CHAPTER FOUR
Information System
Development
Outline
IS Development Life Cycle(SDLC)
Problem Definition
Feasibility Study
System Analysis
System Design
System Development
System implementation
Maintenance and review
1
Information System Lifecycle
Is a logical process for planning, creating, testing,
and deploying an information system
Several phases – the progress of system analysis and design
Step-by-step activities for each phase
Individual & group roles
Deliverables
Tools and techniques
Information System Lifecycle Chapter IV
Problem
Feasibility System “As Is”
Definition
Study Analysis
Identification of Utility and acceptability Study the existing system,
Problems & (Economic, Technical, determine user requirement,
Opportunities Behavioral, Operational…) propose solution
“To Be”
System System
System
Development Implementation
Design
space, personnel, HW, Install
Design new/alternative system – Develop Programs, test & test new system, train &
components, I/O relationships programs, documentation migrate to new system
data, program, interfaces,
post-implementation review, identify Maintenance &
errors & enhancements, fix them, Review
monitor system performance 4
2
Information System Lifecycle
3 levels in which IS evolves
Conceptual Systems
Idea to have a particular system for the organization
Logical System
Idea changed into design (logical model) – flow of data,
logic of processing & I/O relationship
Physical System
The logical design/model is changed into programs, data
files, documentation (to be tested & implemented)
Participants in System Development
System Stakeholders (Beneficiaries – directly or indirectly)
Users (interact with the system)
Managers (initiate and maintain change)
Systems development specialists
Project leader
Systems analyst
System Designer
Software engineer or computer programmer
System Administrators
3
Problem Definition
Identify problems and/or opportunities
What Problems to solve? (bottlenecks, failures, inefficiencies, etc.)
What Opportunities to provide? (expanding performance, improving
customer service, etc.)
E.g. replace manual with automated system – speed, better
communication, reduce cost, etc.
Information System Lifecycle
Define project boundaries
Part of a system to be changed, parts outside its control
Develop terms of reference (TOR) & define resource to
be availed
Final output:
Terms of Reference (goals, bounds & resource requirements)
4
Feasibility Study
The practical utility & acceptability of the proposed
system
Can it be done?
Can we afford it?
Will the proposed new system fit in with existing procedures?
Will it benefit the intended users?
Whether there is a preferred alternative?
Economic, Technical, Behavioral, Operational,
Organizational, Legal
Feasibility
Key feasibility considerations
Economic – cost/benefit analysis
Costs projection – development, hardware, facilities
operational, manpower, maintenance
Tangible & intangible benefits projections
Tangible – speed of processing/efficiency, reduced cost/error,
increase in sales, reduced inventory …
Intangible – access to information timely, better Decision
Making, transparency & accountability, improved customer
response; better staff morale, Customer goodwill, etc.
10
5
Feasibility
Technical – HW & SW (procuring/installing)
Analyzes and determines whether the solution can be supported
by existing technology or not
Technological requirements – storage, processing,
communication, output
Availability
Within budget
Matching present & future needs
Sophistication
The skill needed (hiring extra staff, consultant firm)
Behavioral – user reaction (employee rejection, management resistance);
Evaluates and estimates the user attitude or behavior towards the
development of new system.
11
Feasibility
Operational
Determines whether the system is operating effectively once it is
developed and implemented
Required speed, volume, usability and reliability
To what extent the system becomes operational when
implemented?
Organizational = work patterns, users skills, strategic plan
Legal: whether laws or regulations may prevent or limit
Copyright, data capture, data transfer
Final Output:
•Feasibility report - GO / NOT GO decision must be made
12
6
System Analysis
Study of the existing system: Deals with “the way things
are”/ “as is”
How is the current system working?
