TIS Chapter 3

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Chapter 3: Designing T IS

Data Management
IT applications cannot be done without using some kind of data, which
are at the core of management and marketing operations. However,
managing data is difficult for various reasons.

🞂​ The amount of data increases exponentially with time.


🞂​ Data are scattered throughout organizations.
🞂​ Data are collected by many individuals using several methods.
🞂​ External data needs to be considered in making organizational
decisions.
🞂​ Data security, quality, and integrity are critical.
🞂​ Selecting data management tools can be a major problem.

Data are an asset, when converted to information and knowledge,


give the firm competitive advantages.
Data Sources
The data life cycle begins with the acquisition of data from data
sources.

These sources can be classified as internal, personal, and


external.

a) Internal Data Sources are usually stored in the corporate


database and are about people, products, services, and processes.
b) Personal Data is documentation on the expertise of corporate
employees usually maintained by the employee. It can take the form of
• estimates of sales
• opinions about competitors
• business rules
• Procedures
c) External Data Sources range from commercial databases to
Government reports.
Internet and Commercial Database Services are accessible through the
Internet.
Methods for Collecting Raw Data
The task of data collection is fairly complex. Which can create data-quality
problem requiring validation and cleansing of data.

Collection can take place


• in the field
• from individuals
• via manually methods
time studies
Surveys
Observations
contribution
s from
experts
• using
instruments
and sensors
• Transaction
processing
systems (TPS)
Methods for managing data collection
One way to improve data collection from multiple external
sources is to use a data flow manager (DFM), which takes
information from external sources and puts it where it is
needed, when it is needed, in a usable form.

D F M consists of:
a decision support system
a central data request processor
a data integrity component
links to external data suppliers
the processes used by the
external data suppliers.
USING Unified Modeling Language

Process: 1
Process: 2
Database Approach
1) Database management system (DBMS) provides all users
with access to all the data.
2) DBMSs minimises the following problems:
🞂​ Data redundancy: the same data stored in many places.
🞂​ Data isolation: applications cannot access data associated with
other applications.
🞂​ Data inconsistency: various copies of the data do not
agree.
3) DBMSs maximize the following issues:
 Data security.
 Data integrity: data meets certain constraints, no alphabetic
characters in zip code field.
 Data independence: applications and data are independent
of
one another, all applications are able to access the same data.
Data Hierarchy

🞂​ Bit (a binary digit): a circuit that is either on or off.


🞂​ Byte: group of 8 bits, represents a single character.
🞂​ Field: name, number, or characters that describe a n aspect of
a business object or activity.
 Record: collection of related data fields.
 File (or table): collection of related records.
 Database: a collection of integrated and related files
Designing the Database
🞂​ Data model
🞂​ Diagram that represents the entities in the database
and
their relationships.
🞂​ Entity is a person, place, thing or event.
🞂​ Attribute is a characteristic or quality of a particular
entity.
🞂​ Primary key is a field that uniquely identifies that
record.
🞂​ Secondary keys are fields that have identifying
information but may not identify with complete
accuracy.
Database Management Systems

🞂​ Database management system (DBMS) is a set of


programs that provide users with tools to add,
delete, access and analyze data stored in one
location.
🞂​ Online transaction processing (OLTP) is when
transactions are processed as soon as they occur.
🞂​ Relational database model is based on the
concept of two-dimensional tables.
🞂​ Popular examples of relational databases
are
Microsoft Access and Oracle.
Query Languages
🞂​ Structured query language (SQL) is the most
popular query language used to request
information.
🞂​ Query by example (QBE) is a grid or template that
a user fills out to construct a sample or description
of the data wanted.
Relational Database Management
Systems
🞂​ Normalization is a method for analyzing and
reducing a relational database to its most
streamlined form for:
🞂​ Minimum redundancy;
🞂​ Maximum data integrity;
🞂​ Best processing performance.
🞂​ Normalized data is when attributes in the
table
depend only on the primary key.
Virtual Databases
🞂​ Software applications that provide a way of
managing many different data sources as
though they were all one large database.

