2022年北大MBA原文案例库 .pdf

上传人:Che****ry 文档编号:30542752 上传时间:2022-08-06 格式:PDF 页数:14 大小:95.23KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
2022年北大MBA原文案例库 .pdf_第1页
第1页 / 共14页
2022年北大MBA原文案例库 .pdf_第2页
第2页 / 共14页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《2022年北大MBA原文案例库 .pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《2022年北大MBA原文案例库 .pdf(14页珍藏版)》请在得力文库 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。

1、How Financial Firms Decide on Technology,介绍国际大银行在决定对信息技术投资时的考虑要点和他们具体的实施过程。How Financial Firms Decide on Technology(Abstract ) The financial services industry is the major investor in information technology(IT) in the U.S. economy; the typical bank spends as much as 15% of non-intereste expenses on

2、IT. A persistent finding of research into the performance of financial institutions is that performance and efficiency vary widely across institutions. Nowhere is this variability more visible than in the outcomes of the IT investment decisions in these institutions. This paper presents the results

3、of an empirical investigation of IT investment decision processes in the banking industry. The purpose of this investigation is to uncover what, if anything, can be learned from the IT investment practices of banks that would help in understanding the cause ofthis variability in performance along wi

4、th pointing toward management practices that lead to better investment decisions. Using PC banking and the development of corporate Internet sites as the case studies for this investigation, the paper reports on detailed field-based surveys of investment practices in several leading institutions How

5、 Financial Firms Decide on Technology(Part One ) 信息技术对金融服务业的影响正在增加,不仅仅表现在银行的15% 无息开支上,而且对金融服务业的运做和战略也有很强的影响。一个对金融机构的长期研究表明,不同的机构的效率和表现也不同。其决定的因素有以下一些其中的一个因素就是对投资的决定和管理。SBS是一个失败的例子,但是成功的公司也不少。本文注重解答以下的问题:. 银行对投资的评估和管理过程?. 在对的管理过程中,理论和实际操作的结合如何?. 投资的管理和银行性能的关系如何?1.0 Introduction名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 -

6、- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 1 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - Information technology(IT) is increasingly critical to the operations of financial services firms. Today banks spend as much as 15% of non-interest expense on information technology. It is estimated that the indust

7、ry will spend at least $21.1 billion on IT in 1998, and financial institutions collectively account for the majority of IT investment in the U.S. economy. In additon to being a large component of the cost structure, information technology has a strong influence on financial firms operatons and strat

8、egy. Few financial products and services exist that do not utilize computers at some point in the delivery process, and a firmsinformation systems place strong constraints on the type of products offered, the degree of customization possible and the speed at which firms can respond to competitive op

9、portunities or threats.A persistent finding of research into the performance of financial institutions is that performance and efficiency varies widely across institutions, even after controlling for factors such as size(scale), product breadth(scope), branching behavior and organizational form(e.g.

10、 stock versus mutual for insurers; banks versus saving & loans). Given the central role that technology plays in these institutions, at least some of this variation is likely to be due to variations in the use and effectiveness of IT investments. While some authors have argued that the value of IT i

11、nvestment has been insignificant, particularly in services, recent empirical work has suggested that IT investment, on average, is a productive investment. Perhaps more importantly, there appears to be substantial variation across firms; some firms have very high investments but are poor performers,

12、 while otheres invest less but appear to be much more successful. Brynjolfsson and Hitt found that as much as half the returns to IT investment are due to firm specific factors.One potentially important driver of differences in IT value, and of firm performance more broadly, is likely to be the deci

13、sion and management peocessed for IT investments. Horror stories of bad IT investment decisions abound. Consider the example of the new strategic banking system(SBS) at Banc One(American Banker 1997). Banc One Corp. and Electronic Data Systems Corp. agreed last year to end 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - -

14、 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 2 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - their joint development of this retail banking system after spending an estimated $175 million on it. As stated in the American Banker article, SBSwas just so overwhelming and so complete that by the time they were ge

15、tting to market, it was going to take too long to install the whole thing, said Alan Riegler, principal in Ernst & Youngs financial services management consulting division. However, not all the stories are negative. New IT systems are playing a vital role in reshaping the delivery of financial servi

