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Information Systems
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Information systems sits at the intersection of technology, management, and organizational behavior, making it a central subject in business, computer science, and public administration programs. The field examines how organizations collect, process, store, and distribute data to support decision-making and operational efficiency. Its academic appeal lies in the way it bridges purely technical concerns—software, networks, infrastructure—with human and organizational questions about knowledge management, process design, and strategic alignment. Because nearly every modern organization depends on digital systems, courses across disciplines from accounting to supply chain management treat information systems as foundational.

The papers in this collection reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a case-study format, examining how structural changes in specific organizations—such as centralized systems transformations—affect performance. Others adopt evaluative or diagnostic angles, analyzing failures in information systems and information technologies or assessing technology's impact on environmental sustainability. Policy-oriented and comparative work also appears, covering e-government, e-learning, e-commerce, and ERP implementations, as well as the distinct challenges facing developing countries. Ethics in computing and the role of information systems in areas like accounting, sales, and military supply support further illustrate how broadly the topic extends.

A strong essay on information systems requires a clearly scoped thesis that connects a specific system, process, or technology to a measurable organizational or social outcome. Evidence drawn from real implementations, documented case analyses, or established management frameworks tends to carry the most weight. One common pitfall is treating the technology itself as the focus rather than examining how it interacts with organizational processes, human behavior, and decision-making—the relationships between systems and the people who use them are almost always where the most substantive arguments live.

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Paper Doctorate
Identifying the root causes of problems
Business Problem -- Chattanooga Ice Cream Company
Paper Undergraduate
Project Management Assessing the Role
The intent of this analysis is to assess the role of the project plan and why its location in the project planning phase is optimal for attaining inter- and intra-group collaboration and minimizing shared risk through a…
Essay Doctorate
Healthcare Information Technology Project Failures and Best
¶ … healthcare information technology project failures and best practices recovery. It highlights factors that are responsible for such failures including lack of direction, clarity of goals, consistent system and…
Paper Undergraduate
Ecommerce in Developing Countries What
Both articles and their extensive empirical and theoretical research have a wealth of insights and intelligence that brings e-commerce into a more realistic and pragmatic perspective. Starting with Exploring E-commerce benefits for businesses in a developing country (Molla, Heeks, 2007) that authors explain how they have interviewed 92 businesses in South Africa who have moved beyond the basic stage of ecommerce as defined by the 6-point e-commerce capability indicator cited in their article (Molla, Heeks, 2007). In citing this scale the authors contend that the much-hyped benefits of e-commerce surrounding operating efficiency gains including lower transaction costs and greater fluidity and flexibility of e-commerce are in fact not occurring in the emerging economy of South Africa. Instead, the authors state that the greatest gains are being made in the area of intra- and interorganizational communication and collaboration, clustered primarily in services industry as evidenced by their cited research (Molla, Heeks, 2007). This is certainly the case in Brazil where the continued growth of e-commerce has succeed while other nations have failed mainly due to the exceptional stability of the nations' banking system, strong laws and regulations to protect e-commerce and online commerce, and an infrastructure that makes automating supply chains more achievable than many other regions and nations of the world (Paulo, Dedrick, 2004). Brazil is also unique in that is government subsidizes new ventures and seeks out global technology partners, including Intel, for its e-commerce and infrastructure-dependent industries (Callaway, 2008). Juxtaposing the growth of Brazil is the stagnation of South Africa as is shown in the analysis, which implies e-commerce is better at breaking down the walls of organizations and getting them to work together more effectively than it is in driving top-line revenue from transactions., This consistent with the more pragmatic and practical studies of e-commerce adoption in emerging nations that show e-commerce system development and implementation will teach a business more about itself than it had never considered prior to the implementation (Alemayehu, Heeks, 2007). The process of creating an e-commerce strategy including the process and system integration, coordination of product and services catalogues, redefining and clarification of pricing, and the ability to define expediting processes for service and service recovery of negative customer events all force a business to grow faster than it had anticipated (Standing, Benson, 2000). Small businesses enter e-commerce thinking the big pay-off will be increased top-line revenue growth and greater transaction efficiencies (Molla, Heeks, 2007). Small businesses in commodity driven industries will also do this to specifically drive down the cost per transaction and pool purchasing power to gain an advantage in negotiating with suppliers (Salcedo, Henry, Rubio, 2003). All of these actual benefits are completely different than the much-hyped and promoted benefits of e-commerce being frictionless commerce throughout a supply chain, greater revenue growth at lower transaction costs, and ease and speed of generating customer loyalty, all contributing to skyrocketing profitability of an enterprise (Romano, 2009). All of these benefits accrue, in actuality, to oligopolistic firms who have the infrastructure, from a corporate IT staff to a well-known brand and the ability to selectively disintermediate their own supply chain to gain the much-hyped transaction cost efficiencies (Molla, Heeks, 2007). The greater the global market power of a company and its commanding position in an oligopoly, the more it can enforce its market-maker statue and drive change (Alemayehu, Heeks, 2007). Molla and Heeks (2007) deflate the hype of Transaction Cost Theory and its corollary of disintermediation by showing through their research that perfect competition doesn't exist in e-commerce globally and is especially problematic in emerging countries due to the lack of value chain integration and transparency. The authors also make an excellent point that the main catalysts or fuel of e-commerce growth in many nations is market research and mass customization (Molla, Heeks, 2007). There are myriad of examples of how e-commerce combined with mass customization has led to explosive, profitable growth on the part of companies with Dell not only reaching over $1B in revenues from online sales but also achieving double-digit inventory turns and extensive operational efficiencies at the same time (Luo, John, Du, 2005). The authors contend that for many emerging nations this however is not possible given the lack of trust and adoption of e-commerce, and the lack of alacrity and accuracy in complex supply chain relationships including a lack of clarity in communications and procurement performance (Molla, Heeks, 2007). Contrasting this however are the effects of a stabilized and trusted banking system in Brazil for example (Brazilian e-Commerce, 2005). The greater the trust levels in a given nation's financial system the higher the level of e-commerce adoption, even in highly collectivist cultures (Joia, Sanz, 2005). The authors continue with a triangulation of market performance, communications and transaction cost reduction, showing how e-commerce is more of a catalyst of organizational synchronization than a platform for selling more online (Molla, Heeks, 2007).
Essay Doctorate
Secondary Research Business Information Systems- * History
The modern day society evolves at the fastest rate known so far to humanity. And the trend setter for this rapid change is represented by technology. Innovations are present in all aspects of the daily operations, from…
Paper Undergraduate
Information security principles and practices
A broad definition of information security is given in ISO/IEC 17799 (2000) standard as:
Paper Undergraduate
Mixing Qualitative and Quantitative Research Methods
While quantitative methodologies that emphasize measurement and statistics are often usually deemed to be the best scientific method of research, there has also been recognition of the positive aspects of qualitative…
Essay Doctorate
What SAP Won't Tell You About Business Intelligence Systems
What SAP didn't tell you about creating and using business intelligence, and why
Research Paper Undergraduate
Counter the New Terrorism Threat
¶ … counter the new terrorism threat (post 9/11) and whether these strategies have been successful. It will also look at many possible long-term strategies to counter the new terrorism.
Paper Undergraduate
Business and information systems integration
¶ … information system requires knowledge of development tools in addition to expertise in software development methodologies. As each of these areas requires expertise the typical user does not have, it is daunting for…