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The Systems Analyst
and Information
Systems Development
SYSTEMS ANALYSIS AND DESIGN, 6TH EDITION
DENNIS, WIXOM, AND ROTH
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1Roberta M. Roth
Learning Objectives
 Explain the systems analyst’s role information systems development.
 Describe the basic systems development life cycle and its phases.
 Explain how organizations identify IS development projects.
 Explain the importance of linking the information system to business needs.
 Be able to create a system request.
 Describe technical, economic, and organizational feasibility assessment.
 Be able to perform a feasibility analysis.
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 2
The Systems Analyst
ROLE AND SKILLS
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 3
Systems Analyst Role
 Key role in developing information systems
o Analyzing the business situation
o Identifying opportunities for improvements
o Designing an information system to implement the improvements
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 4
Systems Analyst Roles
 Interaction with an array of people
o Technical specialists (DBAs, network admins, programmers)
o Business people (users, managers, steering committee)
o Others (vendors, consultants)
 Variety of specialized roles
o People-oriented: change management analyst, project management
o Business-oriented: requirements analyst, business analyst
o Technically-oriented: infrastructure analyst
o Generalist: systems analyst
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 5
What Do System Analysts Like
About Their Work?
 Challenge
 Technology
 Variety
 Constant Change
 Problem Solving
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 6
What Do System Analysts Dislike
About Their Work?
 Management’s lack of communication/recognition
 End-user mistakes and demands
 Stress/pressure/burnout
 Ever-changing business technology
 Unrealistic deadlines
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 7
Preparing for Your Career
 Working knowledge of information technology
 Computer programming experience & expertise
 General business knowledge
 Problem-solving skills
 Interpersonal communication skills
 Flexibility and adaptability
 Character and ethics
 Systems analysis & design skills
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 8
The Systems
Development Life
Cycle
THE OVERALL PROCESS OF SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 9
How Do Systems Get Built?
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)
 Planning
 Analysis
 Design
 Implementation
On-going Systems Planning
Planning
AnalysisDesign
Implementation
New Project Launched
Planned
ProjectSystem
Requirements
System
Specifications
Obsolete System
10
Planning Phase
 Project Initiation
o Prepare system request
o Perform preliminary feasibility analysis
 Set Up the Project
o Project Plan, including work plan & staffing plan
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 11
Analysis Phase
 Determine Analysis Strategy
o Study existing system and its problems
 Collect and Analyze Requirements
o Develop new system concept
o Describe new system with analysis models
 Prepare and Present System Proposal
oSummarize results of the Analysis Phase
oGo/No Go decision made by sponsor and steering committee
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 12
Design Phase
 Determine Design Strategy
o Build / Buy / Outsource
 Design system components
o Architecture, interface, database, programs
o Assemble design elements into System Specification
 Present to steering committee
o Go / No Go decision before entering final phase
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 13
Implementation Phase
 System Construction
o Programming and testing
 System Installation
o Training
o Conversion to new system
 On-going system support
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 14
Project Initiation
HOW PROJECTS GET STARTED
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 15
Where Do IS Projects Come From?
 Fulfill a business need
o Enable a business initiative or strategy
o Support a merger/acquisition
o Fix a “point of pain”
o Utilize a new technology
o Outgrowth of Business Process Management (BPM)
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 16
What is BPM?
 Business Process Management: A methodology used by
organizations to continuously improve end-to-end
business processes
o Internal and cross-organizational processes
o Benefits include:
▪ Enhanced process agility
▪ Process alignment with industry “best practices”
▪ Increased process efficiencies
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 17
What is BPM? (continued)
 Four-step continuous cycle:
o Define and map the steps in a business process,
o Create ways to improve on steps in the process that add value,
o Find ways to eliminate or consolidate steps in the process that
don’t add value,
o Create or adjust electronic workflows to match the improved
process maps.
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 18
BPM Identifies Business Needs
 Business Process Automation
o “Create or adjust electronic workflows to match the improved process
maps”
 Business Process Improvement
o Study the business processes
o Create new, redesigned processes to improve the process workflows,
and/or
o Utilize new technologies enabling new process structures
 Business Process Reengineering
o Total overhaul of work processes
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 19
Do We Have a Project Yet?
 Strong business need leads to a person or group stepping
up as the Project Sponsor
o Driving force behind project
o Specifies overall business requirements
o Determines business value
o Formally requests a project via the System Request
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 20
The Systems Request
THE BUSINESS REASONS FOR THE NEW SYSTEM
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 21
System Request
 Describes business reasons for project
 Defines system’s expected value
o Force the sponsor to formalize his/her ideas
o Provide a framework for collecting initial project information
o Standardize information to be used by steering (approval)
committee
 Lists project’s key elements
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 22
Elements of the
Systems Request
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 23
Systems Request
for Tune Source
Music Download
System
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 24
Estimating
Business Value
o Identify sources: increased sales;
decreased costs; reduced
headcount; lower turnover…
o Assign values as initial estimates
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 25
Feasibility Analysis
IS THIS PROJECT REALLY WORTH DOING…
CAN WE DO THIS PROJECT…
WILL THE ORGANIZATION ACCEPT THIS IF WE GO AHEAD…
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 26
Feasibility Analysis
 Detailed business case for the project
o Technical feasibility
o Economic feasibility
o Organizational feasibility
 Compiled into a feasibility study
 Critically important to reassess feasibility
throughout the project
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 27
Technical Feasibility: Can We Build It?
