Value Through Series
Value through Information
“For managers to produce information required for their
work, they have to address two broad questions:
1. What information do I
owe to the people with whom I work, and on whom I depend? In what form? And in
what time frame?
2. What information do I need myself? From whom? In what
form? And in what time frame?
- Competing with Information: A Manger’s Guide
to Creating Business Value with Information Content, Edited by Donald A.
Marchand
Another way to improve the quality of information is to look at
your people. Information is how people communicate their knowledge so things get
accomplished. Since information relies on people, it only stands to reason that
the quality of information has a lot to do with the quality of people; i.e. the
skills, expertise, training, experience as well as their communication skills.
This can greatly impact the quality of information – improve your people if you
want to improve your information.
The quality of information also
follows certain characteristics. These characteristics can lend serious value to
information. Here are a few examples:
• Up to Date – Information that is
current usually has more value than old, outdated information.
• Accuracy –
Some sources of information tend to have higher accuracy than others.
•
Impact on Decision Making – Information that is useful to decision making will
lend value to the organization.
One common problem in creating value
through information is putting the information in front of the decision maker.
This requires that people have access to information. Too often, organizations
have fragmented silos of information, contributing to inconsistency in
decision-making. Pulling all of these stovepipes of information together into
one common repository can yield numerous benefits, such as:
• Faster
response time by decision makers
• Better creditability with stakeholders
(employees, customers, suppliers, etc.)
• Improved accuracy through
verification
• More value added through the application of analytical tools
Obviously, technology plays a big role in making this happen –
everything from better access to filtering of the information overload. Perhaps
the single biggest technology behind the management of information is something
called the Data Warehouse. The Data Warehouse pulls together all of the
desperate databases, providing not only wider access, but also increased
analytical capability through the understanding of relationships between all of
this data. So if you are serious about creating value through information,
you’ll probably have to consider some form of a data warehouse.
“Capitalizing on the information a company owns about its customers,
suppliers, and partners is now the value proposition for sustainable long-term
growth. Better information, then, transforms business. Better information also
transforms the terms of collaboration between businesses.”
- The Value
Factor by Mark Hurd and Lars Nyberg
Finally, the roadmap to value
through information is creating systems and processes for learning. Author Peter
Senge popularized this concept in his book The Fifth Discipline – namely that we
all need to become systems thinkers, having the ability to fit the pieces
together. This entire process is commonly referred to as the Learning
Organization. And this is a big factor behind creating value through
information! And when coupled with the right people and the right technology
(such as a data warehouse), information can add a lot of value for anyone
touched by the information.
“The knowledge economy stands on three
pillars. Knowledge has become what we buy, sell, and do. It is the most
important factor of production. The second pillar is a mate, a corollary to the
first: Knowledge assets – that is, intellectual capital – have become more
important to companies than financial and physical assets. The third pillar is
this: To prosper in this new economy and exploit these newly vital assets, we
need new vocabularies, new management techniques, new technologies, and new
strategies. On these three pillars rest all the new economy’s laws and its
profits.”
- The Wealth of Knowledge by Thomas A. Stewart