Showing posts with label information technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label information technology. Show all posts

Thursday, December 2, 2010

When You Are Starting To Compete In Industry, You Need Desktop Management

Every business that succeeds grows, and as it grows their communication and information technology needs grow. Step by step a computer finds its way onto each desk in the office as each employee strives to stay at the leading edge of the business. Keeping these computers in touch with one another and properly maintained requires skilled desktop management.

The idea of using precious manpower slots to have professionals who focus largely on the set up and care taking of the information technology network would have seemed foolish only a decade ago. But technology has changed and now the internet is an integral part of business and one of its biggest threats. Keeping the system running smoothly and free of attacking programs designed by people with talent but an antisocial streak is a full time job.

Setting up a system that allows the employees to communicate with one another and their clients from anywhere and at anytime makes them much more productive and efficient. Information can be transmitted literally instantly to all employees simultaneously. Individuals who are on a trip, on holiday or sick can still get the information on mobile devices or at the latest when they first step back into their office. Having a team of professionals dedicated to the job of nurturing the information systems network really can increase the productivity of employees and the company overall, boosting the bottom line despite the cost if installation and upkeep. The notion of dedicating a team to this process smells a little like inflated bureaucracy, but this increase in personnel has a demonstrable positive effect on profit.

The centralization of computer care makes them more efficient in a number of ways. First and foremost, it allows the company to be sure that all the computer products are compatible, which can save a lot of embarrassment and loss resulting from data which can not be presented. It also ensures that all the software in the system is standard, meaning that there are no special programs that individual employees may have fallen in love with. Most of us have computers at home, so a relative skill level in dealing with hardware and software is a common enough ability, but so too is the realization that sometimes these supposedly self installing programs do not exactly pan out. The software makers do their best, but there are simply too many possible installation configurations for them to anticipate all of them, and sometimes they cause conflicts. The time it takes to correct these conflicts can cost a lot of man hours, and if they occur at the wrong time, they could cost much more.

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.

When employees introduce software from home, they risk circumventing preventive efforts by the desktop management team to keep malware out of the system. It is complicated enough to fight the constant attacks from the external world of the internet. Protecting from intrusions within the firewalls and other protective measures is difficult, costly and inefficient and a bane to the technicians working hard to keep the system running.

Monday, August 23, 2010

There is an ironic truth in the management complaint that computers have made the business so complex that if the power goes off or the information technology freezes up, everybody may as well go home. It has come to pass that we are so deeply invested in computers to operate on a daily business that we can not continue to operate without them. While this is literally true in many manufacturing and financial sectors, it is also beginning to be the state of affairs for nearly every company, and highlights the need for systems management software.

 

In the days before the information systems tidal wave, managers still made decisions based on information. Certainly the information was lower in volume and less sophisticated, but it was relevant information the manager could use to operate his business. The advent of computers allowed the manager to widen the pool of data he could tap into and therefore make his decisions more accurately and confidently. As this ability has progressed, the dearth of information has turned into a flood.

 

Given the right motivation, we can identify and collect an endless stream of facts concerning our business. There is information about the historical needs and uses of the product, what time of year it is most needed, what additions or complementary products most affect its use and so on. We can even spit details of which employee candidate pool is the most likely to successfully work in our industry and where they can be most easily found, attracted, hired and motivated. Unfortunately, we have not found a way to make the day longer or management more multitask capable than we already have. We can hire others to do parts of the business, but that in itself complicates the process and while we gain flexibility, we lose control.

 

This is not to imply that any manager would wish to have less information, far from it. It is that the effort to gain usable, decision-making understanding from the data has been overcome by the methodology for garnering the raw data from which it is distilled. Information carries with it nuances that help determine its meaning in the form of the entering arguments for the collection process. This is the age old recognition that how one asks a question influences the answer to a degree. With the manager expending so much time in collecting reference points and measurements, there is little left to consider the purpose and possible alternative collection means.

 

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.

 

If a business is in the manufacturing industry, management does not want or need to spend its time gathering and inputting data about the supply chain, constructing statistical process control charts, or gathering data on trends in the demand for their product or the prices of their supply chain. What they need is that data collected for them by an automated system that collects and collates the information and packages it in a readily identifiable format and delivered to their desktop before the day begins.

 

This is the ultimate purpose of and advantage to using systems management software. It keeps the onus of detailed data input and collection distributed across a workforce with the appropriate specialists. Individual employees input the data relevant to their portion of the company process.The software then executes the appropriate queries to collate the correct data to provide managers with the usable information they need in a format they can readily put to operational use.