🞂​ Benefits of virtual databases include:


🞂​ Lower development costs;
🞂​ Faster development time;
🞂​ Less maintenance;
🞂​ Single point of entry into a company’s
data.
The Data Warehouse
A data warehouse is a repository of subject-oriented historical data that
is organized to be accessible in a form readily acceptable for analytical
processing activities (such a s data mining, decision support, querying,
and other applications).

• Benefits of a data warehouse are:


• The ability to reach data quickly, since they are located in one
place
• The ability to reach data easily and frequently by end users
with Web browsers.
• Characteristics of data warehousing are:
• Organization: Data are organized by subject
• Consistency: In the warehouse data will be coded in a consistent
manner.
The Data Warehouse Continued

🞂​ Characteristics of data warehousing are:


🞂​ Time variant. The data are kept for many years so they can
be used for trends, forecasting, and comparisons over time.
🞂​ Nonvolatile. Once entered into the warehouse, data are not
updated.
🞂​ Relational. Typically the data warehouse uses a relational
structure.
🞂​ Client/server. The data warehouse uses the client/server
architecture mainly to provide the end user a n easy access
to its data.
🞂​ Web-based. Data warehouses are designed to provide an
efficient computing environment for Web-based applications
The Data Warehouse Continued
Benefits of Data Warehousing

🞂​ End users can access data quickly and easily via


Web browsers because they are located in one
place.
🞂​ End users can conduct extensive analysis with data
in ways that may not have been possible before.
🞂​ End users have a consolidated view of
organizational data.
Document Management

Document management is the automated control of electronic


documents, page images, spreadsheets, word processing documents,
and other complex documents through their entire life cycle within
an organization, from initial creation to final archiving.

Maintaining paper documents, requires that:


• Everyone have the current version
• An update schedule be determined
• Security be provided for the document
• The documents be distributed to the appropriate individuals in a
timely manner
Data Marts & Data Mining

🞂​ Data mart is a small data warehouse, designed for


the end-user needs in a strategic business unit
(SBU) or a department.

🞂​ Data mining involves searching for valuable


business information in a large database, data
warehouse, or data mart.
🞂​ Used to predict trends and behaviors.
🞂​ Identify previously unknown patterns.
The Data Mart
A data mart is a small scaled-down version of a data warehouse
designed for a strategic business unit (SBU) or a department. Since
they contain less information than the data warehouse they provide
more rapid response and are more easily navigated than enterprise-
wide data warehouses.

There are two major types of data marts:


Replicated (dependent) data marts are small subsets of the data
warehouse. In such cases one replicates some subset of the data
warehouse into smaller data marts, each of which is dedicated to
a certain functional area.
Stand-alone data marts. A company can have one or more
independent data marts without having a data warehouse.
Typical data marts are for marketing, finance, and engineering
applications.
Data Mining Applications
🞂​ Retailing and sales. Predict sales, prevent theft and fraud,
determine correct inventory levels and distribution schedules.
🞂​ Banking. Forecast levels of bad loans, fraudulent credit card
use,
predict credit card spending by new customers, etc.
🞂​ Manufacturing and production. Predict machinery failures, find key
factors to help optimize manufacturing capacity.
🞂​ Insurance. Forecast claim amounts, medical coverage costs, predict
which customers will buy new insurance policies.
 Police work. Track crime patterns, locations, criminal behavior;
identify attributes to assist in solving criminal cases.
 Health care. Correlate demographics of patients with critical
illnesses, develop better insight to identify and treat symptoms and
their causes.
 Marketing. Classify customer demographics to predict how
customers will respond to mailing or buy a particular product.
Operational Data Stores

Operational data store is a database for transaction processing systems


that uses data warehouse concepts to provide clean data to the TPS. It
brings the concepts and benefits of a data warehouse to the
operational portions of the business.

• It is typically used for short-term decisions that require time sensitive


data analysis
• It logically falls between the operational data in legacy systems and the
data warehouse.
• It provides detail as opposed to summary data.
• It is optimized for frequent access
• It provides faster response times.
Online Analytical Processing
Online analytical processing (OLAP) is a set of tools that analyze
and aggregate data to reflect business needs of the company.
These business structures (multidimensional views of data) allow
users to quickly answer business questions. OLAP is performed on
Data Warehouses and Marts.