What information needs?
information sources, storage pattern and requirements
Data type & information flow
inputs and outputs
procedures
Problems with present working condition
What the new system should do? User requirement
13
System Analysis
Tools for extracting data for system analysis:
Review of documents (Objectives, Organizational structure, JD,
reports, procedures, system documentation)
Observation
Conducting interview – with top managment and users
Questionnaire
14
7
System Analysis
Results of System Analysis Detailed documentation of:
How the existing system works
Requirements for the new system
System analysis phase is also called logical design
General specification for how the IS can meet end user requirements
An input for the physical design (program development)
System Analyst is responsible
Analyzing the existing system
Liaison between user & IT professionals (programmers)
15
System Design
Deals with “the way things should be”/ “to be”
Input: Specifications from system analysis
Design processes
Input definition – defining input formats
Output definition – reports, screen & file layout
Data dictionary – details of data (name, description, source, usage,
maintenance, storage, organization)
Program specifications – Documenting logic of processing in each program
System Specifications – description of relationship between various modules
& b/n programs
16
8
System Design
Final output –design specification report
Description of proposed system including:
Input/output
Form design
Report layouts
Processing
System flow charts
Storage & Backup
Data file designs
17
System Development
Actual Development of the SW
The programmer converts the design specifications into computer
instructions (programs)
Programs:
Coordinate the data movements and
Control the entire process in a system
Programming language (C++, Java, Python, Ruby, C#, etc.)
18
9
System Development
Steps
Checking system specifications
System Modules
Breaking system modules into smaller
programs
programs must be modular in
nature - fast development,
maintenance and future change
Developing program code
Defining interfaces b/n various
programs
Ensuring data availability for testing
19
System Development
Testing of programs with test data –
at different level
Unit Testing- Individual program
Integration Testing: Individual program
as part of the system modules
System Testing: The entire system
User Acceptance Testing: Testing the
finished software with respect to the
user perception
Debugging (error corrections)
20
10
System Development
System/Technical Documentation
Preparing documentation for each program
Requirement documentation
Design and architecture
Source code
Testing
Installation and maintenance guide
User Documentation
Create manual for users and operators
21
System Implementation
Converting from old to new system
Major activities
Planning for implementation
Preparing schedule for implementation
Procurement of HW
Installation of SW
Operation & testing of HW & SW
Recruitment of operating personnel
Site and data preparation
22
11
System Implementation
Motivation and training of selected personnel and users
Training – how to use the system, how to enter data, how to
process and generate reports
Ease into system, make them comfortable, and gain their
support
Conversion of data files from old system to the new
system
23
System Implementation
Final switch – approaches
Direct/plunge/crash approach
Entire new system completely replaces entire old system, in one step
Parallel approach
Both systems are operated side by side until the new system proves itself
Pilot approach
New system launched for only one group within the business -- once new
system is operating smoothly, implementation goes company-wide
Phased/incremental approach
Individual parts of new system are gradually implemented over time, using
either crash or parallel for each piece.
24
12
Post-implementation maintenance & review
Types of Changes:
Physical repair of the system
Correction of new bugs/errors found (corrective)
System adjustments to environmental changes (adaptive)
Adjustments for users’ changing needs (adaptive)
Changes to user better techniques when they become available (perfective)
Revision of formats – report/data input
Evaluation Methods
Systems audit - performance compared to original specifications
Periodic evaluation - “checkups” from time to time, modifications if
necessary
25
Chapter IV
SDLC Life Cycle-summary
Problem TOR & Resource to be Allocated
Definition
Approved Feasibility Abort Project
Feasibility Study
Study Go to next phase
Existing Sys & Req Go to Previous phase
System Specifications
Analysis
System
Design Specifications
Design
Coded and
System Tested System
Development
Begin building
new system System System conversion
Implementation
Users trained
System
Maintenance Operational System
Documentation completed
26
13
Chapter IV
SDLC Life Cycle-summary
Increasing cost of errors
Cost incurred to fix an error increases as we move
from earlier to advanced stage
Late detection – revision of all steps back
27
Thank you !!!!
28
14