Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta information technology. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta information technology. Mostrar todas las entradas

jueves, 2 de diciembre de 2010

If You Are Going To Contend In Business, You Need Desktop Management

The reason for business is to make money, and once engaged in the process, the usual trajectory for successful companies is expansion and growth. Today, it is hard to imagine being able to function in the market place without the use of information technology. For any company that is using computers, the need for desktop management is absolute.

The term certainly sounds like an effort to get employees to adopt a clean desk approach to office work, but that would be erroneous. The goal is to create a network of computers that allow employees to interconnect and communicate to foster the synergy of group approaches to problems. The network also serves to eliminate a fair number of meetings, which tend to increasingly eat productive hours as the number of employees increase. 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.

One of the drawbacks to the new dependence on information technology is the cost of software and the licenses for multiple computer use. There is little a company can do as the programs need regular updating in order to stay current and to avoid security problems. The least expensive way to run a network is to have a central hub from which all the computers can be remotely cared for.

The business and employees benefit from the ability to stay in touch with and service clients and accounts from anywhere without traveling, and when they do have to travel, they remain in contact with the home office for support and direction. The gain from the technology, however, can be lost without qualified personnel dedicated to keeping it running smoothly. Software is not always as easily installed as we would like, even those which tout a plug and play platform. Inevitably there are some machines display complications with compatibility with the configuration in place, almost the way some people present with allergic reactions to medicines most tolerate well. Dealing with these complications can cost many man hours when preformed by the average worker who maybe skilled with using the computer, but not necessarily with servicing it. When an employee has compatible computer setups at home and at the office, the temptation to take work home and bring the results back can be too hard to resist. This well meaning effort to give even more energy and effort to the company can also result in giving the company network malicious software that can wreak havoc on the system. Having professionals on staff to resolve these problems is a very valuable addition and can save the business from catastrophe.

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.

lunes, 23 de agosto de 2010

The age of the computer has changed business in many ways, allowing the manager unprecedented span of knowledge and control over all processes relating to his business. This has allowed for the use of data and information on an unprecedented scale. The drawback is that the available data for any business can be unwieldy and it is very possible to drown the manager in information. This is the time to leverage the power of processing to control the computer via systems management software.

 

Business has long had a need for more information. Management has always sought the answer to such questions as what will sell, when it should be sold, how can we get the product to the consumer quicker, and what inefficiencies are we experiencing. With the advent of the microprocessor, the old adage of be careful what you wish for may be an important consideration. We can now measure so many things and compile so much data that the manufacturing process becomes hard to recognize.

 

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.

 

While the data is important and even critical to a competitive organization, the methodology for gleaning information does impact the final data. Once all this data has been collected, the manager must make sense of it and put it to use in a practical way, a difficult endeavor made more complex by not having a good handle on the parameters under which it was collected. This is further complicated by the issue of time, just how much should be spent on the analysis of data?

 

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.

 

Not surprisingly, this phenomenon is known to information system specialists, who are working feverishly to reign in the complexities of using management tools. It should also be no surprise that the solution will likely entail software designed to run or enhance the existing management tools, computers in charge of computers. This secondary iteration of control is much like the levels of management in a company, with each successive level designated to run the level below, allowing the higher levels to focus on a more strategic role.

 

All leaders intrinsically want to have a feel for what their company is doing. There is no scarier feeling than being responsible for something and not having the first hand knowledge of what is being done to make it happen. This does not mean that the CEO of a company needs to know the name, start time destination and cargo of every truck carrying product within his company, that is what the management hierarchy is about. Unfortunately, the nature of man is to be curious, and if the data is available it is difficult not to get captured in the mountains of minutia.

 

So while it is important that someone is aware of the collection and interpretation of all the detailed information a company has, there has to be a way to develop that raw data into useful knowledge for each level of management. This is the crux of systems management software, manipulating data collected by software systems to develop actionable information for leadership to run the business efficiently and profitably.