Order ID 53563633773 Type Essay Writer Level Masters Style APA Sources/References 4 Perfect Number of Pages to Order 5-10 Pages Description/Paper Instructions
Purpose
This document sets out a model approach to writing an essay for the subject BISM7202 in Semester 1, 2020. This is a model approach. The topic is different to that set in the course, but the base principles still apply.
Audience
This document is intended for the reference of tutors and students in BISM7202.
Background
Students are required to write an 800-1200 word (note that your assignment is 1200-1500 words) essay that considers the “Role of Lotus Notes in Business Decision-Making”. This is an individual assignment – group work or any collaboration on the written component is not permitted.
In this essay, you are therefore required to discuss:
- How easy Lotus Notes was to learn and use.
- The strengths (at least one) and weaknesses (at least one) of Lotus Notes in relation to one only of the different types of tools for analysing and access vast quantities of data (discuss ONE OF THE FOLLOWING only):
o Data warehousing OR
o Multidimensional data analysis OR o Data mining, OR
o Utilizing Web interfaces to database
- Overall, whether (and why) you consider Lotus Notes to be a useful tool
You are to refer to external sources (for example, journal articles) to support your observations. In this case, these sources are to be cited using the Harvard referencing style.
The essay should have an abstract, an introduction, a body, and a conclusion. The introduction should be short and identify the purpose, scope, and structure of the essay. The conclusions should be short and summarise the points you have made in your essay.
Formatting and professionalism
Note the following:
- The essay is to be written to a professional standard.
- You should include a title page with identifying details (student number, full name, date, title, and word count).
- The essay should be typed (in Times Roman 12-point font or larger, single-spaced) and it should be in the range of 800 to 1,000 words in total length (excluding title page, abstract, footnotes, tables and references). No appendices are to be provided. Tables in the essay should not exceed one page. The word limit must be observed.
- You are expected to use the Harvard referencing style in this instance.
- You must be consistent with the reference style, and include for journal papers author, title, journal name, volume, number, pages. For all other sources, provide as much as information (conference dates and location) as possible. You are to provide a written list of sources referred to in your essay after the conclusion under the heading “References”.
- The UQ Library provides “How To” guides for writing that you can use. Here is the UQ guide to Harvard referencing:
Page | 2
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
https://web.library.uq.edu.au/research-tools-techniques/referencing/referencing-style-guides
Scope
The pages that follow set out an initial outline, with some comments on how to proceed. The essay develops into a final draft.
Working Drafts
First Draft: Initial outline
The following is a working ‘notes to self’ discussion of an initial outline of how I would address the essay. This outline then gets edited in the second draft. Highlighted items (in yellow) are general notes to consider. Keywords of particular note identified in the requirements are presented in bold text.
Simple opportunities to find research references (for a 1200-word assignment I probably need 5 to 15 good references) are highlighted in blue. Note that exceeding the word limit will result in a lower mark; writing more does not mean more marks, it’s about the content. The website scholar.google.com will probably help a lot here. If I follow the plan below, I will have 9 references, which sounds like between 5 and 15 references to me.
Abstract
[COMMENT: Note that an abstract is a brief summary of the overall essay, and a reader uses an abstract to quickly ascertain the purpose of the paper. The abstract should cover the whole paper and reports what the paper is for, what you did, and the conclusion.
An abstract is different to the introduction in that an introduction provides the rationale for the paper and be a forward-looking statement as to what you intend to achieve in the paper, whereas the abstract reports what was achieved. Note that an introduction supports its statements with citations whereas an abstract does not.
An abstract also differs from the executive summary in that an executive summary is intended to communicate the key points of a document (usually, a report rather than an essay). The executive summary can be read on its own and acted upon.
An abstract does NOT introduce new ideas, it only summarises the ideas in the essay to come. It should allow the reader to work out if they wish to read the whole paper. As it is a summary, the abstract should not include references (exceptions may be made for fundamental papers, but they are to be avoided). The abstract can therefore only be written once the assignment is done, so leave it for now. As a rule of thumb, an abstract should be around 10% of the total pages in the complete essay, and no more than 10 pages in length (though of course that shouldn’t apply here) . So I need an abstract roughly 80 -120 words in length – since it’s not part of the word count I’ll be a bit relaxed about that.]
