourself and not get it
from another source. You collect this information by means of surveys or observation.
It is also data that previously has not been gathered. For example a manufacture
may create survey to find out what their customer think about them. This is
primary information as this information has been collected by the manufacture
itself.
Secondary
Secondary is information that you have received from someone
else who have received the information from someone else. This information
could be changed by the time you receive the information, as the information
could be altered by each person. For example information on a newspaper can be
altered as the information the journalist receive could be changed.
Source Information
Internal Information
It is information that is collected within the business. The department
within the business will produce information, to help the business to improve
what they are failing. This is a reliable source of information as it is
information that is produced by the business itself.
External Information
It is information that they receive externally. This external
information could help the organisation to improve their business. They can
receive the information from trade groups, government, surveys etc. Some
external information could be unreliable for example the government, may
provide you with
Reliability of data
source
There are many different sources of information that you can
receive, there are good and bad sources of information. It is very important
that you understand the sources of information you receive and how reliable it
can be. For example if you read an article from a website that isn’t popular,
this information could be altered by the write.
What type of internal and
external information do organisations have?
The internal information an organisation will collect are
that how many sales they are making within a day and how many more products they
will need to buy to restocks their stores. For example the employees at an
Apple store will gather information about how many Apple products and
components they have in their store, where they will then use this information
to order more to the store. The external information the organisation could
collect from people outside the organisation could be about how much sales the
area makes on during lunch time. For example takeaways will use this
information to check if have enough food to serve their customers at bus times.
Purpose of Information
·
Operational
support is when a business monitors activities within the business to make
decisions to help them run their business smoothly. Keeping track of all the
products they have and what they need to restock so they don’t run out. For
example if a football match is the shops will make sure they have enough drinks
to supply their customers.
·
Analysis
data is used to identify trends and monitor the business. This shows the weekly
sales and costs report of the business. This will help the business identify if
their profit is increasing or decreasing. For example a restaurant will use
analysis data to compare the profits with other restaurant. Which they can then
use to improve their restaurant.
·
Decision
making is when the management needs to make a decision to help them improve the
business or making a decision to help solve problems. Decision making will
allow the business making. For example a the management at a food chain may
want to reduce their costs so the management may decide to close the business
down earlier
·
Gaining
advantage is when the organisation takes advantage of problems that have
occurred.
Organisation can also use this to identify patterns or trends; they will use this information to make it a benefit. For example if
Organisation can also use this to identify patterns or trends; they will use this information to make it a benefit. For example if
Business Functional
Areas
Sales
The sales department are interested in what products they are
selling, how many they are selling and who they are selling the items to. The
sales department will also be able to identify how much stock is left. For example the sales department in a
clothing store will be able to identify how much stock they have and how much
they will need to bring in. They can then inform the management that they need
to restock their stock.
Purchasing
The department are only interested on how their suppliers
perform. The department will analyse the manufacturer by the price, by fewest
problems and by product availability. The departments main job is to find the
best supplier with a cheapest price, deliver quickly and reliable. For example
schools and colleges will have purchasing department which will look for
equipment that is reliable and cheap.
Manufacturing
The manufacturing department are focused in showing how
efficient their business is. They evaluate how well their staff, machinery, how
well they produce their products and how they minimise wastage. They do this to
show the public that they are reliable and environmentally friendly, so that
they can attract customers.
Marketing
The marketing department are only focused on the customer and
their competitors. They are interested on the sales they make, the sales the
competitors and the types of customer.
Finance
The finance department is often split. Financial accounting
deals with organisations income and expenditure. Management accounting is
focused on how the organisation spends its money. For example a restaurants
financial accounting will deal with how much income the business has made and
how much they have spent.
Personnel
This department evaluates information about the employees
within the organisation. They do this to see how the employee has progressed. This
consists on the average staff wages, the average days the employee has taken
off and the hours the employee has worked in order to meet the terms.
Administration
The administration department will deal with reports for the
organisation. They will also analysis reports from other departments to help
them improve. For example one of the departments may need more equipment so
they will send a report on what they need.
Information Flow
Internal information
flows:
Downwards
Within an organisation the information is passed on from a
senior management to the employees, such as making changes to the organisation.
For example if there is a faulty machine the management will inform the employees
about this so that they do not injure themselves.
Upwards
The information is passed on to the senior management. This
information is passed from a lower level employee, this is to inform their
senior management on their progress or any problems that the management that
need to be informed. For example if the employee is on medication they will
inform the management that they are on medication, were the employee will tell
them not to work with machinery.
