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10.1
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
10
Chapter
Improving Decision
Improving Decision
Making and Managing
Making and Managing
Knowledge
Knowledge
10.2
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Business Value of Improved Decision Making
Business Value of Improved Decision Making
• Possible to measure value of improved decision
making.
• Decisions made at all levels of the firm.
• Some are common, routine, and numerous.
• Although value of improving any single
decision may be small, improving hundreds of
thousands of “small” decisions adds up to large
annual value for the business.
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.3
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Business Value of Improved Decision Making
Business Value of Improved Decision Making
Decision Maker Number
/ year
Value of
decision
Annual value
to firm
Allocate support to most
valuable customers.
Accounts manager 12 $100,000 $1,200,000
Predict call center daily
demand.
Call Center
management
4 150,000 600,000
Decide parts inventory level
daily.
Inventory manager 365 5,000 1,825,000
Identify competitive bids
from major suppliers.
Senior management 1 2,000,000 2,000,000
Schedule production to fill
orders.
Manufacturing
manager
150 10,000 1,500,000
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.4
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Types of Decisions
Types of Decisions
Decision Making and Information Systems
• Unstructured
• Decision maker must provide judgment to solve problem
• Novel, important, nonroutine
• No well-understood or agreed-upon procedure for making
them
• Structured
• Repetitive and routine
• Involve definite procedure for handling them so do not
have to be treated as new
• Semistructured
• Only part of problem has clear-cut answer provided by
accepted procedure
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.5
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-1
Senior managers, middle
managers, operational
managers, and employees
have different types of
decisions and information
requirements.
Information Requirements of Key Decision-Making
Information Requirements of Key Decision-Making
Groups in a Firm
Groups in a Firm
Decision Making and Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.6
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
The Decision-Making Process
The Decision-Making Process
Decision Making and Information Systems
1. Intelligence
• Discovering, identifying, and understanding the problems
occurring in the organization—why is there a problem,
where, what effects it is having on the firm
2. Design
• Identifying and exploring various solutions
3. Choice
• Choosing among solution alternatives
4. Implementation
• Making chosen alternative work and monitoring how well
solution is working
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.7
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Figure 10-2
The decision-making
process can be broken
down into four stages.
Stages in Decision Making
Stages in Decision Making
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.8
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Quality Dimensions of Decisions
Quality Dimensions of Decisions
Decision Making and Information Systems
• Accuracy
• Decision reflects reality.
• Comprehensiveness
• Decision reflects a full consideration of the
facts and circumstances.
• Fairness
• Decision faithfully reflects the concerns and
interests of affected parties.
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.9
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Quality Dimensions of Decisions
Quality Dimensions of Decisions
Decision Making and Information Systems
• Speed (efficiency)
• Decision making is efficient with respect to time
and other resources.
• Coherence
• Decision reflects rational process that can be
explained to others and made understandable.
• Due process
• Decision is the result of a known process and
can be appealed to a higher authority.
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.10
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Systems and Technologies for Supporting Decisions
Systems and Technologies for Supporting Decisions
Decision Making and Information Systems
• Management information systems (MIS)
• Decision-support systems (DSS)
• Executive support systems (ESS)
• Group-decision support systems (GDSS)
• Intelligent techniques
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.11
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Management Information Systems (MIS)
Management Information Systems (MIS)
Systems for Decision Support
• Help managers monitor and control a business
by providing information on the firm’s
performance.
• Typically produce fixed, regularly scheduled
reports based on data from TPS.
• E.g., summary of monthly or annual sales for
each of the major sales territories of a
company.
• Exception reports: highlighting exceptional
conditions only.
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.12
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision-Support Systems (DSS)
Decision-Support Systems (DSS)
• Support semistructured and unstructured problem
analysis.
• Earliest DSS were model-driven:
• “What-if” analysis: model is developed, various
input factors are changed, and the output
changes are measured.
• Data-driven DSS:
• Use OLAP and data mining to analyze large
pools of data in major corporate systems.
Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.13
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Components of DSS
Components of DSS
Systems for Decision Support
• DSS database: collection of current or historical
data from a number of applications or groups
• DSS software system
• Software tools that are used for data analysis
• OLAP tools
• Data mining tools
• Mathematical and analytical models
• DSS user interface
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.14
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Figure 10-3
The main components of the
DSS are the DSS database,
the DSS software system,
and the user interface. The
DSS database may be a
small database residing on a
PC or a large data
warehouse.
