From the Publisher: The title of this book contains the word "politics" because this term describes, perhaps more aptly than any other, what information management is mostly about. Information management is the process by which those who set policy guide those who follow policy. Politics concerns power, and applying an understanding of power to the management of information technologies is not only appropriate, but timely. The proliferation of computers has now reached a stage of development where they are shaping relationships between suppliers and customers in business, as well as how public institutions relate to private organizations and individuals. Written by a former chief information executive (1956-1978) and vice president of strategic planning (1978-1985) for three large multinational corporations. Strassmann also served as chief information executive of the U.S. Department of Defense and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense. The book covers the following topics: Centralization vs. decentralization of computing power. The role of a corporate systems staff in guiding business units. Linking business and information technology plans. Privacy of personal information on personal computers. Information architecture as a reflection of organizational design. Organizing for information security. Responsibilities of the Chief Information Officer. Reengineering, business process improvement and information systems. Totalitarian tendencies and violence implicit in computerized controls. Outsourcing of computer services. Information management as a core competency of a business. How to define goals and principles of information management. Preservation of organizational knowledge as software. The use of standards as a balance between rigidity and chaos. The economics of open systems. The value of employee training and cumulative learning. Cost reduction as a prerequisite of all good information management. What auditors need to check. The prospects of a widespread computer literacy. Threats to a prosperous information-based society. "Paul Strassmann's new book is nothing less than an attempt to create a "unified theory" of information management."-- Enterprise Reengineering
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- Sneed H and Verhoef C (2020). Cost‐driven software migration, Journal of Software: Evolution and Process, 32:7, Online publication date: 2-Jul-2020.
- Feigenbaum E How the “what” becomes the “how” ACM Turing award lectures
- Dennis A, Carte T and Kelly G (2003). Breaking the rules, Decision Support Systems, 36:1, (31-47), Online publication date: 1-Sep-2003.
- Hirschheim R, Porra J and Parks M (2003). The evolution of the corporate IT function and the role of the CIO at Texaco, ACM SIGMIS Database: the DATABASE for Advances in Information Systems, 34:4, (8-27), Online publication date: 28-Nov-2003.
- Feigenbaum E (1996). How the “what” becomes the “how”, Communications of the ACM, 39:5, (97-104), Online publication date: 1-May-1996.
- Robbins S The system is a mirror Proceedings of the 13th annual international conference on Systems documentation: emerging from chaos: solutions for the growing complexity of our jobs, (138-147)
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