16、ces. For example, new computer-telephony integration(CTI) technologies are transforming call center operations in financial institutions. By investing in technology, more and more institutions are moving operations from high-cost branch operations to the telephone channel,where the cost per transact

17、ion is one-tenth the cost of a teller interaction. This IT investment not only reduces the cost of serving existing customers, but also extends the reach of the institution beyond its traditional geographic boundaries.In this paper, we utilize detailed case studies of six retail banks to investigate

18、 several interrelated questions:.What processes do banks utilize to evaluate and manage IT investments? .How well do actual practices align with theoretical arguments about how IT investments should be managed? .What impact does that management of IT investments have on performance?How Financial Fir

19、ms Decide on Technology(Part Two ) For the first question, we develop a structured framework for cataloging IT investment practices and then populate this framework using a combination of 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 3 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - sur

20、veys and semi-structured interviews. We then compare the results of this exercise with a synthesis of the literature on IT decision making to understanding how practices vary across firms and the extent to which this is consistent with best practices as described in previous literature. Finally, we

21、will compare these processes to internal and external performance metrics to better understand which sets of practices appear to be most effective.To make these comparisons concrete, we examine both the general decision process as well as the specific processes used for two recent IT investment deci

22、sions :the adoption of computer-based home banking (PC banking), and the development of the corporate web site. These decisions were chosen because they were recent and are related but provide some contrast; in particular, PC banking is a fairly well defined product innovation, while the corporate w

23、eb presence is more of an infrastructure investment which is less well-defined in terms of objectives and business ownership.Overall, we find that while some aspects of the decision process are fairly similar across institutions and often conform to best practice as defined by previous literature, t

24、here are several areas where there is large variation in practice among the banks and between actual and theoretical best practice. Most banks have a strong and standardized project management for ongoing systems projects, and formal structures for insuring that line-managers and systems people are

25、in contact at the initiation of technology projects. At the same time, many banks have relatively weak processes(both formal and informal) for identifying new IT investment opportunities, allocating resources across organizational lines, and funding exploratory or infrastructure projects with long t

26、erm or uncertain payoffs.The reminder of this paper is organized as follows. Section 2 describes the previous literature on performance of financial institutions and the effects of IT on performance. Section 3 describes the methods and data. Section 4 describes the current academic thinking on vario

27、us components of the decision process and compares that to actual practices at the banks we visited. Section 5 describes the 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 4 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - results of our in-depth study of PC banking projects and the summa

28、ry, Section 6 contains a similar analysis for the Corporate Web Site and discussion and conclusion appear in Section 7. How Financial Firms Decide on Technology( Part Three ) 2.0 Previous Literature 2.1 Performance of Financial Institutions There have been a number of studies that have examined the

29、efficiency of the banking industry andthe role of various factors such as corporate control structure (type of board, directors, insider stock holdings, etc.), economies of scale (size), economies of scope (product breadth), and branching strategy; see Berger, Kashyup and Scalise (1995) and Harker a

30、nd Zenios (forthcoming) for a review of the banking efficiency literature. While there is substantial debate as to the role of these various factors, there is one unambiguous result: that most of the (in) efficiency of banks is not explained by the factors that have been considered in prior work. Fo

31、r example, Berger and Mester (1997) estimate that as much as 65-90% of the x-inefficiency remains unexplained after controlling for known drivers of performance. A similar story also appears in insurance where x-efficiency varies substantially across firms when size, scope, product mix, distribution

32、 strategy and other strategic variables are considered. It has been argued that one must get inside the black box of the bank ot consider the role of organizational, strategic and technological factors that may be missed in studies that rely heavily on public financial data.2.2 Information Technolog

33、y and Business Value 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 5 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - Early studies of the relationship between IT and productivity or other measures of performance were generally unable to determine the value of IT conclusively. Loveman (1

34、994) and Strassmann (1990) ,using different data and analytical methods both found that the performance effects of computers were not statistically significant. Barus, Kriebel and Mukadopadhyay (1995), using the same data as Loveman, found evidence that IT improved some internal performance metrics