Introduction
[COMMENT: In this essay the requirements say, “overall do you consider Lotus Notes to be a useful tool?”. This has an implication for me – it means that I will choose to write in the first person (as in, “I found it to be a useful tool but one fraught with dangers if used in appropriately.” Although this essay does not have to be in the first person, first person does make it a bit easier to write as a personal reflection]
[COMMENT: Some basic ground rules I probably need to remind myself of here. A paragraph does not have several ideas in it – a paragraph is focussed on a single idea. By extension this means that
Page | 3
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
a paragraph has at least three sentences in it – if it was less than three sentences I would probably combine it with the earlier paragraph. ]
[COMMENT: Oh and it’s probably important that as it is a structured formal essay I have some bridging going on – that is, the introduction says what is going to happen in the rest of the essay, and whenever I come to an idea that requires multiple paragraphs, the first paragraph ends with a sentence that basically says, “I will now discuss X, Y and then Z”, followed by three paragraphs (X, Y and then Z). This is essentially what is described as ‘signposting’ – see https://www.business.uq.edu.au/sites/default/files/brochures/assign-uqbs-student-writing-guide.pdf]
[FIRST PARAGRAPH: An introduction ‘sets the scene’ for the rest of the essay. This allows the reader to know whether this essay will interest them or not. It also defines what the benchmark for success in this essay – does it do its job? So, in the first paragraph I will answer questions such as ‘What is the purpose of this essay?’ (through simple sentences such as, ‘The purpose of this essay is to…’). I will also include why I was motivated to write this essay (usually, it’s not a great idea to say ‘to get a mark back so I can pass the course’).]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Say this might be a good place to find a reference that refers the reader to a good summary of what Lotus Notes is – otherwise I need to explain what it is for my reader.]
[SECOND PARAGRAPH: In the second paragraph I will discuss ‘How I address this purpose (i.e. what is the structure of the essay?). This structure will affect how you write the body of the essay that comes next.]
Evaluation of Lotus Notes
[COMMENT: In the requirements there are three points noted that you have to discuss, but in these points are several elements. For example, “How easy Lotus Notes was to learn and use” is two points: (1) how easy to learn and (2) how easy to use. It would be useful to have a paragraph on each. In the notes below I have outlined my likely approach to each paragraph. Note that I have decided to look at the strengths and weaknesses of Lotus Notes as a Utilizing Web Interface tool. Note also that I have used ‘Evaluation of Lotus Notes’ here to describe the ‘body’ section of the essay. Section headings in an essay are optional (essays rarely have sub-headings, though). If I do have section headings then they should be meaningful and relate very much to the structure I set out in the introduction. If no headings are used then I need to have a more explicit bridging sentence at the opening of the paragraphs. Meh. In this case, a heading is easier.]
[Paragraph: How easy was Lotus Notes to learn? With the next paragraph, this aims to address Point 1 of the noted requirements for the discussion in the assessment overview.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Find a reference that says how easy Lotus Notes is to learn perhaps? Does the reference support my experience?]
[Paragraph: How easy was Lotus Notes to use? With the preceding paragraph, this aims to address Point 2 of the noted requirements for the discussion in the assessment overview.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Find a reference that says how easy Lotus Notes is to use perhaps? Does the reference support my experience? As an example, I note that https://scholar.google.com.au/scholar?as_ylo=2012&q=%22Lotus+notes%22+%22easy+to+use%22& hl=en&as_sdt=0,5
has 436 results just since 2012]
[Paragraph: Identify that there were four choices to be made. Which tool did I choose? Why did I choose it? Is Lotus Notes popularly used this way? End with a bridging sentence that links to the following two paragraphs that talk about Lotus Notes’s strengths and weaknesses when used as this tool.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Ooh, I’m getting the hang of this now – find a reference (maybe two?) that discuss Lotus Notes being used as this type of tool. Yes, two references I think at once might be in order in this case.]
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
[Paragraph: Discuss strengths of Lotus Notes as a Web Interface tool. I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two strengths. I’ve heard the lecturer is pedantic about the ‘s’ –strengths is plural so that means at least two strengths need to be included.]
[Paragraph: Discuss weaknesses of Lotus Notes as a Web Interface tool. Again, I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two weaknesses.]
[Paragraph: Now, although it is not specifically noted in the requirements, any time we talk about strengths and weaknesses it would make sense to compare those strengths and the weaknesses together. Otherwise why did I discuss them? So, in this paragraph, I am focussing on Lotus Notes as the type of tool we chose (one of the four) and this is distinct from the final requirement, which is ‘overall do you consider Lotus Notes useful?’ So, I think I’d better discuss whether the strengths outweigh the weaknesses when using it as this type of tool, and if I do that I need to come to a conclusion – in this case, is it a good tool to use as a Web Interface tool?]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: I wonder if I can find a reference that talks about strengths and weaknesses of Lotus Notes as this tool? If I can, great – find one source for strength, one source for weakness.]
[Paragraph: Now we come to the final requirement, which is whether, overall, do I consider Lotus Notes useful? Hold on a second though – what’s the overall context here? Useful for what? Ah, this essay is to address the topic ‘Role of Lotus Notes in Business Decision Making’ – so I better focus this final overall discussion on that topic. So I had better answer that question – either ‘Yes I do think it is useful’ or ‘No it isn’t useful’. Now, it might be legitimate to say, ‘I’m not sure, it’ll depend on the context’. And the requirements need me to justify my position (the requirements say ‘(and why)’) . So, I need to give reasons as to why I think that. Well, this might be best considered again in terms of a strengths and weaknesses assessment. In which case, if I still have words left in my assignment I’ll do another bridging sentence to the next two paragraphs – one paragraph identifying what I consider strengths, one on weaknesses, and then a final concluding paragraph that says why I think it is or is not a useful tool (or, I suppose, why I can’t make my mind up. Note that bridging sentences are important to demonstrate the logic and flow of my essay.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Hmm – I’m performing an evaluation. Let’s find a reference (maybe two?) that discuss whether Lotus Notes is a good tool. Yes, two references I think. Paper count must be going OK by now.]
