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management information system for automating inventory

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You are an independent technology consultant working with Margaret Smith, owner of JavaBooks, a bookstore and coffee shop. You initially met her at a networking meeting and had some great ideas about how she could improve her business with a more strategic approach to investing in information technology. Margaret was ecstatic to meet with you.

Her office is situated in the back of the retail floor and was covered in books and loose papers--invoices and packing slips, tax notices and announcements, city planning advisories, inventory charts and schedules. Post-it notes were used to remind Margaret of upcoming appointments and meetings. A clipboard full of paper was apparently used as a store catalog and inventory item master. Margaret's personal computer is buried under four separate binders.

To get started, you asked a couple of questions concerning how the company kept track of its sales and inventory. Margaret said the company uses a manual cash register and carbon receipt process, writing down inventory items and prices by hand as listed on the item schedule--the large clipboard with all of the inventory costs. Inventory totals are also subtracted by hand from the clipboard.

You confirmed the following points about JavaBooks business processes with Margaret:

â?¢All sales are done by hand.
â?¢All inventory issues and receipts are done by hand.
â?¢The cash register is a basic manual drawer.
â?¢All invoice records are carbons.
â?¢Inventory is not manually recognized until it is manually entered into a spreadsheet.
â?¢Purchase orders are created manually by the business owner in Excel.
You were not surprised to learn that inventory counts were completely inaccurate, supplier orders were always late, and stock-outs were very frequent. Invoicing was erroneous, often reflecting inaccurate costs or extended pricing to the customer. Margaret frequently reordered obsolete books and supplies or completed purchase orders with retired SKUs (stock keeping units). Management had no comprehension of the businessâ?? current financial position because all of those reports would need to be manually compiled.

Explain how through the use management information systems, her competitors are lowering costs and improving profit margins through increasing efficiency.

The response addresses the queries posted in 1211 words with references.

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Solution Summary

The response addresses the queries posted in 1211 words with references.

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The response addresses the queries posted in 1211 words with references.

// The following paper is developed for implementation of management information system in an organization named, JavaBooks, a book store and coffee shop. The organization currently performs all its business activities manually. The aim of implementing management information system is to automate the complete system in order to help the business compete with other major book retailers. In this series, the following paragraph presents a brief background of the company as well the concept of management information system.//

Abstract

The given paper is developed as a report presented to the JavaBook. JavaBook wants to implement management information system in its business to compete with other major book retailers. In this relation, initially the scenario of the company is described in detail. In further discussion, the use of MIS and its benefits are evaluated, for different business activities of the JavaBooks. The main activities of the company, which would be supported through the use of management information system are automating inventory management receiving customer orders and fulfilling them, having Web-based self-services and invoice generation. All these activities are discussed in detail along with the analysis of the benefits of MIS. In addition to this the use of MIS by the competitors for cost reduction and profit generation is also evaluated in the end of the paper.

Overview of the Company: JavaBooks is a book store and coffee shop owned by Margaret Smith. Her office is covered with books and loose papers, invoices and packing slips, tax notices and announcements, city planning advisories, inventory charts and schedules. Earlier, notes were used to remind Margaret the upcoming appointments and meetings. The company is totally based on paper work like; it uses manual cash register and carbon receipt process.

Management Information System: It is simply a system that provides information to the management to manage the organization properly and commonly known as MIS. Initially a manual system was used for internal reporting but with ...

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  • MBA (IP), International Center for Internationa Business
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