 Sources of Technical Risk:
o Users’ and analysts’ lack of familiarity with the business application
area
o Lack of familiarity with technology
▪ Have we used it before? How new is it?
o Project size
▪ Number of people, time frame, distinct features
o Compatibility with existing systems
▪ Degree of integration required
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 28
Economic Feasibility: Should We Build
It?
 Identify costs and benefits
 Assign values to costs and benefits
 Determine cash flow
 Assess financial viability
o Return on investment
o Break even point
o Net present value
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 29
Costs and
Benefits
o Include development and
operational costs
o Consider tangible and intangible
benefits
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 30
Cost-Benefit
Analysis
o Discounted cash flow method
preferred
o NPV preferred
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 31
Organizational Feasibility:
If We Build It, Will They Come?
 Strategic alignment
o Are project goals aligned with business strategy?
 Evaluate effect on various stakeholders
o Strong and influential project champion?
o Strong and widespread organizational management support?
o Receptive / resistant system users?
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 32
Organizational Feasibility
If We Build It, Will They Come?
 Strategic alignment
o Close alignment with strategy increases the likelihood of success
 Stakeholder groups can be influenced
o Presentations describing and promoting benefits
o Emphasizing personal benefits as well as organizational benefits
o Prototypes help prove the system concept
o Real user involvement throughout project
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 33
Feasibility Assessment: Summing It Up
 All projects have feasibility risks
o Our goal is to know the risks we face and the significance of those risks
o Project Sponsor, Project Manager, and other team members need this
awareness
o Once risks are known, steps can be taken to mitigate the risks
▪ For example, if unfamiliar with a new technology
• Provide enough budget for training
• Provide enough budget to hire consultants with expertise
• Allow more schedule time to move up the learning curve
• Use a methodology that incorporates experimentation
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 34
Feasibility Assessment: Summing It Up
 Essential to continuously review and revise the
feasibility assessment
o How well are we managing the risks we previously identified?
Are adjustments needed?
▪ Risk is being managed
▪ Risk is not well managed and needs further attention
o Are there any new risks that have appeared?
▪ If so, what are the actions needed to address those risks?
▪ Budgetary and schedule effect?
© 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 35

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HI600 Ch01 text_slides

  • 1. The Systems Analyst and Information Systems Development SYSTEMS ANALYSIS AND DESIGN, 6TH EDITION DENNIS, WIXOM, AND ROTH © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1Roberta M. Roth
  • 2. Learning Objectives  Explain the systems analyst’s role information systems development.  Describe the basic systems development life cycle and its phases.  Explain how organizations identify IS development projects.  Explain the importance of linking the information system to business needs.  Be able to create a system request.  Describe technical, economic, and organizational feasibility assessment.  Be able to perform a feasibility analysis. © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 2
  • 3. The Systems Analyst ROLE AND SKILLS © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 3
  • 4. Systems Analyst Role  Key role in developing information systems o Analyzing the business situation o Identifying opportunities for improvements o Designing an information system to implement the improvements © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 4
  • 5. Systems Analyst Roles  Interaction with an array of people o Technical specialists (DBAs, network admins, programmers) o Business people (users, managers, steering committee) o Others (vendors, consultants)  Variety of specialized roles o People-oriented: change management analyst, project management o Business-oriented: requirements analyst, business analyst o Technically-oriented: infrastructure analyst o Generalist: systems analyst © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 5
  • 6. What Do System Analysts Like About Their Work?  Challenge  Technology  Variety  Constant Change  Problem Solving © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 6
  • 7. What Do System Analysts Dislike About Their Work?  Management’s lack of communication/recognition  End-user mistakes and demands  Stress/pressure/burnout  Ever-changing business technology  Unrealistic deadlines © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 7
  • 8. Preparing for Your Career  Working knowledge of information technology  Computer programming experience & expertise  General business knowledge  Problem-solving skills  Interpersonal communication skills  Flexibility and adaptability  Character and ethics  Systems analysis & design skills © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 8
  • 9. The Systems Development Life Cycle THE OVERALL PROCESS OF SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 9
  • 10. How Do Systems Get Built? © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)  Planning  Analysis  Design  Implementation On-going Systems Planning Planning AnalysisDesign Implementation New Project Launched Planned ProjectSystem Requirements System Specifications Obsolete System 10
  • 11. Planning Phase  Project Initiation o Prepare system request o Perform preliminary feasibility analysis  Set Up the Project o Project Plan, including work plan & staffing plan © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 11
  • 12. Analysis Phase  Determine Analysis Strategy o Study existing system and its problems  Collect and Analyze Requirements o Develop new system concept o Describe new system with analysis models  Prepare and Present System Proposal oSummarize results of the Analysis Phase oGo/No Go decision made by sponsor and steering committee © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 12
  • 13. Design Phase  Determine Design Strategy o Build / Buy / Outsource  Design system components o Architecture, interface, database, programs o Assemble design elements into System Specification  Present to steering committee o Go / No Go decision before entering final phase © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 13