[Paragraph: Discuss strengths of Lotus Notes as an overall useful tool. I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two strengths.]
[Paragraph: Discuss weaknesses of Lotus Notes as an overall useful tool. I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two weaknesses.]
[Paragraph: I think I’d better discuss how I came to my assessment of it as a useful tool – do the strengths outweigh the weaknesses? Since it’s a conclusion I’m drawing from these reasons, I will end the paragraph with a statement like ‘For these reasons I consider Lotus Notes a useful tool.]
Conclusion
[Hooray, my essay is nearly done! Oh wait – I have to write it yet. OK – so I will summarise what I said above. I might do one sentence for each of the three requirements I had to do: (1) Was it easy to learn and use? (2) Is it good as the type of tool I nominated? And (3) Is it overall a useful tool?). It’s fairly like that I probably some sort of concluding sentence (e.g. ‘In conclusion, in this essay I have reflected upon the use of the Lotus Notes tool and I consider it useful/not useful/a complete load of horse-hockey.’)]
References
[COMMENT: Alphabetical list; see the guide referenced above. I can copy and paste in the citations from Google Scholar in Harvard style (click cite). That should do OK. Make sure I don’t miss any or
Page | 5
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
add any that I don’t use. Perhaps I should download Mendeley and put these papers in there if I’m going to be doing a lot of this sort of writing in my degree.]
Second draft: Fleshing it all out
How might my essay start to look in a second draft where I try to address these points? The new parts of the essay that implement the PARAGRAPH statements are shown in green highlighter. You should be able to see how each highlighted paragraph implements the requirements of the PARAGRAPH statements.
Abstract
[COMMENT: Note that an abstract is a brief summary of the overall essay, and a reader uses an abstract to quickly ascertain the purpose of the paper. The abstract should cover the whole paper and reports what the paper is for, what you did, and the conclusion.
An abstract is different to the introduction in that an introduction provides the rationale for the paper and be a forward-looking statement as to what you intend to achieve in the paper, whereas the abstract reports what was achieved. Note that an introduction supports its statements with citations whereas an abstract does not.
An abstract also differs from the executive summary in that an executive summary is intended to communicate the key points of a document (usually, a report rather than an essay). The executive summary can be read on its own and acted upon.
An abstract does NOT introduce new ideas, it only summarises the ideas in the essay to come. It should allow the reader to work out if they wish to read the whole paper. As it is a summary, the abstract should not include references (exceptions may be made for fundamental papers, but they are to be avoided). The abstract can therefore only be written once the assignment is done, so leave it for now. As a rule of thumb, an abstract should be around 10% of the total pages in the complete essay, and no more than 10 pages in length (though of course that shouldn’t apply here) . So I need an abstract roughly 80 -120 words in length – since it’s not part of the word count I’ll be a bit relaxed about that.]
In this essay I consider the role of Lotus Notes in business decision-making. I reflect upon the ease of learning and using Lotus Notes, and I consider its usefulness as a web interface database. I find Lotus Notes not easy to learn due to its technical interface and the difficulty of identifying mistakes. I also find it not easy to use as its interface is unique and unorthodox. Furthermore, although it can operate as a web interface database it is apparent that better solutions exist as Lotus Notes is generally considered to be obsolete and not secure. Nevertheless, due to Lotus Notes’ ability to automate processes and manage structured text well, I find Lotus Notes to be a useful tool for business decision-making.
Introduction
[COMMENT: In this essay the requirements say, “overall do you consider Lotus Notes to be a useful tool?”. This has an implication for me – it means that I will choose to write in the first person (as in, “I found it to be a useful tool but one fraught with dangers if used in appropriately.” Although this essay does not have to be in the first person, first person does make it a bit easier to write as a personal reflection]
[COMMENT: Some basic ground rules I probably need to remind myself of here. A paragraph does not have several ideas in it – a paragraph is focussed on a single idea. By extension this means that a paragraph has at least three sentences in it – if it was less than three sentences I would probably combine it with the earlier paragraph. ]
[COMMENT: Oh and it’s probably important that as it is a structured formal essay I have some bridging going on – that is, the introduction says what is going to happen in the rest of the essay, and whenever I come to an idea that requires multiple paragraphs, the first paragraph ends with a sentence that basically says, “I will now discuss X, Y and then Z”, followed by three paragraphs (X, Y
Page | 6
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
and then Z). This is essentially what is described as ‘signposting’ – see https://www.business.uq.edu.au/sites/default/files/brochures/assign-uqbs-student-writing-guide.pdf]
[FIRST PARAGRAPH: An introduction ‘sets the scene’ for the rest of the essay. This allows the reader to know whether this essay will interest them or not. It also defines what the benchmark for success in this essay – does it do its job? So, in the first paragraph I will answer questions such as ‘What is the purpose of this essay?’ (through simple sentences such as, ‘The purpose of this essay is to…’). I will also include why I was motivated to write this essay (usually, it’s not a great idea to say ‘to get a mark back so I can pass the course’).]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Say this might be a good place to find a reference that refers the reader to a good summary of what Lotus Notes is – otherwise I need to explain what it is for my reader.]
