Articles
Business decision making, management and information technology
Ubiquity, Volume 2007 Issue February | BY A. L. Suseela , B. Pradeep Kumar , John Selvam , K. Kanthi , V. S. Meenakshi , V. Lalith Kumar
Full citation in the ACM Digital Library
"Information technology is no longer a business resource; it is the business environment." His statement is not far from truth. Ongoing advances in information technology (IT), along with increasing global competition, are adding complexity and uncertainty of several orders of magnitude to the organizational environment.
Information technology management (or IT management) is a combination of two branches of study, information technology and management. This aims at achieving the goals and objectives of an organization through computers.
Also called IT management, this name is a common business function within corporations. Strictly speaking, there are two incarnations to this definition. One implies the management of a collection of systems, infrastructure, and information that resides on them. Another implies the management of information technologies as a business function.
The first definition is the subject of technical manuals and publications of various information technologies providers; while the second definition stems from the discussion and formation of the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL).
The ITIL has been in practice throughout regions of the world mainly conducted by IT service providers consulting companies. The relative paucity in the use of the best practice set can be attributed to lack awareness among IT practitioners. However the lack of ready-to-use tools also presents a significant barrier.
Some organizations that value such practices tend to engage consultants to introduce the practice. Such implementations can conflict with the home-grown culture due to a lack of internal buy-in. Other organizations implement the practices by spending resources to develop in-house tools. Most in-house developed tools tend to focus on one or a few specific areas where the organizations feel the most pains. To reap the full advantages, tools will need to be integrated with the organization's IT data in the center.
One notable mention is a relatively small but integrated tool on the market that seems to be developing in this direction
[This article is available as a PDF only. It originally appeared in Ubiquity Volume 8, Issue 8 (February 26, 2007 - March 5, 2007).]
COMMENTS
IT very essenial of inthis glabalization and for business decesion.
��� k.ummer, Tue, 30 Oct 2012 15:26:22 UTC
it is good but it should be long to easliy understandable.
��� M.irshad, Tue, 01 May 2012 10:17:19 UTC