Across
Different parts of the organisation pass information between
them, so they could improve or help each other to achieve their goals. For
example if the organisation is spending too much the finance department will
inform them to cut down on costs as they are going over their budget.
External information
flow
The information of organisation is passed on out of an
organisation. Information about the organisation will be passed on to their
customers. This information may be sent to individual customers such as a bank
statement or to a group of customers, such as council report on its
performance. The company’s annual report will be sent to all the customers.
This information also sent to suppliers.
P2 - Discuss the
characteristics of good information
Valid
Organisations need valid information to help them to keep
track of their stocks. This information must be accurate so that the
organisation can restock the correct amount. For example Apple will distribute
their products to different apple stores, for them to send the correct amount
they will need to receive the correct information from the Apple stores.
·
Fundamental
characteristic
·
Must
be completely accurate
·
Responsibility
of information gatherer
Reliable
The information from two websites can be helpful and reliable
however it can also be unreliable as information on website such as Wikipedia
can be altered by the user. To find reliable information you should check in
more than one place to see if the information match each other.
·
Authentic
source i.e. website
·
Forums/Wikipedia
– The information from the two website
can be helpful and reliable; however it can also be unreliable as the
information on the websites could be altered. The website allows
·
Generated
from different sources to achieve same result
Understandable by the
user
The information provides is understandable for the users, such
as graphs which the users will be able to understand. for example users who
deal with graphs will understand information better than if the information was
written. The information must relate to the user so that they can understand
the information better.
·
Appropriate
titles, legends, graphs, user can relate to information
·
User
can related to information
Timely
Available information when it is needed to help with decision
making and available for references. This information is prepared and ready at
all times for your use.
·
Prepared
and ready
·
Available
for reference
Fit-for-purpose
The information the management receives is related to what
the management has asked for.
·
Needs
to be measured against criterion
·
Appropriate
values identified
Accessible
The employee of an organisation must be able to read and calculate
data that they receive. For example on a printed report it may contain a lot of
data you must be able to read the data without having to key it all in order to
perform the calculation. It is also data that is available for other
departments in the organisation
·
Universal
approach
·
Available
to other departments
Cost-effective
The amount it costs of capturing and producing data.
Researching for a reliable external source and employing external source to
generate information. For example manufactures will look around to find a
reliable source which could provide them cost efficient and reliable components
to use on their systems.
·
Employing
external source to generate information – Getting
·
Conduct
first hand research using reliable source
Sufficiently accurate
Accurate information is needed, if you are calculating costs
or profit. You will have to know how much profit you have available and how
much it costs the organisation to run per month. Using this information you
could know the expected monthly total running then organisation and the profit
the organisation is making. This information doesn’t need to be accurate as the
data could be rounded up.
Relevant
Information must be relevant to the appropriate subject, the
questions must be appropriate to the subject you are questioning on. There is
no point in capturing information that is not relevant as this information will
have nothing to do with the subject engaged in. for example if Apple management
ask mobile phone stores on the sales they have made on their product and the
mobile phone store gives them another manufactures sales, this will mean
nothing to Apple as they wanted information about their product sales.
·
Appropriate
for the subject – asking the appropriate
questions for a the appropriate subject
·
Not
to be overwhelmed with irrelevant information
Having the right level
of detail
Capture enough detail for the purpose that is required, this
information needs to be accurate so that they have the correct information to
provide. For example the department within the organisation must provide their
management with the right level of information to improve the information.
·
5.183333cm
as oppose to 5.81cm
·
£1.21
as oppose to £1.20
·
The
information needs to be accurate so that they have the correct information to
provide.
From a sources in which
the user has confidence
To receive information the user will need to know how
believable the source of information is. For example you are likely to believe
a story that has been reported on the news, then reading the store on a
website. So the source in which you find the information must be believable to
make interested in the topic. Information on Wikipedia are mainly factual
however the website allows users to edit the information.
·
Reputable
source
·
Microsoft
or Wikipedia
P3 – Explain the issues
related to the use of information
Legal Issues
Data protection act 1998 is a law that has been created to
make sure that personal details i.e. the wages they earn are handled properly
and safely. The person who’s information that have been handled, have the right
to know what information of theirs has been held. For example accountants
within a bank must not share details about their customer’s to others within or
outside of their organisation. The person who is handling personal information
must register with the DPA and obey the eight principles.
Freedom of information Act 2000 allows
organisation access to official information. They have the right to ask for
information from any public authority such as NHS, schools, colleges, the local
government etc. the public authority then must provide them with the
information within a number of days. For example if an employee within an
organisation has health issues, the organisation must contact the NHS to ask
for information about the employee. If the information is against the act the
public authorities have the chose to refuse to provide them with the
information they have asked for.