• ROLAP (Relational OLAP) is an OLAP database implemented on top


of an existing relational database. The multidimensional view is
created each time for the user.
• MOLAP (Multidimensional OLAP) is a specialized multidimensional
data store such as a Data Cu be. The multidimensional view is
physically stored in specialize data files.
Data Mining

Data mining is a tool for analyzing large amounts of data. It derives its
name from the similarities between searching for valuable business
information in a large database, and mining a mountain for a vein of
valuable ore.

1) Data mining technology can generate new business opportunities by


providing:
• Automated prediction of trends and behaviors.
• Automated discovery of previously unknown or hidden patterns.
2) Data mining tools can be combined with:
• Spreadsheets
• Other end-user software development tools
3) Data mining creates a data cube then extracts data
Data Mining Techniques
🞂​ Case-based reasoning. uses historical cases to recognize
patterns
🞂​ Neural computing is a machine learning approach which
examines historical data for patterns.
🞂​ Intelligent agents retrieving information from the Internet
or from intranet-based databases .
🞂​ Association analysis uses a specialized set of algorithms
that sort through large data sets and express statistical
rules among items.
🞂​ Decision trees
🞂​ Genetic algorithms
🞂​ Nearest-neighbor method
Data Mining Tasks

🞂​ Classification. Infers the defining characteristics of a certain


group.
🞂​ Clustering. Identifies groups of items that share a particular
characteristic. Clustering differs from classification in that no
predefining characteristic is given.
🞂​ Association. Identifies relationships between events that occur
at one time.
🞂​ Sequencing. Identifies relationships that exist over a period of
time.
🞂​ Forecasting. Estimates future values based on patterns within
large sets of data.
🞂​ Regression. Maps a data item to a prediction variable.
🞂​ Time Series analysis examines a value as it varies over time.
Data Visualization
• Data visualization refers to presentation of data by technologies
s uc h as digital images, geographical information systems,
graphical user interfaces, multidimensional tables and graphs,
virtual reality, three-dimensional presentations, videos and
animation.

Multidimensionality Visualization: Modern data and information


may have several dimensions.
Dimensions:
• Products
• Salespeople
• Market segments
• Business units
• Geographical locations
• Distribution channels
• Countries
• Industries
Data Visualization Continued

Multidimensionality Visualization:

🞂​ Measures:
🞂​ Money
🞂​
Sales
volume
🞂​
Head
count
🞂​
Inventory
profit
🞂​
Actual
versus
forecasted
results.
🞂​ Time:
Data Visualization Continued

🞂​ A geographical information system (GIS) is a computer-


based system for capturing, storing, checking, integrating,
manipulating, and displaying data using digitized maps.
Every record or digital object has an identified geographical
location. It employs spatially oriented databases.
🞂​ Visual interactive modeling (VIM) uses computer graphic
displays to represent the impact of different management or
operational decisions on objectives such as profit or market
share.
🞂​ Virtual reality (VR) is interactive, computer-generated,
three-dimensional graphics delivered to the user. These
artificial sensory cues cause the user to “believe”
that what
they are doing is real.
Specialized Databases

Data warehouses and data marts serve end users in all


functional areas. Most current databases are static: They simply
gather and store information. Today’s business environment also
requires specialized databases.

Marketing transaction database (MTD)


combines many of the characteristics of the current
databases and marketing data sources into a new
database that allows marketers to engage in real-time
personalization and target every interaction with
customers
Interactive capability
a n interactive transaction occurs with the customer
exchanging information and updating the database in real
time, as opposed to the periodic (weekly, monthly, or
quarterly) updates of classical warehouses and marts.
Web-based Data Management Systems
Data management and business intelligence activities—from data
acquisition to mining—are often performed with Web tools, or are
interrelated with Web technologies and e-business. This is done
through intranets, and for outsiders via extranets.

Corporate Portals integrate query, reporting, OLAP, and other tools


Intelligent Data Warehouse Web-based Systems employ a search
engine for specific applications which can improve the operation
of a data warehouse
Clickstream Data Warehouse occur inside the Web environment,
when customers visit a Web site.
Web-based Data Management Systems

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