35、such as inventory trunover, but could not tie these benefits to improvements in bottom line productivity. Although these studies had a number of disadvantages (small samples, noisy data ) which yielded imprecise measures of IT effects, this lack of evidence combined with equally equivocal macroecono

36、mic ananlyses by Steven Roach (1987) implicitly formed the basis for the productivity paradox. As Robert Solow (1987) once remarked, you can see teh computer age everywhere except in the productivity statistics. More recent work has found that IT investment is a substantial contributor to firm produ

37、ctivity, productivity growth and stock market valuation in a sample that contains a wide range of industries. Brynjolfsson and Hitt (1994,1996) and Lichtenberg (1995) found that IT investment had a positive and statistically significant contribution to firm output . Brynjolfsson and Yang (1997) foun

38、d that the market valuation of IT capital was several times that of ordinary capital. Brynjolfsson and Hitt also found a strong relationship between IT and productivity growth and taht this relationship grows stronger as longer time periods are considered. Collectively ,these studies suggest that th

39、ere is no productivity paradox, at least when the analysis is performed across industries using firm-level data. The differences between these results and earlier studies is probably due to the use of data taht was recent , more comprehensice ,and more disaggregated (firm level rather than industry

40、or economy level). Most previous sutdies have considered the effects of technology across firms in multiple industries, although a few studies have considered the role of technology in specifically in the banking industry. Steiner and Teixiera surveyed the banking industry and argued that while larg

41、e investments in technology clearly 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 6 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - had value,little of this value was being captured by the banks themselves; most of the benefits were being passed on to customers as a result of intense co

42、mpetition. Alpar and Kim examined the cost efficiency of banks overall and found that IT investment was associatied with greater cost efficiency although the effects were less evident when financial ratios were used as the outcome measure. Prasad and Harkere examined the relationship between technol

43、ogy investment and performance for 47 retail banks and found positive benefits of investments in IT staff. While these studies show a strong positive contribution of IT investment on average, they do not consider how this contribution (or level of investment )varies across firms. Brynjolfsson and Hi

44、tt found that firm effects can account for as much as half the contribution of IT found in these earlier studies. Recent results suggest that at least part of these differences can be explained by differences in organizational and strategic factors. Brynjolfsson and Hitt found that firms that use gr

45、eater overall IT benefits. Bresnehan, Brynjolfsson and Hitt found a similar result for firms that have greater levels of skills and those that make greater investments in training and pre-employment screening for human capital . In addition, strategic factors also appear to affect the value of IT. F

46、irms that invest in IT to create customer value (e.g. improve service, timeliness, convenience, variety) have greater performance than firms that invest in IT to reduce costs. While these studies are begining to explore how the performance of IT investment varies across firm, particularly due to org

47、anizational and strategic factors, little attention has been paid to the technology decision making process.How Financial Firms Decide on Technology( Part Four ) 2.3 IT Investment Decisions 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 7 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - W

48、hile there is no concise definition of best practice in IT investment decisions, there are a number of consistent arguments advanced in the IT management literature that can be synthesized into an understanding of the conventional wisdom. For the pruposes of discussion it is useful to subdivide the

49、process of IT management into seven discrete, but interrelated processes. The first six processes are oriented around the proposal, development and management of IT projects, while the last process is about maintaining the capabilities of the IT function and its interrelationships with the rest of t

50、he business: 1.Identification of IT opportunities 2.Evaluating opportunities 3.Approving IT projects 4.The make-buy decision 5.Managing IT projects 6.Evaluating IT projects 7.Manage and Develop the IT Function This subdivision loosely corresponds to many of the major issues in IT management such as

展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

当前位置:首页 > 教育专区 > 高考资料

本站为文档C TO C交易模式,本站只提供存储空间、用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。本站仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知得利文库网,我们立即给予删除!客服QQ:136780468 微信:18945177775 电话:18904686070

工信部备案号:黑ICP备15003705号-8 |  经营许可证:黑B2-20190332号 |   黑公网安备:91230400333293403D

© 2020-2023 www.deliwenku.com 得利文库. All Rights Reserved 黑龙江转换宝科技有限公司 

黑龙江省互联网违法和不良信息举报
举报电话:0468-3380021 邮箱:hgswwxb@163.com