Overview of a Decision-Support System
Overview of a Decision-Support System
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.15
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Systems for Decision Support
• Models: abstract representation that illustrates the
components or relationships of a phenomenon
• Statistical modeling helps establish relationships.
• E.g., relating product sales to differences in age, income,
or other factors
• Optimization models, forecasting models
• Sensitivity analysis models
• Ask “what-if” questions repeatedly to determine the
impact on outcomes of changes in one or more factors.
• E.g., what happens if we raise product price by 5 percent
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.16
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Figure 10-4
This table displays the results of a sensitivity analysis of the effect of
changing the sales price of a necktie and the cost per unit on the product’s
break-even point. It answers the question, “What happens to the break-even
point if the sales price and the cost to make each unit increase or
decrease?”
Sensitivity Analysis
Sensitivity Analysis
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.17
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Using Spreadsheet Tables to Support Decision Making
Using Spreadsheet Tables to Support Decision Making
Systems for Decision Support
• Spreadsheet tables can answer multiple
dimensions of questions.
• Time of day and average purchase
• Payment type and average purchase
• Payment type, region, and source
• Pivot table
• Displays two or more dimensions of data in a
convenient format
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.18
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Figure 10-5
This list shows a
portion of the order
transactions for
Online Management
Training Inc. on
October 28, 2009.
Sample List of Transactions for Online Management
Sample List of Transactions for Online Management
Training Inc. on October 28, 2009
Training Inc. on October 28, 2009
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.19
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Figure 10-6
This pivot table was
created using Excel 2007
to quickly produce a
table showing the
relationship between
region and number of
customers.
A Pivot Table That Examines the Regional
A Pivot Table That Examines the Regional
Distribution of Customers
Distribution of Customers
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.20
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Figure 10-7
In this pivot table, we
can examine where
customers come from in
terms of region and
advertising source. It
appears nearly 30
percent of the
customers respond to e-
mail campaigns, and
there are some regional
variations.
A Pivot Table That Examines Customer Regional
A Pivot Table That Examines Customer Regional
Distribution and Advertising Source
Distribution and Advertising Source
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.21
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Data Visualization and Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
Data Visualization and Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
Systems for Decision Support
• Data visualization tools:
• Present data in graphical form to help users see
patterns and relationships in large quantities of
data.
• Geographic information systems (GIS):
• Use data visualization technology to analyze and
display data in the form of digitized maps.
• Support decisions that require knowledge about
the geographic distribution of people or other
resources.
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.22
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Decision Making and Information Systems
Somerset County, New
Jersey, developed a GIS
based on ESRI software
to provide Web access
to geospatial data about
flood conditions. The
system provides
information that helps
emergency responders
and county residents
prepare for floods and
enables emergency
managers to make
decisions more quickly.
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.23
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Web-Based Customer Decision-Support Systems (CDSS)
Web-Based Customer Decision-Support Systems (CDSS)
Systems for Decision Support
• Support customers in the decision-making
process,
• Include: search engines, intelligent agents, online
catalogs, Web directories, newsgroups, e-mail, and so on
• Many firms have customer Web sites where all the
information, models, or other analytical tools for
evaluating alternatives are concentrated in one
location.
• E.g., T. Rowe Price online tools, guides for college
planning, retirement planning, estate planning, and
so on
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.24
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Executive Support Systems (ESS)
Executive Support Systems (ESS)
• Bring together data from many different internal and
external sources, often through a portal.
• Digital dashboard: gives senior executives a picture
of the overall performance of an organization.
• Drill down capability: enables an executive to zoom
in on details or zoom out for a broader view.
• Used to monitor organizational performance, track
activities of competitors, identify changing market
conditions, spot problems, identify opportunities,
and forecast trends.
Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.25
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Group Decision-Support Systems (GDSS)
Group Decision-Support Systems (GDSS)
• Interactive, computer-based systems that facilitate
solving of unstructured problems by set of
decision makers.
• Used in conference rooms with special hardware
and software for collecting, ranking, storing ideas
and decisions.
• Promote a collaborative atmosphere by
guaranteeing contributors’ anonymity.
• Support increased meeting sizes with increased
productivity.
Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.26
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Intelligent techniques for enhancing decision
making
• Many based on artificial intelligence (AI)
• Computer-based systems (hardware and software) that
attempt to emulate human behavior and thought
patterns
• Include:
• Expert systems
• Case-based reasoning
• Fuzzy logic
• Neural networks
• Genetic algorithms
• Intelligent agents
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.27
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Expert systems
• Model human knowledge as a set of rules that are
collectively called the knowledge base
• 200 to 10,000 rules, depending on complexity
• The system’s inference engine searches through the
rules and “fires” those rules that are triggered by facts
gathered and entered by the user.
• Useful for dealing with problems of classification in
which there are relatively few alternative outcomes
and in which these possible outcomes are all known
in advance
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.28
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-8
An expert system contains a set
of rules to be followed when
used. The rules are
interconnected; the number of
outcomes is known in advance
and is limited; there are multiple
paths to the same outcome; and
the system can consider multiple
rules at a single time. The rules
illustrated are for a simple
credit-granting expert system.
Rules in an Expert System
Rules in an Expert System
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.29
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Case-based reasoning
• Knowledge and past experiences of human specialists
are represented as cases and stored in a database for
later retrieval.
• System searches for stored cases with problem
characteristics similar to new one, finds closest fit, and
applies solutions of old case to new case.
• Successful and unsuccessful applications are tagged and
linked in database.
• Used in medical diagnostic systems, customer support.
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.30
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-9
Case-based reasoning
represents knowledge as
a database of past cases
and their solutions. The
system uses a six-step
process to generate
solutions to new problems
encountered by the user.
How Case-Based Reasoning Works
How Case-Based Reasoning Works
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.31
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Fuzzy logic
• Rule-based technology that represents imprecision in
categories (e.g., “cold” versus “cool”) by creating rules
that use approximate or subjective values
• Describes a particular phenomenon or process
linguistically and then represents that description in a
small number of flexible rules
• Provides solutions to problems requiring expertise that is
difficult to represent in the form of crisp IF-THEN rules
• E.g., Sendai, Japan subway system uses fuzzy logic
controls to accelerate so smoothly that standing
passengers need not hold on
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.32
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-10
The membership functions for the input called temperature are in the logic of the
thermostat to control the room temperature. Membership functions help translate
linguistic expressions, such as warm, into numbers that the computer can
manipulate
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Fuzzy Logic for Temperature Control
Fuzzy Logic for Temperature Control
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.33
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Neural networks
• Use hardware and software that parallel the processing
patterns of a biological brain.
• “Learn” patterns from large quantities of data by searching
for relationships, building models, and correcting over and
over again the model’s own mistakes.
• Humans “train” the network by feeding it data for which the
inputs produce a known set of outputs or conclusions.
• Machine learning
• Useful for solving complex, poorly understood problems for
which large amounts of data have been collected.
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.34
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-11
A neural network uses rules it “learns” from patterns in data to construct a hidden layer of logic. The hidden
layer then processes inputs, classifying them based on the experience of the model. In this example, the
neural network has been trained to distinguish between valid and fraudulent credit card purchases.
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
How a Neural Network Works
How a Neural Network Works
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.35
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Genetic algorithms
• Find the optimal solution for a specific problem by
examining very large number of alternative solutions for
that problem.
• Based on techniques inspired by evolutionary biology:
inheritance, mutation, selection, and so on.
• Work by representing a solution as a string of 0s and 1s,
then searching randomly generated strings of binary
digits to identify best possible solution.
• Used to solve complex problems that are very dynamic
and complex, involving hundreds or thousands of
variables or formulas.
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.36
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-12
This example illustrates an initial population of “chromosomes,” each representing a different
solution. The genetic algorithm uses an iterative process to refine the initial solutions so that the
better ones, those with the higher fitness, are more likely to emerge as the best solution.
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
The Components of a Genetic Algorithm
The Components of a Genetic Algorithm
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.37
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
• Intelligent agents
• Programs that work in the background without direct
human intervention to carry out specific, repetitive, and
predictable tasks for user, business process, or
software application
• Shopping bots
• Procter & Gamble (P&G) programmed group of
semiautonomous agents to emulate behavior of
supply-chain components, such as trucks, production
facilities, distributors, and retail stores and created
simulations to determine how to make supply chain
more efficient
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
10.38
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice
Figure 10-13
Intelligent agents are helping Procter & Gamble
shorten the replenishment cycles for products,
such as a box of Tide.
