MIS
IN YOUR POCKET
Can you run your company out of your
pocket? Perhaps not entirely, but there are many functions today that can be
performed using an iPhone, BlackBerry, or other mobile handheld device. The smartphone
has been called the “Swiss Army knife of the digital age.” A flick of the
finger turns it into a Web browser, a telephone, a camera, a music or video
player, an e-mail and messaging machine, and for some, a gateway into corporate
systems. New software applications for social networking and salesforce
management (CRM) make these devices even more versatile business tools.
The BlackBerry has been the favored
mobile handheld for business because it was optimized for e-mail and messaging,
with strong security and tools for accessing internal corporate systems. Now
that’s changing. Companies large and small are starting to deploy Apple’s
iPhone to conduct more of their work. For some, these handhelds have
become necessities.
Doylestown Hospital, a community medical
center near Philadelphia, has a mobile workforce of 360 independent physicians
treating thousands of patients. The physicians use the iPhone 3G to stay connected
around the clock to hospital staff, colleagues, and patient information.
Doylestown doctors use iPhone features such as e-mail, calen-dar, and contacts
from Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync. The iPhone allows them to receive time-sensitive
e-mail alerts from the hospital. Voice communication is important as well, and
the iPhone allows the doctors to be on call wherever they are.
Doylestown Hospital customized the
iPhone to provide doctors with secure mobile access from any location in the
world to the hospital’s MEDITECH electronic medical records system. MEDITECH delivers
information on vital signs, medications, lab results, allergies, nurses’ notes,
therapy results, and even patient diets to the iPhone screen. “Every radiographic
image a patient has had, every dictated report from a specialist is available
on the iPhone,” notes Dr. Scott Levy, Doylestown Hospital’s vice president and
chief medical officer. Doylestown doctors also use the iPhone at the patient’s
bedside to access medical reference applications such as Epocrates Essentials
to help them interpret lab results and obtain medication information.
Doylestown’s information systems
department was able to establish the
same high level of security for authenticating users of the system and tracking
user activity as it maintains with all the hospital’s Web-based medical records
applications. Information is stored securely on the hospital’s own server computer.
D.W. Morgan, headquartered in
Pleasanton, California, serves as a supply chain consultant and transportation
and logistics service provider to companies such as AT&T, Apple Computer, Johnson
& Johnson, Lockheed Martin, and Chevron. It has operations in more than 85 countries
on four continents, moving critical inventory to factories that use a
just-in-time (JIT) strategy. In JIT, retailers and manufacturers main-tain
almost no excess on-hand inventory, relying upon suppliers to deliver raw
materials, compo-nents, or products shortly before they are needed. In this
type of production environment, it’s absolutely critical to know the exact
moment when delivery trucks will arrive. In the past, it took many phone calls
and a great deal of manual effort to provide customers with such precise up to
the minute information. The company was able to develop an application called
ChainLinq Mobile for its 30 drivers that updates shipment information, collects
signatures, and provides global positioning system (GPS) tracking on each box
it delivers.
As Morgan’s drivers make their
shipments, they use ChainLinq to record pickups and status updates. When they
reach their destination, they collect a signature on the iPhone screen. Data collected
at each point along the way, including a date and time stamped GPS location
pinpointed on a Google map, are uploaded to the company’s servers. The servers
make the data available to cus tomers on the company’s Web site. Morgan’s competitors
take about 20 minutes to half a day to pro vide proof of delivery; Morgan can
do it immediately.
TCHO is a start-up that uses
custom-developed machinery to create unique chocolate flavors. Owner Timothy
Childs developed an iPhone app that enables him to remotely log into each chocolate
making machine, control time and temperature turn the machines on and off, and
receive alerts about when to make temperature changes. The iPhone app also enables
him to remotely view several video cameras that show how the TCHO FlavorLab is doing. TCHO employees also use
the iPhone to exchange photos, e-mail, and text messages.
The Apple iPad is also emerging as a
business tool for Web-based note taking, file sharing, word processing, and
number-crunching. Hundreds of business productivity applications are being
developed, including tools for Web conferencing, word processing, spreadsheets,
and electronic presentations. Properly configured, the iPad is able to connect
to corporate networks to obtain e-mail messages, calendar events, and contacts
securely over the air.
Case
Question :
1. What
kinds of applications are described here? What business functions do they
support? How do they improve operational efficiency and decision making?
There is a Businees apllication.
The examples of ipad application
such word processing, number-crunching, spreadsheets, and electronic
presentations.
3G
to stay conected arround the clock
to hospital staff, colleagues, and patient information.
Iphone to the hospital’s MEDITECH
MEDITEC delivering invormation on
vital sign, meditations, lab results, allergies, nurses’ notes, therapy
results, and even patient diets to the iphone screen.
On Chainling application makes
efficient in daily work. Knowing the exact moment when delivery trucks will
arrive and provide fast minute information.
By updating data 20 minutes to a
half in web designed company, it will much easier to take action what customers
response.
2. Identify
the problems that businesses in this case study solved by using mobile digital
devices.
In the past problem occured of
provide customer up to minute information. And by using mobile digital devices
have increased function of provide fast information to the customer.
3. What
kinds of businesses are most likely to benefit from equipping their employees
with mobile digital devices such as iphones, ipads, and blackberrys?
Medical business in hospital,
business factory, and any small or big company have its advantages
4. D.W.
Morgan’s CEO has stated, “The iPhone is not a game changer, it’s an industry
changer. It changes the way that you can interact with your customers and with
your suppliers.” Discuss the implications of this statement.
Developing technologies have affect
of any condition of work now. From manual then
fast updating information to customers, it will give profit position by
producing more goods and knowing the respondent of customer needs.
Source
: Mangement Information System by Kenneth C. Laudon and Jane P. Laudon. “Apple
iPhone in Business Profiles, www.apple.com,
Accessed May 10, 2010; Steve Lohr, Cisco Cheng, “The Ipad Has Business Potential,” PC World, April 26, 2010; and “Smartphone
Rises Fast from Gadget to Necessity,” The New York Times, June 10, 2009.
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