Computer Misuse Act 1990 is an act that is designed to frame
rules and control over computer crime and internet fraud. Using others ID and
passwords to access ones computer is against the computer misuse act 1990,
unauthorised access to commit a serious crime and unauthorised modification of
a computer content are also against the misuse act, as the person who’s account
has been misuse, they are not aware of this. For example using others log in to
access their account and installing virus to the computer, will destroy their
files on the computer.
Ethical Issues
Use of email harassing emails are usually banned,
including spamming or sending large quantity of emails are banned from an
organisation, however limited use of email for private purpose are sometimes
allowed.
Use of internet website that are inappropriate such as gambling website are
usually banned within an organisation. They are banned either by the code of
practice or by a filtering software. For example organisations such as schools
and colleges will have a software filter to ban their students in going on
untrusted website this is to limit the viruses accessing the computer systems.
There are limited internet uses for personal purpose. Organisations that
provide their own web server have often strict rules to what can be posted on
the server.
Whistle blowing protect their users who grab their management’s attention to
other users misusing their system. The IT administrators that run the servers
will be the first to detect misuse on their system.
Operational Issues
Security of information users of the computer system will
depend on their ICT department to keep its information secure. This is safe
from unauthorised and unexpected access. The management of the organisation is
responsible to pick who can look at and update information. For example the
management of a school will only allow the technicians to update the systems.
Backups will benefit the users in case of physical or software problems.
The backups can include a full system or particular information back up. For
example if the hard drive fails on a computer system the users will not have
lost all of their documents as they can restore the back up to the system and
gain all of the documents back. The IT department should perform recover and
restore frequently. This is so when installing new software or upgrading
software, during it other programs or files are not damaged if so they could
perform a restore of the system.
Health and Safety there are rules within an organisation that apply to the
position of screens and monitors this is to reduce eye strain or damage to the
eyes. Chairs, table, keyboard and mice should also be positioned right. For
example in an office users on the computer should have lumber support, to
prevent lower back problems.
P4 – Describe the
features and functions of information systems
What data would you need to store, how is it input
into the system and how would you make sure in was entered correctly?
The data imputed to
the system must be correct to in order for the output information to be
correct. The information the business will require the customer to fill in are
things addresses and credit card details. This information allows the business
to receive the payment for the purchase and is able to send the item to the
address. Business can validate the information by providing the customer with
the correct field of information. For example the date of birth must be in the
correct format in order to validate the information.
What people are involved in feeding and updating the
system, and what do they do?
Business could train
their employee to be able to hand data to be able to understand the data they
receive. Employees who handle capturing and exploiting data must be motivated
as they can benefit the organisation.
What sort of hardware and software is used in a small
business? How does this hardware and software process the data? What typical
information is produced as output from the system and how is it presented?
Business need to have the correct hardware and software to be
able to processor. The software must be compatible with the hardware so that
the employee can see the information. The Hardware a business will need are
things like routers, servers etc. The computer system must have firewall on in
order to protect the systems information from hackers. The software business
will need are things like excel, outlook, word etc.
What IT and digital technology is available to help
people communicate?
Information that are
shared through the internet have a very high risk in getting hacked, stolen or
intercepted, the information must be encrypted before they are sent through the
internet to prevent the data being hacked. It is very important that the data
is secure so that people information is not hacked. If the data has been hacked
business could lose a lot of customers. Card readers, chip and pin and also
credit card details must be secure during transferring data information.
How do organisations use feedback to make sure that
the output meets the needs of the users?
The feedback a business receives can help them improve and
make changes to their business. They can also view if their customers are
receiving the best performance from their employees. Using feedback business
can see what age groups they are supplying to. Using customer’s data of birth
the business can offer those deals on their birthday. For example ODEAN cinema
offers their customers with free snacks and drink on their birthday.
What is the difference between open and closed
systems?
A closed system is
information that the business can view and receive information from their
departments; no external sources have any influences on the businesses. They
mainly use graphic format and is often aimed at the management of the business.
An open system is when a business can
report on and it’s format in which the information is output. Open systems are
aimed more at analysts of the business. The employee mostly uses the graphical
and textual formats to read the data.
What are the stages involved in the transformation of data
into information and what happens at each one?
There are number of stages where a business takes to which
the data is transformed into information, so that the data can be read by the
user. The employee receives the data from where it was created and is then
checked a validated to make sure when the data is transformed it is
accurate. The business employees store
the data for a long term on to their servers. The data is then processed and
manipulated. Once the data has been processed it is then ready for the output
information. The information is then transferred from the storage to the
computer. This information is then presented on a screen or monitor, and the
information will be written the way the user wants to view it. For example the
users can choose to view the information on a graph or text. Management of an
organisation will prefer to view the information in a graph as it gives a
better view on the profit, sales and cost.