Intelligent Agents in P&G’s Supply Chain Network
Intelligent Agents in P&G’s Supply Chain Network
Intelligent Systems for Decision Support
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Essentials of Management Information Systems
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge

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Improving decision making and managing knowledge

  • 1. 10.1 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice 10 Chapter Improving Decision Improving Decision Making and Managing Making and Managing Knowledge Knowledge
  • 2. 10.2 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Business Value of Improved Decision Making Business Value of Improved Decision Making • Possible to measure value of improved decision making. • Decisions made at all levels of the firm. • Some are common, routine, and numerous. • Although value of improving any single decision may be small, improving hundreds of thousands of “small” decisions adds up to large annual value for the business. Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 3. 10.3 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Business Value of Improved Decision Making Business Value of Improved Decision Making Decision Maker Number / year Value of decision Annual value to firm Allocate support to most valuable customers. Accounts manager 12 $100,000 $1,200,000 Predict call center daily demand. Call Center management 4 150,000 600,000 Decide parts inventory level daily. Inventory manager 365 5,000 1,825,000 Identify competitive bids from major suppliers. Senior management 1 2,000,000 2,000,000 Schedule production to fill orders. Manufacturing manager 150 10,000 1,500,000 Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 4. 10.4 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Types of Decisions Types of Decisions Decision Making and Information Systems • Unstructured • Decision maker must provide judgment to solve problem • Novel, important, nonroutine • No well-understood or agreed-upon procedure for making them • Structured • Repetitive and routine • Involve definite procedure for handling them so do not have to be treated as new • Semistructured • Only part of problem has clear-cut answer provided by accepted procedure Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 5. 10.5 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-1 Senior managers, middle managers, operational managers, and employees have different types of decisions and information requirements. Information Requirements of Key Decision-Making Information Requirements of Key Decision-Making Groups in a Firm Groups in a Firm Decision Making and Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 6. 10.6 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice The Decision-Making Process The Decision-Making Process Decision Making and Information Systems 1. Intelligence • Discovering, identifying, and understanding the problems occurring in the organization—why is there a problem, where, what effects it is having on the firm 2. Design • Identifying and exploring various solutions 3. Choice • Choosing among solution alternatives 4. Implementation • Making chosen alternative work and monitoring how well solution is working Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 7. 10.7 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Figure 10-2 The decision-making process can be broken down into four stages. Stages in Decision Making Stages in Decision Making Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 8. 10.8 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Quality Dimensions of Decisions Quality Dimensions of Decisions Decision Making and Information Systems • Accuracy • Decision reflects reality. • Comprehensiveness • Decision reflects a full consideration of the facts and circumstances. • Fairness • Decision faithfully reflects the concerns and interests of affected parties. Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 9. 10.9 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Quality Dimensions of Decisions Quality Dimensions of Decisions Decision Making and Information Systems • Speed (efficiency) • Decision making is efficient with respect to time and other resources. • Coherence • Decision reflects rational process that can be explained to others and made understandable. • Due process • Decision is the result of a known process and can be appealed to a higher authority. Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 10. 10.10 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Systems and Technologies for Supporting Decisions Systems and Technologies for Supporting Decisions Decision Making and Information Systems • Management information systems (MIS) • Decision-support systems (DSS) • Executive support systems (ESS) • Group-decision support systems (GDSS) • Intelligent techniques Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 11. 10.11 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Management Information Systems (MIS) Management Information Systems (MIS) Systems for Decision Support • Help managers monitor and control a business by providing information on the firm’s performance. • Typically produce fixed, regularly scheduled reports based on data from TPS. • E.g., summary of monthly or annual sales for each of the major sales territories of a company. • Exception reports: highlighting exceptional conditions only. Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 12. 10.12 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision-Support Systems (DSS) Decision-Support Systems (DSS) • Support semistructured and unstructured problem analysis. • Earliest DSS were model-driven: • “What-if” analysis: model is developed, various input factors are changed, and the output changes are measured. • Data-driven DSS: • Use OLAP and data mining to analyze large pools of data in major corporate systems. Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 13. 10.13 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Components of DSS Components of DSS Systems for Decision Support • DSS database: collection of current or historical data from a number of applications or groups • DSS software system • Software tools that are used for data analysis • OLAP tools • Data mining tools • Mathematical and analytical models • DSS user interface Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 14. 