Lotus Notes is a desktop database that is popularly used in business today (Sanocki and Targett 2013). Often, Notes is used in inappropriate ways (O’Leary 2016). The purpose of this essay is to evaluate whether Notes is a useful tool in business decision-making.
[SECOND PARAGRAPH: In the second paragraph I will discuss ‘How I address this purpose (i.e. what is the structure of the essay?). This structure will affect how you write the body of the essay that comes next.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Say this might be a good place to find a reference that refers the reader to a good summary of what Lotus Notes is – otherwise I need to explain that.]
[SECOND PARAGRAPH: In the second paragraph I will discuss ‘How I address this purpose (i.e. what is the structure of the essay?). This structure will affect how you write the body of the essay that comes next.]
In this essay I therefore consider the role of Lotus Notes in business decision- making, and particularly with a focus on its role as a web interface tool. I adopt the following structure. First, I consider how easy Notes is to learn and use. Second, I consider the role of Notes as a web interface tool, and finally I present my evaluation of Notes as a useful tool in business decision-making.
Evaluation of Lotus Notes
[COMMENT: In the requirements there are three points noted that you have to discuss, but in these points are several elements. For example, “How easy Lotus Notes was to learn and use” is two points: (1) how easy to learn and (2) how easy to use. It would be useful to have a paragraph on each. In the notes below I have outlined my likely approach to each paragraph. Note that I have decided to look at the strengths and weaknesses of Lotus Notes as a Utilizing Web Interface tool. Note also that I have used ‘Evaluation of Lotus Notes’ here to describe the ‘body’ section of the essay. Section headings in an essay are optional (essays rarely have sub-headings, though). If I do have section headings then they should be meaningful and relate very much to the structure I set out in the introduction. If no headings are used then I need to have a more explicit bridging sentence at the opening of the paragraphs. Meh. In this case, a heading is easier.]
[Paragraph: How easy was Lotus Notes to learn? With the next paragraph, this aims to address Point 1 of the noted requirements for the discussion in the assessment overview.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Find a reference that says how easy Lotus Notes is to learn perhaps? Does the reference support my experience?]
In my experience Lotus Notes was very difficult to learn. The interface is very technical and mistakes are not easily identified by a novice user. In this way my experiences mirror that of Harrison (2015) who considers Lotus Notes an older technology that is out of step with today’s design environments.
[Paragraph: How easy was Lotus Notes to use? With the preceding paragraph, this aims to address Point 2 of the noted requirements for the discussion in the assessment overview.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Find a reference that says how easy Lotus Notes is to use perhaps? Does the reference support my experience? As an example, I note that https://scholar.google.com.au/scholar?as_ylo=2012&q=%22Lotus+notes%22+%22easy+to+use%22& hl=en&as_sdt=0,5
has 436 results just since 2012]
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
I similarly found Lotus Notes difficult to use. Although it has been updated, the tool remains difficult and with a unique and unorthodox interface. These issues are documented well by Wright and Erkes (2012).
[Paragraph: Identify that there were four choices to be made. Which tool did I choose? Why did I choose it? Is Lotus Notes popularly used this way? End with a bridging sentence that links to the following two paragraphs that talk about Lotus Notes’s strengths and weaknesses when used as this tool.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Ooh, I’m getting the hang of this now – find a reference (maybe two?) that discuss Lotus Notes being used as this type of tool. Yes, two references I think at once might be in order in this case.]
In the specific context of Lotus Notes’s role in business decision-making, there are four key roles that Lotus Notes can fulfil. These roles include data warehousing, multidimensional data analysis, data mining, and utilizing web interfaces to database (Chaabouni & Yahia 2014). In this essay I focus on Lotus Notes’s role as a database in web interfaces as it fulfils this role in many electronic commerce systems for small businesses (Prescott & Miree 2015) . In my analysis there are both strengths and weaknesses in adopting Lotus Notes for this purpose.
[Paragraph: Discuss strengths of Lotus Notes as a Web Interface tool. I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two strengths. I’ve heard the lecturer is pedantic about the ‘s’ –strengths is plural so that means at least two strengths need to be included.]
I note two key strengths that Lotus Notes provides as a web interface database. There are many people qualified to develop in Lotus Notes (Grewal 2014), so it is an accessible solution to larger businesses. Furthermore, the database is relatively quick and useful for low-traffic websites (Usher 2012).
[Paragraph: Discuss weaknesses of Lotus Notes as a Web Interface tool. Again, I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two weaknesses.]
