Table of Contents Question No Question Page No 1 (a) Define Management Information System? How it is important for an organization? Explain. 1-4 1 (b) Define System. What are the different types of Systems? Explain with examples. 5-6 2 List and explain all types of business information systems. 7-17 4 Briefly the below terminology with an example i. Data Warehouse ii. Data Mining iii. On-line Analytic Processing (OLAP) iv. Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) 18-27 5 (b) List and
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PTS: 1 DIF: Medium REF: 36 OBJ: 02-01 TYPE: comprehension NOT: AACSB: Ethical & Legal understanding | Management: Ethical Responsibilities | Dierdorff & Rubin: Managing the task environment 2. The external environment facing business stays relatively constant over time. ANS: F PTS: 1 DIF: Easy REF: 34-35 OBJ: 02-01 TYPE: comprehension NOT: AACSB: Business Knowledge & Analytical Skills | Management: Environmental Influence | Dierdorff & Rubin: Managing the task environment 3. Demographic‚ economic
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first two of these articles (see the November 1996 and 1997 issues of Training & Development) are longstanding and not likely to change in the near term. Four particularly noteworthy demand-side developments are the growing effort given to managing knowledge‚ the integration of learning and communication functions‚ a resurgence of interest in leadership development and executive coaching‚ and the intensifying requirement among employees that career development become an integral part of their employment
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“Employee performance can be improved by focusing on careers and talent management” Submitted By: Kazi Iftahaz Ahmed 1030239530 Sabrina Humayun Upoma 1110574030 Sharmin Sultana 1020846530 Md.Washim Ahmed 1020963030 Rabeya Sultana 1120284530 Ahsan Zaman 1030211530 Submitted To: Jashim Uddin Lecturer North South University Date of Submision: 9th December
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2. Some of the growth of knowledge management systems in TCS and how the sytems helped its business are listed as below: KBASES AND GROUPWARE It is a knowledge repository in the corporate and branch servers accessible to all employees through the intranet. It contained wide range of information regarding processes‚ line of technology and the line of business. The groupware was a body which automated various in house systems such as training and many other functions. CLOSELY KNITS COMMUNITIES
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1. Describe various e-government initiatives. 2. Understand e-government implementation issues including e-government 2.0 and m-government. 3. Describe e-learning‚ virtual universities‚ and etraining. 4. Describe e-books. 5. Describe knowledge management and dissemination as an e-business. 6. Describe C2C activities. 7. Describe collaborative commerce. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education‚ Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 6-2 • e-government E-commerce model in which a government entity buys or provides
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Management Information Systems in Banking Hubert Van de Vyver Kiev‚ 1-2 June 2006 This project is funded by the European Union and implemented by ING Institutional & Government Advisory Copyright © 2005 by ING Institutional & Government Advisory Services B.V. Introduction • Use and manage information systems to revitalize business process • Improve business decision making with information technologies • Gain competitive advantage on the market Management Information Systems in Banking - 1 Introduction
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Table of Content Serial no: | Topic: | Page No: | 1. | Introduction | 3 | 2. | Communities of Practices | 4 | 3. | Communities of practice and knowledge management | 5 | | I. Importance of teamwork for Knowledge Management | 5 | | II. Sharing ideas to the success of KM | 7 | | III. Connection of COP to Knowledge Management | 8 | | IV. How characteristics of COP help to bring success to KM practices | 9 | 4. | Conclusion | 11 | 5. | References | 12 | Introduction
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case study from a knowledge transfer perspective Z OONKY L EE AND JINYOUL LE E Department of Management‚ College of Business Administration‚ University of Nebraska-Lincoln‚ Lincoln‚ NE 68588–0491‚ USA r & Fr ci s G an An enterprise resource planning (ERP) application is an enterprise-wide package that tightly integrates all necessary business functions into a single system with a shared database. An ERP implementation often entails transferring the business knowledge incorporated in the
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or best guesses of demand for products and products are “pushed” to customers. Pull-based model – demand-driven model‚ actual customer orders or purchases trigger events in the supply chain. 6. Enterprise resource planning (ERP) - is a business management software—usually a suite of integrated applications—that a company can use to collect‚ store‚ manage and interpret data from many business activities. Material requirements planning (MRP) - is a production planning and inventory control system
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