258 research outputs found

    A model to assess customer alignment through customer experience concepts

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    Business and Information Technology Alignment (BITA) has been one of the main concerns of IT and Business executives and directors due to its importance to overall company performance, especially today in the age of digital transformation. For BITA has been developed several models which in general has focused in the implementation of alignment strategies for the internal operation of the organizations and in the measurement of this internal alignment, but, there is still a big gap in measurement models of the alignment with the external environment of the organizations. In this paper is presented the design and application of a maturity measurement model for BITA with the customers, where the customers are actors of the external environment of the companies. The proposed model involves evaluation criteria and business practices which the companies ideally do for improve the relationship with their customers.Comment: 12 pages, Preprint version, BIS 2019 International Workshops, Seville, Spain, June 26 to 28, 2019, Revised Paper

    Business and Information Technology Alignment Measurement -- a recent Literature Review

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    Since technology has been involved in the business context, Business and Information Technology Alignment (BITA) has been one of the main concerns of IT and Business executives and directors due to its importance to overall company performance, especially today in the age of digital transformation. Several models and frameworks have been developed for BITA implementation and for measuring their level of success, each one with a different approach to this desired state. The BITA measurement is one of the main decision-making tools in the strategic domain of companies. In general, the classical-internal alignment is the most measured domain and the external environment evolution alignment is the least measured. This literature review aims to characterize and analyze current research on BITA measurement with a comprehensive view of the works published over the last 15 years to identify potential gaps and future areas of research in the field.Comment: 12 pages, Preprint version, BIS 2018 International Workshops, Berlin, Germany, July 18 to 20, 2018, Revised Paper

    Information Systems Enrollments: Can They Be Increased?

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    It is almost unbelievable that in this age of technology we are experiencing decreasing worldwide enrollments in Information Systems (IS) programs. Suddenly, within a year or two, enrollments decreased as much as 70-80 percent throughout the world. Industry is begging for more graduates with a business and technical background and is expecting an even greater shortage in the next few years. Despite reports of the outsourcing of technical positions, there is a growing demand for IS graduates. This paper presents an overview of the discussion, resulting from a panel at the Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS) 2007, of declining enrollments and some suggestions to reverse the trend. Two major themes, marketing and curriculum, emerged

    Effect of H on Si molecular‐beam epitaxy

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    In Si crystal growth by molecular‐beam epitaxy (MBE) at low temperatures there is known to be an epitaxial thickness: an initially crystalline regime before the deposited film becomes amorphous. The predominant impurity in MBE is hydrogen, but the role of background H in low‐temperature MBE has not previously been assessed. Here the effect of deliberate dosing of the Si surface with atomic H during low‐T growth is studied. The epitaxial thickness is shown to be sensitive to very small additional H fluxes (≊10−9 Torr, i.e., an increase in H only marginally above ambient). With further increases in dose rate, the epitaxial thickness decreases as hepi=h0−k(ln PH). Using secondary‐ion‐mass spectrometry data on the segregated H at the interface, we argue that breakdown in epitaxy is not caused directly by the surface concentration of adsorbed impurities. It is deduced that very small concentrations of H may influence the Si surface diffusion rate. The possible effect of background H adsorption on previous experiments on Si steps and surface diffusion is discussed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69704/2/JAPIAU-74-11-6615-1.pd

    The Unseen Face of E-Business Project Development

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    The purpose of this paper is intent on identify and analyze the unseen factors of successful or failure of e-business project development. The IT managers must take into account both all costs involved in e-business development and all phases (analysis, design, testing, implementation, maintenance and operation) according to principle of project management for software/systems life cycle development. There are many solutions to exceed these factors of failure among could be counted outsourcing, a good project management, involvement of senior management, a real cost estimation etc.Zadanie pt. „Digitalizacja i udostępnienie w Cyfrowym Repozytorium Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego kolekcji czasopism naukowych wydawanych przez Uniwersytet Łódzki” nr 885/P-DUN/2014 zostało dofinansowane ze środków MNiSW w ramach działalności upowszechniającej nauk

    A Maturity Model for IT Dependability in Emergency Management

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    In many organisations a gap exists between IT management and emergency managemement. This paper illustrates how process improvement based on a maturity model can be used to help organisations to evaluate and improve the way they include IT dependability information in their emergency management. This paper presents the IDEM3 (IT Dependability in Emergency Management Maturity Model) process improvement framework which focuses especially on the cooperation between IT personnel, emergency managers, and users, to proactively prevent IT dependability problems when the IT systems are most critical in emergency situations. This paper describes the details of the framework, how the framework was developed and its relation to other maturity models in related fields