However, there are weaknesses as well. I note that Lotus Notes requires significant development on the part of its vendor, as it is fundamentally obsolete (Ganesh, Mohapatra & Nagarajan 2014). It is also insecure as its design was for a different time and has several documented security flaws (Birman 2012).
[Paragraph: Now, although it is not specifically noted in the requirements, any time we talk about strengths and weaknesses it would make sense to compare those strengths and the weaknesses together. Otherwise why did I discuss them? So, in this paragraph, I am focussing on Lotus Notes as the type of tool we chose (one of the four) and this is distinct from the final requirement, which is ‘overall do you consider Lotus Notes useful?’ So, I think I’d better discuss whether the strengths outweigh the weaknesses when using it as this type of tool, and if I do that I need to come to a conclusion – in this case, is it a good tool to use as a Web Interface tool?]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: I wonder if I can find a reference that talks about strengths and weaknesses of Lotus Notes as this tool? If I can, great – find one source for strength, one source for weakness.]
Overall, on the basis of this analysis it appears that Lotus Notes is able to be used as a web interface database (Prescott & Miree 2015). However although it has key strengths (Grewal 2014; Usher 2012), there are also weaknesses due to obsolescence and insecurity (Birman 2012; Ganesh, Mohapatra & Nagarajan 2014). The apparent conclusion is that it is not a good tool to use as a web interface tool.
[Paragraph: Now we come to the final requirement, which is whether, overall, do I consider Lotus Notes useful? Hold on a second though – what’s the overall context here? Useful for what? Ah, this essay is to address the topic ‘Role of Lotus Notes in Business Decision Making’ – so I better focus this final overall discussion on that topic. So I had better answer that question – either ‘Yes I do think it is useful’ or ‘No it isn’t useful’. Now, it might be legitimate to say, ‘I’m not sure, it’ll depend on the context’. And the requirements need me to justify my position (the requirements say ‘(and why)’) . So, I need to give reasons as to why I think that. Well, this might be best considered again in terms of a strengths and weaknesses assessment. In which case, if I still have words left in my assignment I’ll
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
do another bridging sentence to the next two paragraphs – one paragraph identifying what I consider strengths, one on weaknesses, and then a final concluding paragraph that says why I think it is or is not a useful tool (or, I suppose, why I can’t make my mind up. Note that bridging sentences are important to demonstrate the logic and flow of my essay.]
[RESEARCH REFERENCE: Hmm – I’m performing an evaluation. Let’s find a reference (maybe two?) that discuss whether Lotus Notes is a good tool. Yes, two references I think. Paper count must be going OK by now.]
In overall terms, however, I find Lotus Notes to be useful in business decision making. This is because its role is best considered as a knowledge management system to provide support for decision-making rather than as a data analysis tool. I base my assessment on Lotus Notes’ acknowledged strengths and weaknesses.
[Paragraph: Discuss strengths of Lotus Notes as an overall useful tool. I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two strengths.]
The first strength Lotus Notes has is its ability as a free -form database for disseminating unstructured information (Rao 2012). Lotus Notes has an unrivalled capability in routing and storing unstructured text data, and distributing this around global networks in a secure client/server arrangement. Second, it provides its own simple programming language that provides an opportunity to develop automated decision support systems that are customised to the business (Zikos 2013).
[Paragraph: Discuss weaknesses of Lotus Notes as an overall useful tool. I want a good mark, so I’ll talk about two weaknesses.]
There are of course weaknesses, and these are mirrored in my assessment above. Lotus Notes is generally considered obsolete, and it is also considered insecure (Birman 2012; Ganesh, Mohapatra
- Nagarajan 2014). Furthermore, Lotus Notes expertise is not common and its implementation can be expensive (Zikos 2013).
[Paragraph: I think I’d better discuss how I came to my assessment of it as a useful tool – do the strengths outweigh the weaknesses? Since it’s a conclusion I’m drawing from these reasons, I will end the paragraph with a statement like ‘For these reasons I consider Lotus Notes a useful tool.]
My overall assessment is that Lotus Notes is a useful tool in the right context. Its ability to automate processes and manage structured text well (Rao 2012; Zikos 2013) outweighs the weaknesses of obsolescence, insecurity, and expense (Birman 2012; Ganesh, Mohapatra & Nagarajan 2014; Zikos 2013). For these reasons I consider Lotus Notes overall to be a useful tool in business decision-making.
Conclusion
[Hooray, my essay is nearly done! Oh wait – I have to write it yet. OK – so I will summarise what I said above. I might do one sentence for each of the three requirements I had to do: (1) Was it easy to learn and use? (2) Is it good as the type of tool I nominated? And (3) Is it overall a useful tool?). It’s fairly like that I probably some sort of concluding sentence (e.g. ‘In conclusion, in this essay I have reflected upon the use of the Lotus Notes tool and I consider it useful/not useful/a complete load of horse-hockey.’)]