10.14 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Figure 10-3 The main components of the DSS are the DSS database, the DSS software system, and the user interface. The DSS database may be a small database residing on a PC or a large data warehouse. Overview of a Decision-Support System Overview of a Decision-Support System Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 15. 10.15 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Systems for Decision Support • Models: abstract representation that illustrates the components or relationships of a phenomenon • Statistical modeling helps establish relationships. • E.g., relating product sales to differences in age, income, or other factors • Optimization models, forecasting models • Sensitivity analysis models • Ask “what-if” questions repeatedly to determine the impact on outcomes of changes in one or more factors. • E.g., what happens if we raise product price by 5 percent Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 16. 10.16 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Figure 10-4 This table displays the results of a sensitivity analysis of the effect of changing the sales price of a necktie and the cost per unit on the product’s break-even point. It answers the question, “What happens to the break-even point if the sales price and the cost to make each unit increase or decrease?” Sensitivity Analysis Sensitivity Analysis Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 17. 10.17 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Using Spreadsheet Tables to Support Decision Making Using Spreadsheet Tables to Support Decision Making Systems for Decision Support • Spreadsheet tables can answer multiple dimensions of questions. • Time of day and average purchase • Payment type and average purchase • Payment type, region, and source • Pivot table • Displays two or more dimensions of data in a convenient format Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 18. 10.18 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Figure 10-5 This list shows a portion of the order transactions for Online Management Training Inc. on October 28, 2009. Sample List of Transactions for Online Management Sample List of Transactions for Online Management Training Inc. on October 28, 2009 Training Inc. on October 28, 2009 Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 19. 10.19 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Figure 10-6 This pivot table was created using Excel 2007 to quickly produce a table showing the relationship between region and number of customers. A Pivot Table That Examines the Regional A Pivot Table That Examines the Regional Distribution of Customers Distribution of Customers Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 20. 10.20 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Figure 10-7 In this pivot table, we can examine where customers come from in terms of region and advertising source. It appears nearly 30 percent of the customers respond to e- mail campaigns, and there are some regional variations. A Pivot Table That Examines Customer Regional A Pivot Table That Examines Customer Regional Distribution and Advertising Source Distribution and Advertising Source Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 21. 10.21 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Data Visualization and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Data Visualization and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Systems for Decision Support • Data visualization tools: • Present data in graphical form to help users see patterns and relationships in large quantities of data. • Geographic information systems (GIS): • Use data visualization technology to analyze and display data in the form of digitized maps. • Support decisions that require knowledge about the geographic distribution of people or other resources. Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 22. 10.22 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Decision Making and Information Systems Somerset County, New Jersey, developed a GIS based on ESRI software to provide Web access to geospatial data about flood conditions. The system provides information that helps emergency responders and county residents prepare for floods and enables emergency managers to make decisions more quickly. Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 23. 10.23 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Web-Based Customer Decision-Support Systems (CDSS) Web-Based Customer Decision-Support Systems (CDSS) Systems for Decision Support • Support customers in the decision-making process, • Include: search engines, intelligent agents, online catalogs, Web directories, newsgroups, e-mail, and so on • Many firms have customer Web sites where all the information, models, or other analytical tools for evaluating alternatives are concentrated in one location. • E.g., T. Rowe Price online tools, guides for college planning, retirement planning, estate planning, and so on Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 24. 10.24 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Executive Support Systems (ESS) Executive Support Systems (ESS) • Bring together data from many different internal and external sources, often through a portal. • Digital dashboard: gives senior executives a picture of the overall performance of an organization. • Drill down capability: enables an executive to zoom in on details or zoom out for a broader view. • Used to monitor organizational performance, track activities of competitors, identify changing market conditions, spot problems, identify opportunities, and forecast trends. Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 25. 10.25 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Group Decision-Support Systems (GDSS) Group Decision-Support Systems (GDSS) • Interactive, computer-based systems that facilitate solving of unstructured problems by set of decision makers. • Used in conference rooms with special hardware and software for collecting, ranking, storing ideas and decisions. • Promote a collaborative atmosphere by guaranteeing contributors’ anonymity. • Support increased meeting sizes with increased productivity. Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 26. 10.26 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Intelligent techniques for enhancing decision making • Many based on artificial intelligence (AI) • Computer-based systems (hardware and software) that attempt to emulate human behavior and thought patterns • Include: • Expert systems • Case-based reasoning • Fuzzy logic • Neural networks • Genetic algorithms • Intelligent agents Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 27. 