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Information Technology, Strategies for Managers, Business Technology - Information Systems, Management - Technology, Change Management, Management & Troubleshooting - Computer Networks, Information Technology
Competing in the Information Age by Jerry N. Luftman — book cover

Competing in the Information Age

by Jerry N. Luftman
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Overview

Most managers realize that information is among their company's most important assets. However, many don't know how to leverage their investments in information technology. Often, says Jerry N. Luftman, companies rush to acquire state-of-the-art systems without considering their long-term impact. For example, in the 1980s, retail banks invested heavily in ATMs—until ATMs ceased to be a competitive advantage and became merely another (and increasingly expensive) cost of doing business. Stemming from IBM's highly regarded Consulting Group, combining the expertise of consultants and leading academics, Competing in the Information Age shows managers how to avoid being blindsided by information technology. It outlines how to match information systems with business strategy to forge a strong competitive edge and bring powerful solutions to bear on real-world problems.
The bottom line, Luftman contends, is that a firm must coordinate, or align, four elements: its business strategy, the strategy of its information systems, its organizational infrastructure, and its information technology infrastructure. To this end, he adds to his own expertise contributors who offer models, frameworks, and methods that can help companies in any industry discover their ideal strategic alignment. The contributors have a wide variety of backgrounds and approach information technology from a number of illuminating angles. They discuss how to distinguish between information systems that automate human skills and those that augment them; how to put together worldwide, flexible information structures that seamlessly connect people, products, and processes; and how to gauge the benefits of object-oriented programming and connected computer networks. A recurrent theme is the amount to which an executive should be versed in technology, with the caveat that technological jargon sometimes inhibits business opportunities. Other crucial topics include how inter- and intra-organizational systems (IOS) and Electronic Data Exchange (EDI) are creating a whole new raft of management challenges; and how corporate culture affects attitudes toward information technology. The book also offers a six-stage process of transformation to technology, with suggested roles for the CEO, CIO, and other players, and gives advice on coping with the changes and clashes sparked by new information systems. Managers also get advice on how to benchmark information technology strategic alignment, looking at the results of an IBM benchmarking project.
Citing examples from companies as diverse as Federal Express, a Swiss bank, a fresh produce supplier, four airlines contemplating a merger, and a consumer finance organization, this volume will be valuable to managers from small firms to global corporations, at various stages of contemplating—or implementing—leveraging information technology. It gives companies the key to unlock the power of information, and boost their competitiveness in a tough global marketplace.

About the Author, Jerry N. Luftman

Jerry N. Luftman is Professor of Information Management at the Stevens Institute of Technology.

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Editorials

David Rouse

This book grew out of work done by the IBM Consulting Group in its efforts to assist businesses to use information technology effectively. The work of the group combines academic research programs and on-site consulting and resulted in formulation of the strategic alignment model. This model holds that an organization's business and information systems strategies and its organizational and information technology infrastructures must all be in alignment for it to benefit fully from "[its] investments in information technology." Each of this book's 12 chapters or appendixes addresses a particular aspect of the model; its 23 contributors, all academic researchers or IBM consultants, begin the alignment process by minimizing the technical aspect of their work and emphasizing instead its practical application.

Book Details

Published
October 3, 1996
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 1996.
Pages
432
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195090161

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