In conclusion, in this essay I have considered the role of Lotus Notes in business decision- making. I have reflected upon the ease of learning and using Lotus Notes, and I have considered its usefulness as a web interface database in that role. In my view, Lotus Notes is not easy to learn, and it is not easy to use. Furthermore, although it can operate as a web interface database it is apparent that better solutions exist. Nevertheless, due to Lotus Notes’ ability to automate processes and manage structured text well, I find Lotus Notes to be a useful tool in business decision-making.
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
References
Birman, K.P., 2012. Remote Procedure Calls and the Client/Server Model. In Guide to Reliable Distributed Systems (pp. 185-247). Springer London.
Chaabouni, A. and Ben Yahia, I., 2014. Contribution of ERP to the decision-making process through knowledge management. Journal of Decision Systems, 23(3), pp.303-317.
Ganesh, K., Mohapatra, S. and Nagarajan, S., 2014. Taxonomy and Technology Architecture for Knowledge Management Solution Implementation. In Design and Development of Knowledge Management for Manufacturing (pp. 57-80). Springer International Publishing.
Grewal, D.S., 2014. Entrepreneurship in Information Technology. Progress in Science in Engineering Research (PISER) Journal, 2, pp.304-310.
Harrison, G., 2015. Document Databases. In Next Generation Databases (pp. 53-63). Apress.
O’Leary, D.E., 2016. Is knowledge management dead (or dying)?. Journal of Decision Systems, 25(sup1), pp.512-526.
Prescott, J.E. and Miree, C.E., 2015. Small business solutions: Building and leveraging a competitive intelligence capability without going broke. Journal of Small Business Strategy, 9(2), pp.57-76.
Rao, M., 2012. Knowledge management tools and techniques. Routledge.
Sanocki, M. and Targett, D., 2013. 15 Experiences in using Lotus. IT in Business, p.239.
Usher, N., 2012. Going web-first at The Christian Science Monitor: A three-part study of change.
International Journal of Communication, 6, p.20.
Wright, S. and Erkes, C., 2012. User Training and Adoption. In Pro SharePoint 2010 Governance (pp.
55-76). Apress.
Zikos, D., 2013. Data Issues for Clinical-Administrative Decision Making in Healthcare. Phd Health Informatics.
Third draft: Starting to bring it together
So at this point in its history, my essay exists in draft form. In the essay that follows, I have removed all the text in square brackets ([example text]) above, but otherwise have not changed the essay. That is, the below essay only shows those paragraphs above that are highlighted in green above.
I still need to review the essay for typos, check that my references are sound, remove long sentences, and particularly look for problems with grammar (e.g. passive voice etc).
I also need to check that I’ve addressed the formatting requirements (title page and so on). However, as I’ve written my assignment with a few days to spare, I’m going to let it sit for a bit and revise it in a day or two. I also better spend some time making sure that I have addressed the requirements of the marking rubric – better note those weightings!
So as it is, I’ll then give it a final read-through on the day it is due to catch those last-minute typos, which are always a pain. In the end, there are 12 references cited here without too much mucking about. Also, the main body of the assignment (i.e. excluding the ‘Abstract’ and ‘References’) is 792 words – I had better note that on the title page. I’m confident that my final revision will move it into the required 800-1200 word range easily. Note though that the rubric states that exceeding the word limit will result in a lower mark; writing more does not mean more marks, it’s about the content.
Looking good! Not bad for an afternoon’s work. Oh, and I have now given my essay a title.
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
Lotus Notes: How easy is it to Learn and use, and is it useful?
Abstract
In this essay I consider the role of Lotus Notes in business decision-making. I reflect upon the ease of learning and using Lotus Notes, and I consider its usefulness as a web interface database. I find Lotus Notes not easy to learn due to its technical interface and the difficulty of identifying mistakes. I also find it not easy to use as its interface is unique and unorthodox. Furthermore, although it can operate as a web interface database it is apparent that better solutions exist as Lotus Notes is generally considered to be obsolete and not secure. Nevertheless, due to Lotus Notes’ ability to automate processes and manage structured text well, I find Lotus Notes to be a useful tool for business decision-making.
Introduction
Lotus Notes is a desktop database that is popularly used in business today (Sanocki and Targett 2013). Often, Notes is used in inappropriate ways (O’Leary 2016). The purpose of this essay is to evaluate whether Notes is a useful tool in business decision-making.
In this essay I therefore consider the role of Lotus Notes in business decision- making, and particularly with a focus on its role as a web interface tool. I adopt the following structure. First, I consider how easy Notes is to learn and use. Second, I consider the role of Notes as a web interface tool, and finally I present my evaluation of Notes as a useful tool in business decision-making.
Evaluation of Lotus Notes
In my experience Lotus Notes was very difficult to learn. The interface is very technical and mistakes are not easily identified by a novice user. In this way my experiences mirror that of Harrison (2015) who considers Lotus Notes an older technology that is out of step with today’s design environments.
I similarly found Lotus Notes difficult to use. Although it has been updated, the tool remains difficult and with a unique and unorthodox interface. These issues are documented well by Wright and Erkes (2012).
