Showing posts with label information technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label information technology. Show all posts

Thursday, December 2, 2010

When You Are Planning To Contend In Industry, You Need Desktop Management

There are few types of businesses which do not use information system technology. Even for businesses like landscaping where most work is hands on, physical and outside, the business end of your company will likely use computers. They are simply to efficient at everything from scheduling, mapping, billing and communicating to overlook them as a tool for the company. When the company grows and more computers arrive at the office, the method for handling desktop management must be considered.

The idea of using precious manpower slots to have professionals who focus largely on the set up and care taking of the information technology network would have seemed foolish only a decade ago. But technology has changed and now the internet is an integral part of business and one of its biggest threats. Keeping the system running smoothly and free of attacking programs designed by people with talent but an antisocial streak is a full time job.

The advent of an internal electronic mail system alone can increase productivity dramatically, allowing employees to contact one another regardless of the time of day or geographic separation. A single mass email has the greatest probability of getting to a group of employees in the fastest possible way than any other. Once transmitted, each employee has the exact same information waiting to be retrieved at their convenience. Once initiated, email usually becomes almost a habit, with employees checking for information on a very regular basis.

Having a team of professionals dedicated to the job of nurturing the information systems network really can increase the productivity of employees and the company overall, boosting the bottom line despite the cost if installation and upkeep. The notion of dedicating a team to this process smells a little like inflated bureaucracy, but this increase in personnel has a demonstrable positive effect on profit.

The centralization of computer care makes them more efficient in a number of ways. First and foremost, it allows the company to be sure that all the computer products are compatible, which can save a lot of embarrassment and loss resulting from data which can not be presented. It also ensures that all the software in the system is standard, meaning that there are no special programs that individual employees may have fallen in love with.

Every software maker touts their product as a plug and play process that requires no special training or knowledge. To their credit, most of the time that works out pretty well. But regardless the effort and intent, there are simply too many ways to install too many types of programs for the makers to evaluate and prepare for. This leave the occasion where installing a seemingly simple program hijacks the system and freezes or other wise compromises the entire network. This method of maintaining the information system also helps preserve the integrity of this process, which is often sabotaged by well meaning and hard working employees who mean well. Invariably employees have experimented with a wide variety of programs on their home systems, and often grow quite fond of specific capabilities. In the attempt to either use the same productivity in the office or the desire to share their favorite program, they introduce these favorite programs to the work system.

One of the most insidious of ways company information systems networks become infected or otherwise disabled come from industrious employees themselves. Hard driving team members are tempted to take work home with them, where they use their home computers to add quality and value to the work, then they bring it back to the office. Unless they are unusually careful at home, there will likely come a time when the desktop management team will have to untangle the system from some malicious program that piggybacked in with some legitimate work via thumb drive.

Monday, August 23, 2010

It is nearly impossible to imagine a business today that does not have a significant reliance on information technology. The more complex or larger the business is, the greater the investment in and reliance on computer technology. This is true because the computer has allowed us to communicate much more effectively. The problem arises as the computer begins to take more and more time from management creating inefficiency. The solution is systems management software.

 

Information is the lifeblood of industry, from determining what product or service is needed to handling the myriad requirements that must all be pulled together to create them. Knowing the customer is a complicated business that is not intuitively obvious, and those who crack the code first are the most successful. Information is the key to the code, and information technology allows for its collection and analysis. As this new era of automation matures, the quest for ever greater detail in the information collected and studied grows until there comes a point where there is simply too much to effectively make sense of.

 

The manager is now faced with so much information about every topic that discerning the valuable information from background noise data is seriously problematic. Hiring decisions used to be made following an interview, with questions and answers and the unquantifiable interpersonal ques an interview provides. Today a successful candidate of yore may be electronically eliminated by an insignificant criterion before an interview is even conducted.

 

There is no question that the greater the quantity of valuable accurate data a business has to feed into the decision making process, the more likely a correct decision will be arrived at to the benefit of the company. The problem is knowing how much data is enough, and which data is useful. A manager needs to know what data was collected and under what conditions to understand the information from it. Trying to keep track of all the individual input through his area of operational control necessarily requires precious time sacrificed from running the business.

 

Like all tools, the computer has the potential for enhancing decisions with data that engenders confidence and produces results. It becomes problematic when the tool becomes the driving force in the business. If management is spending more time using the tool than created and delivering the goods and services at the heart of the company, there is a problem. While the information and uses for it grow exponentially, management possesses an ability to use it which remains fairly stagnant, which means there is inefficiency in the process as a whole.

 

There is a means of restoring sanity to the balance of business using computers; the use of the computer to control the information gathering and analyzing automatically. This is, in essence, using a computer to run the computer, and it pays immediate and far reaching dividends. This gives management the ability to make the decision on what data it needs and in what format it wants the information presented. That accomplished, managers can spend their time doing what they were hired to do; run the company and make a profit.

 

If a business is in the manufacturing industry, management does not want or need to spend its time gathering and inputting data about the supply chain, constructing statistical process control charts, or gathering data on trends in the demand for their product or the prices of their supply chain. What they need is that data collected for them by an automated system that collects and collates the information and packages it in a readily identifiable format and delivered to their desktop before the day begins.

 

This is the ultimate purpose of and advantage to using systems management software. It keeps the onus of detailed data input and collection distributed across a workforce with the appropriate specialists. Individual employees input the data relevant to their portion of the company process.The software then executes the appropriate queries to collate the correct data to provide managers with the usable information they need in a format they can readily put to operational use.