10.27 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Expert systems • Model human knowledge as a set of rules that are collectively called the knowledge base • 200 to 10,000 rules, depending on complexity • The system’s inference engine searches through the rules and “fires” those rules that are triggered by facts gathered and entered by the user. • Useful for dealing with problems of classification in which there are relatively few alternative outcomes and in which these possible outcomes are all known in advance Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 28. 10.28 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-8 An expert system contains a set of rules to be followed when used. The rules are interconnected; the number of outcomes is known in advance and is limited; there are multiple paths to the same outcome; and the system can consider multiple rules at a single time. The rules illustrated are for a simple credit-granting expert system. Rules in an Expert System Rules in an Expert System Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 29. 10.29 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Case-based reasoning • Knowledge and past experiences of human specialists are represented as cases and stored in a database for later retrieval. • System searches for stored cases with problem characteristics similar to new one, finds closest fit, and applies solutions of old case to new case. • Successful and unsuccessful applications are tagged and linked in database. • Used in medical diagnostic systems, customer support. Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 30. 10.30 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-9 Case-based reasoning represents knowledge as a database of past cases and their solutions. The system uses a six-step process to generate solutions to new problems encountered by the user. How Case-Based Reasoning Works How Case-Based Reasoning Works Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 31. 10.31 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Fuzzy logic • Rule-based technology that represents imprecision in categories (e.g., “cold” versus “cool”) by creating rules that use approximate or subjective values • Describes a particular phenomenon or process linguistically and then represents that description in a small number of flexible rules • Provides solutions to problems requiring expertise that is difficult to represent in the form of crisp IF-THEN rules • E.g., Sendai, Japan subway system uses fuzzy logic controls to accelerate so smoothly that standing passengers need not hold on Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 32. 10.32 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-10 The membership functions for the input called temperature are in the logic of the thermostat to control the room temperature. Membership functions help translate linguistic expressions, such as warm, into numbers that the computer can manipulate Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Fuzzy Logic for Temperature Control Fuzzy Logic for Temperature Control Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 33. 10.33 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Neural networks • Use hardware and software that parallel the processing patterns of a biological brain. • “Learn” patterns from large quantities of data by searching for relationships, building models, and correcting over and over again the model’s own mistakes. • Humans “train” the network by feeding it data for which the inputs produce a known set of outputs or conclusions. • Machine learning • Useful for solving complex, poorly understood problems for which large amounts of data have been collected. Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 34. 10.34 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-11 A neural network uses rules it “learns” from patterns in data to construct a hidden layer of logic. The hidden layer then processes inputs, classifying them based on the experience of the model. In this example, the neural network has been trained to distinguish between valid and fraudulent credit card purchases. Intelligent Systems for Decision Support How a Neural Network Works How a Neural Network Works Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 35. 10.35 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Genetic algorithms • Find the optimal solution for a specific problem by examining very large number of alternative solutions for that problem. • Based on techniques inspired by evolutionary biology: inheritance, mutation, selection, and so on. • Work by representing a solution as a string of 0s and 1s, then searching randomly generated strings of binary digits to identify best possible solution. • Used to solve complex problems that are very dynamic and complex, involving hundreds or thousands of variables or formulas. Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 36. 10.36 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-12 This example illustrates an initial population of “chromosomes,” each representing a different solution. The genetic algorithm uses an iterative process to refine the initial solutions so that the better ones, those with the higher fitness, are more likely to emerge as the best solution. Intelligent Systems for Decision Support The Components of a Genetic Algorithm The Components of a Genetic Algorithm Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 37. 10.37 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice • Intelligent agents • Programs that work in the background without direct human intervention to carry out specific, repetitive, and predictable tasks for user, business process, or software application • Shopping bots • Procter & Gamble (P&G) programmed group of semiautonomous agents to emulate behavior of supply-chain components, such as trucks, production facilities, distributors, and retail stores and created simulations to determine how to make supply chain more efficient Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge
  • 38. 10.38 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Figure 10-13 Intelligent agents are helping Procter & Gamble shorten the replenishment cycles for products, such as a box of Tide. Intelligent Agents in P&G’s Supply Chain Network Intelligent Agents in P&G’s Supply Chain Network Intelligent Systems for Decision Support Essentials of Management Information Systems Essentials of Management Information Systems Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge Chapter 10 Improving Decision Making and Managing Knowledge