As they grow, would it be sensible to install a
Management Information System (MIS)? What are the features, benefits and
effectiveness criteria involved?
Management information system (MIS) is support system which
input request and responses are pre-set. This is used in business where the
management ask the same questions regularly. The benefit of MIS is that the
system is easy to use by the senior management. The system answers are replied
back very quickly and are replied both in tables and graphs. They can also be
provided into spreadsheet to provide the management with information. MIS needs
to be accurate as the information MIS provide must be accurate as other source
of information, sustainable the information must be reliable and available when
the management needs the information and consistent to provide the information
to the senior management, MIS needs to flow these points to be effective.
P5 – Identify the
information systems used in a specified organisation
Hardware
The servers that run the Opello website are Dell PowerEdge
servers. Every year Opello servers receive more than a million page requests in
4 different languages and 5 different currencies. The data from the server is
transferred into the organisation microsystem which involves over 100 computers
to read the data being passed through the server.
Software
Opello brought in a new MRP system to the organisation. The
new MRP system is capable in doing a number of things such as bar code
scanning, product scheduling and product tracking. The new system benefits the
organisation as they can track products going out.
Marketing System
Opello’s marketing system focus on
external reports from Dunn and Bradstreet this is to find changes in the buying
patterns and the UK spending trends, which they then create a monthly report to
inform the other departments of any changes that have been made in the last
month. This system is used to predict
any marketing change.
Data
The data Opello receive are
data such as records of their costs to run the departments within the business,
departments such as sales and marketing. The data Opello receive can help them
set a budget each year by the finance department as they can use the previous
year’s data to help them set a budget for the coming year. For example the marketing
department of offer data such as changes of sales. Opello can benefit off the
data they receive from each department, by saving costs.
Telecommunication
Opello do not have any shops or wholesales outlets. They deal
with their customers directly from their website. As they are dealing with
their customers through the internet Opello must understand their customer
needs and provide the most effective computing solution to meet the needs. On
the Opello website they will provide the customers with feedback option which
they can use to help them see what the customers are looking for. The Opello
MIS system deal with day to day communication where it is linked to Microsoft
Outlook for instant messaging to their customers.
People
The staffs within Opello are flexible and regularly trained
to keep their skill in line with the business.
Opello’s success have come from flexible staff, as it allows the
business to bring in part time staff to the business at times of high selling
periods such as Christmas. The central administration is operated by the
processing manger and four technicians to be able to run the system.
Input
The input data that Opello receive are data such as customer
orders, which is then transferred on to the management information system where
it is then processed to information. A build list is automatically created and
the items are immediately available to the purchasing and manufacturing
departments.
Processing
Opello process their data by using a mining technique to
recognise the patterns the way the customer’s order, the types of products they
purchase and also their sales patterns. The data is processed to information so
that their marketing department or sales department are able to read the
information, to make predictions.
Output
The output information could be presented in text or graph
depending on the person who is receiving the information. The marketing
department will expect their information to be outputted as a graph. The
information is easier for them to understand and make predictions.
Feedback
Millions of customers every day leave Opello feedback in ways
they could improve. This feedback helps the organisation in continually making
improvements in to the items manufacture and also the services the organisation
offer to the customers.
Storage
Opello store their data on their servers as their business is
an online service. They store their data on the servers because it is the
faster way to store and access data as the technicians do not have to transfer
all the data from the servers to an external hard drive.
Retrieval
If Opello know when and what is
going to be sold, its purchasing team can work with its Chinese and Malaysian suppliers to ensure that the basic components are
available just when needed. This reduces the amount of stock that has to be
held in the company and so reduces the finance tied up in stock.
Presentation
The
presentation of the data will depend on the person who is reading the
information. Opello could provide the information in text or graphs depending
on where the information is being sent to. The marketing and sales department
will want the information to be provided in a graph as it is easier to
understand if the sales are going up or down, how many of each items are being
sold.
"note you may be asked to expand on some of the points, so try to add more to the assignment. Also remember not to copy word for word, as their are now software to check for plagiarism, when marking the assignment, try to complete the assignment your own way." [I am not encouraging you to copy this piece is here for educational purposes]
"note you may be asked to expand on some of the points, so try to add more to the assignment. Also remember not to copy word for word, as their are now software to check for plagiarism, when marking the assignment, try to complete the assignment your own way." [I am not encouraging you to copy this piece is here for educational purposes]