IT 509 QU: Management of Information Technology

Woodbury University

Spring 2009

Room NBUS 202

Instructor Nathan Garrett

818.252.5147, Miller Building

Last Updated 2/20/09

Catalog Description

The role of information as a corporate resource, and its use in providing strategic advantage. Problems of aligning corporate IT and corporate goals, creating IT architectures and using IT to enable change in organization. The case study method is used. This course is appropriate for both users of systems and providers of system support. Prerequisite: Computer literacy and graduate standing. 3 Units.

Course Learning Outcomes

My goal for this class is to answer the following two questions:

1.  What are the fundamental principles behind IT systems?

2.  How can I use these systems to generate advantage in my business?

This class is not about using IT, but is designed to help non-technical people understand the principles behind iPods, cellular phones, websites, Laptops, the Internet, and the invisible systems that make it possible for Target to deliver an order to your front door.

At the end of the course, you will be able to:

1.  Describe major IT technologies

2.  Describe the impact of major IT technologies on business operations

3.  Write reports supporting the use of IT in providing strategic advantage

4.  Orally present arguments for the use of IT in providing strategic advantage

Woodbury Principles

1.  Innovation & Creativity

2.  Communication

3.  Transdisciplinary

4.  Social Responsibility

5.  The Integrated Student

6.  Academic Quality

Alignment with Program Goals

This course is designed to support the following MBA and AACSB Program learning goals:

MBA Goals

1.  Develop: Communicate effectively

2.  Develop: Act in an ethnical manner

3.  Develop: Act effectively in global environments

4.  Develop: Integrate strategies cross-functionally

5.  Develop & Master: Develop Domain-specific Knowledge and Skills

AACSB Goals

1.  Secondary: Capacity to lead organizations

2.  Secondary: Capacity to apply knowledge in new and unfamiliar circumstances

3.  Secondary: Capacity to adapt and innovate to solve new problems

4.  Secondary: Integrate learning across disciplines

Textbooks

We will not be using a textbook for this course. Instead, we will be reading a selection of readings from Harvard Business Review and other major journals.

Several HBR Case Studies will be assigned as homework. These must be individually purchased by each student. You are responsible for reading the cases on your own computer, as the digital rights management used may not work on Woodbury lab computers.

Readings and cases vary depending upon student interests, and will be announced in class.

Time Estimation

The credit hour system at Woodbury estimates that each hour of normal in-class work will require around 2 hours of out-of-class preparation. For our 4 hour class, this would result in 8 hours a week of preparation.

Furthermore, IT509 is an accelerated course. Since we meet for half the semester, you should plan on doubling the out-of-class preparation time. I attempt to make each week’s assignments comparable, but you should expect to take some more time for the assignments in the final two weeks.

Grading & Assignments

Letter grades will follow Woodbury University Catalog standards. The following preliminary schedule gives a rough estimation of the points available for the course.

·  7 Reading Summaries – 20 Points Each

·  7 Quizzes – 20 Points Each

·  Company Proposal – 100 Points

·  Group Company Proposal Presentation – 100 Points

·  Case Study Presentation – 100 Points

·  Final Case Proposal – 200 Points

·  Other points TBD

Course Outline

I will email the class with your first week’s assignments on March 2.

To help you keep on top of the material, I send out a weekly email with assignments due the next class meeting. Please contact me quickly with any questions you may have; I am typically able to respond quickly to questions.

1.  March 9: The Basics of Computing in Business, Part 1

a.  Due: Reading Summaries

b.  Due: In-class Quiz

c.  Tech:

i.  Binary

d.  Bus: Major IT Systems

i.  Porter

ii. Reengineering

iii.  Market Transformation

iv.  Business IT Usage Levels

2.  March 16: The Basics of Computing in Business, Part 2

a.  Due: Reading Summaries

b.  Due: In-class Quiz

c.  Bus: Using IT To Provide Strategic Advantage

i.  CRM, ERP

ii. Internet

d.  Tech: Networks

i.  Internet

ii. Websites

3.  March 23: Programming Languages and Governance

a.  Due: Reading Summaries

b.  Due: In-class Quiz

c.  Due: Proposal 1

d.  Bus: Who Makes Decisions?

i.  Outsourcing

ii. Governance

e.  Tech:

i.  Programming Languages

4.  March 30: Databases and Open Source

a.  Due: Reading Summaries

b.  Due: In-class Quiz

c.  Due: Mini Case Study Presentation

d.  Bus:

i.  SCM

ii. Carr - Does IT Matter?

e.  Tech:

i.  Databases

ii. Open Source

5.  April 6: Project Management

a.  Due: Reading Summaries

b.  Due: In-class Quiz

c.  Due: Assigned Case Studies - Report & Presentation (1st half of class)

i.  IBM Innovation Jam

ii. Oracle v. Salesforce.com

iii.  CVS

d.  Bus:

i.  What business managers need to know about PM

e.  Tech:

i.  Risk Factors / Redundancy / Reliability

6.  April 13: Mass Collaboration

a.  Due: Assigned Case Studies - Report & Presentation (2nd half of class)

i.  Charles Schwab Case

ii. Harley Davidson

iii.  IBM Case

b.  Bus: Using Mass Collaboration

i.  Wiki-nomics

ii. Network Effects, The Long Tail

c.  Tech: Standards

i.  Winning with Standards, VHS/DVD and HD-DVD/Blue-ray

7.  April 20: Business Analytics

a.  Due: Reading Summaries

b.  Due: In-class Quiz

c.  Due: Final Open Source Case Proposal

d.  Bus:

i.  Using Analytics to Win

e.  Tech:

i.  Artificial Intelligence and Data Mining

ii. Security, DRM, GIS, RFID, Social Networks

Important Notes

1.  Email

a.  All email to me must be signed with your full name, and needs to include the course number in the email title.

b.  Email addresses in IQ Web should be up-to-date. You are responsible for ensuring is white-listed in your spam filter.

2.  Attendance

a.  Missing class will lower your final grade. Missing 2 classes lowers your maximum grade to a B, 3 to a C, and more than 3 will result in a F.

b.  Lateness or leaving early counts as missing ½ of a class.

c.  Code of Student Conduct See Student Handbook: http://www.woodbury.edu/s/131/index.aspx?sid=131&gid=1&pgid=1731

3.  Subject to change

a.  This syllabus is provisional and subject to change.

4.  Assignments

a.  Please single-space assignments, and use 1in margins and 10pt Arial font.

b.  Assignments can be submitted in Word 2007 (docx) or 2003 (doc) format.

c.  Writing Center: http://www.woodbury.edu/s/131/index.aspx? sid=131&gid=1&pgid=1646&sparam=writing%20center&scontid=0

5.  Plagiarism

a.  This class will adhere to the standard Woodbury policies on plagiarism.
http://my.woodbury.edu/Staff/AA/Shared%20Documents/
Approved%20Academic%20Honesty%20Policy.pdf