Role of Information Technology in Growth of Business
Information technology (IT) refers to the management and use of information using computer-based tools. It includes acquiring, processing, storing, and distributing information. Most commonly it is a term used to refer to business applications of computer technology, rather than scientific applications. The term is used broadly in business to refer to anything that ties into the use of computers.
Mostly businesses today create data that can be stored and processed on computers. In some cases the data must be input to computers using devices such as keyboards and scanners. In other cases the data might be created electronically and automatically stored in computers.
Small businesses generally need to purchase software packages, and may need to contract with IT businesses that provide services such as hosting, marketing web sites and maintaining networks. However, larger companies can consider having their own IT staffs to develop software, and otherwise handle IT needs in-house. For instance, businesses working with the federal government are likely to need to comply with requirements relating to making information accessible.
The constant upgrade in information technology, along with increasing global competition, is adding difficulty and hesitation of several orders of scale to the business and trade. One of the most widely discussed areas in recent business literature is that of new organizational network structures that hold survival and growth in an environment of growing complexity.
Effective implementation of information technology would decrease liability by reducing the cost of expected failures and increase flexibility by reducing the cost of adjustment. The businesses reaction to the environment remains to be the vital determinant for its effectiveness. The capabilities and flexibilities of computer-communication systems make them gradually more appropriate to businesses by being able to respond to any specific information or communication requirement.
Information Technology is having impact on all trade industries and businesses, in service as well as in manufacturing. It is affecting workers at all levels of organizations, from the executives to middle management and clerks. Information technology is increasingly becoming a basic factor of all types of technologies such as craft, engineering, routine, and non-routine.
The advances in Information Technology would result in remarkable decline in the costs of synchronization that would lead to new, concentrated business structures. It enables the business to respond to the new and urgent competitive forces by providing effective management of interdependence.
In the near future businesses would be facing a lack and a redundancy of information called information glut. To solve the information-glut companies will need to introduce methods for selective thinning out of information. Improvements in telecommunications will make it easier to control business units dispersed over different parts of the world. Advances in telecommunications, would result in increased distance-communication. Indirect communication would be preferred for well-structured information for routine, preprogrammed and decision processes.
Balancing Technology, Management, and Leadership
“The art of progress is to preserve order amid change and to preserve change amid order.” — Alfred North Whitehead, 19th century British mathematician and philosopher
As Achieve (my first consulting company) was working with our Clients to implement Toward Excellence (the cultural change process we had developed in conjunction with Tom Peters) I was growing increasingly uneasy. Something didn’t feel right. In In Search of Excellence, Peters and Waterman presented a powerful case against “the rational model” of management. It forcefully argued (among other things) for focusing on people (customers and those serving them) rather than processes, action instead of analysis, and becoming values rather than numbers driven.
Sure there was a strong need for managers to move away from the overstuffed bureaucratic, controlling, and hierarchical approach many companies had fallen into.
But I also knew of companies that were entrepreneurial, exciting, people-oriented, customer-driven — and they struggled or even went down the tubes because they used a shoebox for an accounting system and yesterday’s technology. Some of these managers came from the we-must-still-have-money-because-we-still-have-checks-left school of business mismanagement.
It seemed to me the real issue was balance. So as I went to work on my first book, The VIP Strategy, I developed an early version of the “triangle model”. After using it with numerous management teams to frame key organization improvement issues, and continuing to study, speak, and write about the performance balance, we have since further refined the model:
Performance Balance Triangle
Technology — an organization’s core technology is the expertise and/or equipment that produces the products or services that its customers buy. Supporting technology may include web-based applications, software, telecommunications, robotics, production equipment, and the like to produce, deliver, or support the organization’s core technology. Personal technology is the technical expertise I bring to the production, delivery, or support of either core or supporting technologies.
Management Systems and Processes — organizational processes are the flow of materials, work activities, customer interactions, or information across an organization to produce, deliver, or support the products or services that its customers buy. Organizational systems are the underlying feedback and measurements loops, performance improvement methods, and organization structure. Personal systems and processes are the methods, habits, and approaches we all use to get things done.
People (Leadership) — this includes those people an organization serves, the people they would like to serve, people in the organization doing the producing and serving, key external partners (such as distributors, strategic alliances, suppliers, etc.), everyone in the organization supporting the producers and serving the servers, shareholders or funding partners, and (very deliberately last) management.
In top performing organizations, each area is strong and constantly improving. For example, in our technological age, we all need to ensure that we’re constantly upgrading our technical expertise and technological tools. We can’t afford to fall behind. In my case, my notebook computer has been a huge help with email, managing my time, storing and easily retrieving information, keeping contact and project records, maintaining our database, developing slides for presentations and workshops, and accessing a multitude of information and research through the Internet. Without it, I’d be 30 – 40% less productive and would need much more administrative help.
But as with any technology, just automating sloppy personal habits and disorganization will mean we’ll just mess it up faster.
If our understanding of our customer expectations are only partially accurate, expensive technology and “reengineered” processes will only deliver partial results. If people in our organizations can’t communicate face-to-face, electronic communications won’t improve communications very much. If we haven’t established the discipline of setting priorities for our time or organizing ourselves, a notebook computer or other wireless mobile device won’t do it for us.
Systems and processes is also an extremely important area. An organization can be using the latest technologies and be highly people-focused, but if the methods and approaches used to structure and organize work is weak, performance will suffer badly. People in organizations can be empowered, energized, and enlightened, but if systems and processes (and technologies) don’t enable them to perform well, they won’t. Developing the discipline and using the most effective tools and techniques of personal and organization systems and processes is a critical element of high performance.
The Performance Balance triangle has people or leadership at its base. That’s very deliberate. In well-balanced, high performing teams or organizations, technology, systems, and processes serve people. For example, as information technology (IT) specialists study why so many huge investments in equipment and software haven’t paid off, they find the problem comes back to how the technology is designed and used, by whom, and for whom. An executive in California’s Silicon Valley summed up an important perspective making the rounds there, “we used to say people need to be more technology literate. Now we say that technology needs to become more people literate.”
New Technology
We may think of future technology as being flying cars or robot butlers, but in actuality the device you are using to read this was considered future technology just a few years ago. As the days in our fast paced world go by, technology changes and updates at a rapid pace. The following is a list of what is considered to be a few things that will change everything in future technology.
Wireless Power Transmission
This is a method of being able to throw or transmit electricity a few feet without the use of wires or the danger of injuring anyone nearby. This technology will not be around for another four to six years (if everything goes well and according to plan), but imagine not having to deal with so many wires!
Windows 7
Though this software has already been released it is once of the programs that has been mentioned as one of the top fifteen things that would change everything. It replaces the faulty Windows Vista and provides improved taskbar, touch screen support, access to Netflix in Media Center, faster start ups & shut down and many more features.
Google’s Desktop OS
This application has almost everything you can imagine. It offers an alternative to pay pal with Google check out, street views on the maps shows every house. The Google chrome browser has been release to wet the pallet of those that wish test drive this app.
Cell Phone as the New Paper
If you are an owner of android phone such as the G1, you have most like seen the app that gives its users local discount coupons. There are also websites where you can purchase tickets and are able to show the ticket agent you ticket on your cell phone (can’t lose your ticket that way). Next step that continental Airlines is experimenting with a cell based check-in.
Our technology is continuously changing and there is no better way to utilize this technology than by taking an e-learning course on Windows 7. One of the perks of growing technology is being able to do thing when you want and how you want, and if you like this notion when regarding education, e-learning is the thing for you.