systems analysis chapter 4. key definitions the as-is system is the current system and may or may...

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Systems Analysis Chapter 4

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Page 1: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Systems Analysis

Chapter 4

Page 2: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Key Definitions

The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized

The To-Be system is the new system that is based on updated requirements

Page 3: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Key Ideas

The goal of the analysis phase is to truly understand the requirements of the new system and develop a system that addresses them -- or decide a new system isn’t needed.The line between systems analysis and systems design is very blurry.

Page 4: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

THE ANALYSIS PROCESS

Page 5: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Combines business and information technologyBalance expertise of users and analysts

Analysis Across Areas

Page 6: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

The SDLC Process

Page 7: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Three Steps of the Analysis Phase

Understanding the “As-Is” systemIdentifying improvement opportunitiesDeveloping the “To-Be” system concept

Page 8: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Three Fundamental Analysis Strategies

Business process automation (BPA)Business Process Improvement (BPI)Business Process Reengineering (BPR)

Page 9: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

BUSINESS PROCESS AUTOMATION

Page 10: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Proposal Outline

Table of contentsExecutive summarySystem requestWork planAnalysis strategyRecommended systemFeasibility analysis

Process modelData ModelAppendices

Page 11: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Identifying Improvements in As-Is Systems

Problem AnalysisAsking users to identify problemsRarely finds significant monetary benefits

Root Cause AnalysisPrioritizing problemsTracing symptoms to their causes

Page 12: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Root Cause Analysis Example

Page 13: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

BUSINESS PROCESS IMPROVEMENT

Page 14: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Duration Analysis

Calculate time needed for each process stepCalculate time needed for overall processCompare the twoDevelop process integration or parallelization

Page 15: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Activity-Based Costing

Calculate cost of each process stepConsider both direct and indirect costsIdentify most costly steps and focus improvement efforts on them

Page 16: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Benchmarking

Studying how other organizations perform the same business processInformal benchmarking

Check with customersFormal benchmarking

Establish formal relationship with other organization

Page 17: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

BUSINESS PROCESS REENGINEERING

Page 18: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Business Process Reengineering

Radical redesignof business processes

Page 19: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Outcome Analysis

Consider desirable outcomes from customers’ perspectiveConsider what the organization could enable the customer to do

Page 20: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Breaking Assumptions

Identify fundamental business rulesSystematically break each ruleIdentify effects on the business if rule is broken

Page 21: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Technology Analysis

Analysts list important and interesting technologiesManagers list important and interesting technologiesThe group identifies how each might be applied to the business

Page 22: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Activity Elimination

Identify what would happen if each organizational activity were eliminatedUse “force-fit” to test all possibilities

Page 23: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Proxy Benchmarking

List similar industriesLook for techniques from other industries that could be applied by the organization

Page 24: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Process Simplification

Eliminate complexity from routine transactionsConcentrate separate processes on exception handling

Page 25: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Avoiding Classic Analysis Mistakes

Reducing analysis timeRequirement gold-plating

User over-specification of featuresDeveloper gold-plating

Too many “cool” featuresLack of user involvement

Page 26: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Your Turn

How do you know whether to use business process automation, business process improvement, or business process reengineering? Provide two examples.

Page 27: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

DEVELOPING AN ANALYSIS PLAN

Page 28: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Developing an Analysis Strategy

Potential business valueProject costBreadth of analysisRisk

Page 29: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Characteristics of Analysis Strategies

Business Business BusinessProcess Process ProcessAutomation Improvement Reeingineering

Potential Business Low-Moderate Moderate HighValue

Project Cost Low Low-Moderate High

Breadth of Analysis Narrow Narrow-Moderate Very Broad

Risk Low-Moderate Low-Moderate Very High

Page 30: Systems Analysis Chapter 4. Key Definitions The As-Is system is the current system and may or may not be computerized The To-Be system is the new system

Summary

The analysis process aims to create value for the organizationThree main analysis strategies are BPA, BPI, and BPRThese strategies vary in potential business value, but also in potential cost and risk