    Governance of Offshore IT Outsourcing at Shell Global Functions IT-BAM Development and Application of a Governance Framework to Improve Outsourcing Relationships

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    The lack of effective IT governance is widely recognized as a key inhibitor to successful global IT outsourcing relationships. In this study we present the development and application of a governance framework to improve outsourcing relationships. The approach used to developing an IT governance framework includes a meta model and a customization process to fit the framework to the target organization. The IT governance framework consists of four different elements (1) organisational structures, (2) joint processes between in- and outsourcer, (3) responsibilities that link roles to processes and (4) a diverse set of control indicators to measure the success of the relationship. The IT governance framework is put in practice in Shell GFIT BAM, a part of Shell that concluded to have a lack of management control over at least one of their outsourcing relationships. In a workshop the governance framework was used to perform a gap analysis between the current and desired governance. Several gaps were identified in the way roles and responsibilities are assigned and joint processes are set-up. Moreover, this workshop also showed the usefulness and usability of the IT governance framework in structuring, providing input and managing stakeholders in the discussions around IT governance

    Applying a business intelligence system in a big data context: production companies

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    Industry 4.0 promotes automation through computer systems of the manufacturing industry and its objective is the Smart Factory. Its development is considered a key factor in the strategic positioning not only of companies, but of regions, countries and continents in the short, medium and long term. Thus, it is no surprise that governments such as the United States and the European Commission are already taking this into consideration in the development of their industrial policies. This article presents a case of the implementation of a BI system in an industrial food environment with Big Data characteristics in which information from various sources is combined to provide information that improves the decision-making of the controls

    An enterprise engineering approach for the alignment of business and information technology strategy

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    Information systems and information technology (IS/IT, hereafter just IT) strategies usually depend on a business strategy. The alignment of both strategies improves their strategic plans. From an external perspective, business and IT alignment is the extent to which the IT strategy enables and drives the business strategy. This article reviews strategic alignment between business and IT, and proposes the use of enterprise engineering (EE) to achieve this alignment. The EE approach facilitates the definition of a formal dialog in the alignment design. In relation to this, new building blocks and life-cycle phases have been defined for their use in an enterprise architecture context. This proposal has been adopted in a critical process of a ceramic tile company for the purpose of aligning a strategic business plan and IT strategy, which are essential to support this process. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.Cuenca, L.; Boza, A.; Ortiz, A. (2011). 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    Defective ALC1 nucleosome remodeling confers PARPi sensitization and synthetic lethality with HRD.

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    Chromatin is a barrier to efficient DNA repair, as it hinders access and processing of certain DNA lesions. ALC1/CHD1L is a nucleosome-remodeling enzyme that responds to DNA damage, but its precise function in DNA repair remains unknown. Here we report that loss of ALC1 confers sensitivity to PARP inhibitors, methyl-methanesulfonate, and uracil misincorporation, which reflects the need to remodel nucleosomes following base excision by DNA glycosylases but prior to handover to APEX1. Using CRISPR screens, we establish that ALC1 loss is synthetic lethal with homologous recombination deficiency (HRD), which we attribute to chromosome instability caused by unrepaired DNA gaps at replication forks. In the absence of ALC1 or APEX1, incomplete processing of BER intermediates results in post-replicative DNA gaps and a critical dependence on HR for repair. Hence, targeting ALC1 alone or as a PARP inhibitor sensitizer could be employed to augment existing therapeutic strategies for HRD cancers.Work in I.A.’s group is funded by the WellcomeTrust (grant number 210634), BBSRC (BB/R007195/1), and Cancer ResearchUK (C35050/A22284). Work in D.A.’s group is funded by the Cancer ResearchUK Career Development Fellowship (grant number 16304). Work in the S.J.B.lab is supported by the Coun, which receives its core fundingfrom Cancer Research UK (FC0010048), the UK Medical Research Council(FC0010048), and the Wellcome Trust (FC0010048); a European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Investigator Grant (TelMetab); and Wellcome TrustSenior Investigator and Collaborative Grants. S.S.-B. was the recipient of an EMBO Long Term Fellowship (ALTF 707-2019) and a MSCA individual fellow-ship (grant 886577). Work in the J.R.C. group is funded by CRUK Career Devel-opment Fellowship (C52690/A19270) with infrastructural support from Well-come core award 090532/Z/09/ZS
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