In the specific context of Lotus Notes’s role in business decision-making, there are four key roles that Lotus Notes can fulfil. These roles include data warehousing, multidimensional data analysis, data mining, and utilizing web interfaces to database (Chaabouni & Yahia 2014). In this essay I focus on Lotus Notes’s role as a database in web interfaces as it fulfils this role in many electronic commerce systems for small businesses (Prescott & Miree 2015) . In my analysis there are both strengths and weaknesses in adopting Lotus Notes for this purpose.
I note two key strengths that Lotus Notes provides as a web interface database. There are many people qualified to develop in Lotus Notes (Grewal 2014), so it is an accessible solution to larger businesses. Furthermore, the database is relatively quick and useful for low-traffic websites (Usher 2012).
However, there are weaknesses as well. I note that Lotus Notes requires significant development on the part of its vendor, as it is fundamentally obsolete (Ganesh, Mohapatra & Nagarajan 2014). It is also insecure as its design was for a different time and has several documented security flaws (Birman 2012).
Overall, on the basis of this analysis it appears that Lotus Notes is able to be used as a web interface database (Prescott & Miree 2015). However although it has key strengths (Grewal 2014; Usher 2012), there are also weaknesses due to obsolescence and insecurity (Birman 2012; Ganesh, Mohapatra & Nagarajan 2014). The apparent conclusion is that it is not a good tool to use as a web interface tool.
In overall terms, however, I find Lotus Notes to be useful in business decision making. This is because its role is best considered as a knowledge management system to provide support for decision-making rather than as a data analysis tool. I base my assessment on Lotus Notes’ acknowledged strengths and weaknesses.
Page | 11
BISM7202 – Information Systems for Management
The first strength Lotus Notes has is its ability as a free -form database for disseminating unstructured information (Rao 2012). Lotus Notes has an unrivalled capability in routing and storing unstructured text data, and distributing this around global networks in a secure client/server arrangement. Second, it provides its own simple programming language that provides an opportunity to develop automated decision support systems that are customised to the business (Zikos 2013).
There are of course weaknesses, and these are mirrored in my assessment above. Lotus Notes is generally considered obsolete, and it is also considered insecure (Birman 2012; Ganesh, Mohapatra
- Nagarajan 2014). Furthermore, Lotus Notes expertise is not common and its implementation can be expensive (Zikos 2013).
My overall assessment is that Lotus Notes is a useful tool in the right context. Its ability to automate processes and manage structured text well (Rao 2012; Zikos 2013) outweighs the weaknesses of obsolescence, insecurity, and expense (Birman 2012; Ganesh, Mohapatra & Nagarajan 2014; Zikos 2013). For these reasons I consider Lotus Notes overall to be a useful tool in business decision-making.
Conclusion
In conclusion, in this essay I have considered the role of Lotus Notes in business decision- making. I have reflected upon the ease of learning and using Lotus Notes, and I have considered its usefulness as a web interface database in that role. In my view, Lotus Notes is not easy to learn, and it is not easy to use. Furthermore, although it can operate as a web interface database it is apparent that better solutions exist. Nevertheless, due to Lotus Notes’ ability to automate processes and manage structured text well, I find Lotus Notes to be a useful tool in business decision-making.
References
Birman, K.P., 2012. Remote Procedure Calls and the Client/Server Model. In Guide to Reliable Distributed Systems (pp. 185-247). Springer London.
Chaabouni, A. and Ben Yahia, I., 2014. Contribution of ERP to the decision-making process through knowledge management. Journal of Decision Systems, 23(3), pp.303-317.
Ganesh, K., Mohapatra, S. and Nagarajan, S., 2014. Taxonomy and Technology Architecture for Knowledge Management Solution Implementation. In Design and Development of Knowledge Management for Manufacturing (pp. 57-80). Springer International Publishing.
Grewal, D.S., 2014. Entrepreneurship in Information Technology. Progress in Science in Engineering Research (PISER) Journal, 2, pp.304-310.
Harrison, G., 2015. Document Databases. In Next Generation Databases (pp. 53-63). Apress.
O’Leary, D.E., 2016. Is knowledge management dead (or dying)?. Journal of Decision Systems, 25(sup1), pp.512-526.
Prescott, J.E. and Miree, C.E., 2015. Small business solutions: Building and leveraging a competitive intelligence capability without going broke. Journal of Small Business Strategy, 9(2), pp.57-76.
Rao, M., 2012. Knowledge management tools and techniques. Routledge.
Sanocki, M. and Targett, D., 2013. 15 Experiences in using Lotus. IT in Business, p.239.
Usher, N., 2012. Going web-first at The Christian Science Monitor: A three-part study of change.
International Journal of Communication, 6, p.20.
Wright, S. and Erkes, C., 2012. User Training and Adoption. In Pro SharePoint 2010 Governance (pp.
55-76). Apress.
Zikos, D., 2013. Data Issues for Clinical-Administrative Decision Making in Healthcare. Phd Health Informatics.
