INFO2010 - L4 Justifying the system Flashcards
Biz IT
Evolution of computing, became subsumed into whole biz function
Prevalence and benefits of IS/IT often taken for granted by biz orgs
Strategy needed for optimising IT investment to maximise the investment
Competitive advantage through IT
- Ability of a biz org to compete with others
- Competitive biz recognises that IS/IT can be used to transform an org’s relation to its customers
- Competitive adv gained by providing superior efficiency, effectiveness and sys sustainability
Justifying the investment
Can be transformative of biz practice
Upper management hv pesimistic attitude so peeps want to see a cost justification for IT investment
Sometimes difficult to do
Justifying the investment
Acquiring IT can require significant resources
Two clear benefits:
- predict what cost will be incurred, quantify them, match them with predicted benefits
- if quantified benefits outweighs quantified costs, acquisition of IT is justified
Capital budgeting
Process of analysing and selecting various proposals for capital expenditure.
CB methods rely on measures of cach flow in and out of org
Main reasons for investing into capital projects
- expand production to meet anticipated demand
- to modernise production equipment ot reduce cost
IS - considered long term capital investment projects
Other reasons for investing into capital projects - non economic
Install pollution control equipment
Meet government regs
satisfy non-market public demands
Capital budgeting models
Payback method Acounting ROI on investment Net Present Value Cost Benefit Ratio Profitability Index Internal Rate of Return
Payback method
Measure of time required to pay back the initial investment of a project
Orig Investment
————————– = No of yrs to payback
Annual net cash flow
Payback method benefits
Simple
Powerful as an initial screening method
Good for high risk projects where useful life is difficult to know
If sys pays for itself in 2 yrs, less important how long it will last
Ignores (this is weakness as well as virtue):
- time value of money
- amount of cash flow after payback period
- disposal value
- profitability of investment
Accounting Rate of Return on Investment
Firms make capital investments to earn a satisfactory rate of return; depends on;
- cost of borrowing money
- historic rates of return expected by the firm
- desired rate of return must equal or exceed the cost of capital in the marketplace
Rate of ROI in practice
ROI ralculates the rate of return from an investment by adjusting the cash inflows produced by the investment for depreciation.
Gives an approximation of the accounting income earned by the project
- ignores time value of money; does not need to be converted into present value
Rate of ROI in practice - how to work it out
(Total benefits-Total Cost-Depreciation)
—————————————— = Net Benefit
Useful life
Net Benefit
——————————— = ROI
Total Initial Investment
Depreciation
Cost of life of equipment usual 20+ years for large plant
ICT much less 10-15 years
ROI - how is it used
Projects ranked in descending order by ROI
Those providing acceptable ROI selected
Can be altered by resource constraints, organisational priorities or politics