  • 14. Implementation Phase  System Construction o Programming and testing  System Installation o Training o Conversion to new system  On-going system support © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 14
  • 15. Project Initiation HOW PROJECTS GET STARTED © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 15
  • 16. Where Do IS Projects Come From?  Fulfill a business need o Enable a business initiative or strategy o Support a merger/acquisition o Fix a “point of pain” o Utilize a new technology o Outgrowth of Business Process Management (BPM) © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 16
  • 17. What is BPM?  Business Process Management: A methodology used by organizations to continuously improve end-to-end business processes o Internal and cross-organizational processes o Benefits include: ▪ Enhanced process agility ▪ Process alignment with industry “best practices” ▪ Increased process efficiencies © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 17
  • 18. What is BPM? (continued)  Four-step continuous cycle: o Define and map the steps in a business process, o Create ways to improve on steps in the process that add value, o Find ways to eliminate or consolidate steps in the process that don’t add value, o Create or adjust electronic workflows to match the improved process maps. © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 18
  • 19. BPM Identifies Business Needs  Business Process Automation o “Create or adjust electronic workflows to match the improved process maps”  Business Process Improvement o Study the business processes o Create new, redesigned processes to improve the process workflows, and/or o Utilize new technologies enabling new process structures  Business Process Reengineering o Total overhaul of work processes © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 19
  • 20. Do We Have a Project Yet?  Strong business need leads to a person or group stepping up as the Project Sponsor o Driving force behind project o Specifies overall business requirements o Determines business value o Formally requests a project via the System Request © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 20
  • 21. The Systems Request THE BUSINESS REASONS FOR THE NEW SYSTEM © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 21
  • 22. System Request  Describes business reasons for project  Defines system’s expected value o Force the sponsor to formalize his/her ideas o Provide a framework for collecting initial project information o Standardize information to be used by steering (approval) committee  Lists project’s key elements © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 22
  • 23. Elements of the Systems Request © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 23
  • 24. Systems Request for Tune Source Music Download System © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 24
  • 25. Estimating Business Value o Identify sources: increased sales; decreased costs; reduced headcount; lower turnover… o Assign values as initial estimates © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 25
  • 26. Feasibility Analysis IS THIS PROJECT REALLY WORTH DOING… CAN WE DO THIS PROJECT… WILL THE ORGANIZATION ACCEPT THIS IF WE GO AHEAD… © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 26
  • 27. Feasibility Analysis  Detailed business case for the project o Technical feasibility o Economic feasibility o Organizational feasibility  Compiled into a feasibility study  Critically important to reassess feasibility throughout the project © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 27
  • 28. Technical Feasibility: Can We Build It?  Sources of Technical Risk: o Users’ and analysts’ lack of familiarity with the business application area o Lack of familiarity with technology ▪ Have we used it before? How new is it? o Project size ▪ Number of people, time frame, distinct features o Compatibility with existing systems ▪ Degree of integration required © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 28
  • 29. Economic Feasibility: Should We Build It?  Identify costs and benefits  Assign values to costs and benefits  Determine cash flow  Assess financial viability o Return on investment o Break even point o Net present value © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 29
  • 30. Costs and Benefits o Include development and operational costs o Consider tangible and intangible benefits © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 30
  • 31. Cost-Benefit Analysis o Discounted cash flow method preferred o NPV preferred © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 31
  • 32. Organizational Feasibility: If We Build It, Will They Come?  Strategic alignment o Are project goals aligned with business strategy?  Evaluate effect on various stakeholders o Strong and influential project champion? o Strong and widespread organizational management support? o Receptive / resistant system users? © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 32
  • 33. Organizational Feasibility If We Build It, Will They Come?  Strategic alignment o Close alignment with strategy increases the likelihood of success  Stakeholder groups can be influenced o Presentations describing and promoting benefits o Emphasizing personal benefits as well as organizational benefits o Prototypes help prove the system concept o Real user involvement throughout project © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 33
  • 34. Feasibility Assessment: Summing It Up  All projects have feasibility risks o Our goal is to know the risks we face and the significance of those risks o Project Sponsor, Project Manager, and other team members need this awareness o Once risks are known, steps can be taken to mitigate the risks ▪ For example, if unfamiliar with a new technology • Provide enough budget for training • Provide enough budget to hire consultants with expertise • Allow more schedule time to move up the learning curve • Use a methodology that incorporates experimentation © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 34
  • 35. Feasibility Assessment: Summing It Up  Essential to continuously review and revise the feasibility assessment o How well are we managing the risks we previously identified? Are adjustments needed? ▪ Risk is being managed ▪ Risk is not well managed and needs further attention o Are there any new risks that have appeared? ▪ If so, what are the actions needed to address those risks? ▪ Budgetary and schedule effect? © 2015 JOHN WILEY & SONS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 35