RUBRIC
QUALITY OF RESPONSE NO RESPONSE POOR / UNSATISFACTORY SATISFACTORY GOOD EXCELLENT Content (worth a maximum of 50% of the total points) Zero points: Student failed to submit the final paper. 20 points out of 50: The essay illustrates poor understanding of the relevant material by failing to address or incorrectly addressing the relevant content; failing to identify or inaccurately explaining/defining key concepts/ideas; ignoring or incorrectly explaining key points/claims and the reasoning behind them; and/or incorrectly or inappropriately using terminology; and elements of the response are lacking. 30 points out of 50: The essay illustrates a rudimentary understanding of the relevant material by mentioning but not full explaining the relevant content; identifying some of the key concepts/ideas though failing to fully or accurately explain many of them; using terminology, though sometimes inaccurately or inappropriately; and/or incorporating some key claims/points but failing to explain the reasoning behind them or doing so inaccurately. Elements of the required response may also be lacking. 40 points out of 50: The essay illustrates solid understanding of the relevant material by correctly addressing most of the relevant content; identifying and explaining most of the key concepts/ideas; using correct terminology; explaining the reasoning behind most of the key points/claims; and/or where necessary or useful, substantiating some points with accurate examples. The answer is complete. 50 points: The essay illustrates exemplary understanding of the relevant material by thoroughly and correctly addressing the relevant content; identifying and explaining all of the key concepts/ideas; using correct terminology explaining the reasoning behind key points/claims and substantiating, as necessary/useful, points with several accurate and illuminating examples. No aspects of the required answer are missing. Use of Sources (worth a maximum of 20% of the total points). Zero points: Student failed to include citations and/or references. Or the student failed to submit a final paper. 5 out 20 points: Sources are seldom cited to support statements and/or format of citations are not recognizable as APA 6th Edition format. There are major errors in the formation of the references and citations. And/or there is a major reliance on highly questionable. The Student fails to provide an adequate synthesis of research collected for the paper. 10 out 20 points: References to scholarly sources are occasionally given; many statements seem unsubstantiated. Frequent errors in APA 6th Edition format, leaving the reader confused about the source of the information. There are significant errors of the formation in the references and citations. And/or there is a significant use of highly questionable sources. 15 out 20 points: Credible Scholarly sources are used effectively support claims and are, for the most part, clear and fairly represented. APA 6th Edition is used with only a few minor errors. There are minor errors in reference and/or citations. And/or there is some use of questionable sources. 20 points: Credible scholarly sources are used to give compelling evidence to support claims and are clearly and fairly represented. APA 6th Edition format is used accurately and consistently. The student uses above the maximum required references in the development of the assignment. Grammar (worth maximum of 20% of total points) Zero points: Student failed to submit the final paper. 5 points out of 20: The paper does not communicate ideas/points clearly due to inappropriate use of terminology and vague language; thoughts and sentences are disjointed or incomprehensible; organization lacking; and/or numerous grammatical, spelling/punctuation errors 10 points out 20: The paper is often unclear and difficult to follow due to some inappropriate terminology and/or vague language; ideas may be fragmented, wandering and/or repetitive; poor organization; and/or some grammatical, spelling, punctuation errors 15 points out of 20: The paper is mostly clear as a result of appropriate use of terminology and minimal vagueness; no tangents and no repetition; fairly good organization; almost perfect grammar, spelling, punctuation, and word usage. 20 points: The paper is clear, concise, and a pleasure to read as a result of appropriate and precise use of terminology; total coherence of thoughts and presentation and logical organization; and the essay is error free. Structure of the Paper (worth 10% of total points) Zero points: Student failed to submit the final paper. 3 points out of 10: Student needs to develop better formatting skills. The paper omits significant structural elements required for and APA 6th edition paper. Formatting of the paper has major flaws. The paper does not conform to APA 6th edition requirements whatsoever. 5 points out of 10: Appearance of final paper demonstrates the student’s limited ability to format the paper. There are significant errors in formatting and/or the total omission of major components of an APA 6th edition paper. They can include the omission of the cover page, abstract, and page numbers. Additionally the page has major formatting issues with spacing or paragraph formation. Font size might not conform to size requirements. The student also significantly writes too large or too short of and paper 7 points out of 10: Research paper presents an above-average use of formatting skills. The paper has slight errors within the paper. This can include small errors or omissions with the cover page, abstract, page number, and headers. There could be also slight formatting issues with the document spacing or the font Additionally the paper might slightly exceed or undershoot the specific number of required written pages for the assignment. 10 points: Student provides a high-caliber, formatted paper. This includes an APA 6th edition cover page, abstract, page number, headers and is double spaced in 12’ Times Roman Font. Additionally, the paper conforms to the specific number of required written pages and neither goes over or under the specified length of the paper. GET THIS PROJECT NOW BY CLICKING ON THIS LINK TO PLACE THE ORDER
CLICK ON THE LINK HERE: https://www.perfectacademic.com/orders/ordernow
Do You Have Any Other Essay/Assignment/Class Project/Homework Related to this? Click Here Now [CLICK ME] and Have It Done by Our PhD Qualified Writers!!