Prof S Lubbe (HOD Buss Management) Mr F Nel (Lecturer MIS)
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Transcript of Prof S Lubbe (HOD Buss Management) Mr F Nel (Lecturer MIS)
Careers in MIS
Prof S Lubbe
(HOD Buss Management)
Mr F Nel
(Lecturer MIS)
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Our guest!
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John Browning:
“Information Technology is no longer a business resource; it has become the
business environment”
The Economist, 1990
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What we want to Achieve?
What is your passion? Curriculum Where do MIS fit in? Careers CV’s
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Revision:
Who was Monday 10 years old? What smartphone app is developed in CT? And laptop? Interview:
Explain to us MIS?
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Where do you see yourself in 3 years……. 5 years?
Dragging your hind-legs Inspired by ‘gangsters’ story PE The German Shepard Don’t get stuck in mediocrity or ..poverty…
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Curriculum
1st Year: B.Comm:
Economics, Business Management, Accounting MIS:
Based on the IS 2002 Model Curriculum and Guidelines for undergraduate degree programs in information systems (ISWorld, 2007). These standards are well summarized in an article by Prof S Wang of the University of Massachusetts: An Examination of the Introductory MIS Course, Journal of Information Technology Education Volume 6, 2007
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YEAR 2
Semester 1 Semester 2
Maths & Stats: SSTT121 Stats: SSTT122
Commercial Law : CLAW101 Commercial Law: CLAW102
Introductory Computing: SCPS111 Database : SCPS232
Computer Comm & NW: SCPS231 VB: SCPS242
YEAR 3
Semester 1 Semester 2
Accounting IS: CMIS301OO Analysis & Design1.1;CMIS311Computer Architecture: SCPS221Database: SCPS331
OO Analysis & Design1.2;CMIS302Managerial Acc: CMIS312/CFMC..Client Server Comp: SCPS332Project; SCPS322
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Where does MIS fit in?
What is MIS?
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Careers: Does MIS stand the test of providing jobs?
Programmer/Analyst/System Developer Business/System Analyst Business Consultant Database Administrator Network Administrator Web Master/Developer Chief Information/technology Officer Procurement/Management Support Forensics??
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Your CV:
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Globalization: Globalization 1.0: Columbus discovered the
world is round and the world shrank from large to MEDIUM
Globalization 2.0: around 1800, with the industrial revolution, the world went from medium to SMALL, and international companies dominated
Globalization 3.0: Early 2000, distance is removed from the business equation, and the world went from small to TINY.
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Globalization 3.0
In this era, people of all colors from the four corners of the world dominate business.
Farmers in remote villages in Nepal carry an iPhone to access the world’s knowledge at, say, Wikipedia or the stock market closing prices at Bloomberg. Boeing 777: Using the Internet to build a world
class airplane
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The World is Flat: T Friedman
Columbus proved in 1492 that the world is round Sailors maneuvered the seas discovering lands,
people, languages as nations began trading goods around the world
The world has become flat due to technological advances connecting people in China, India and the US as if we were all next door neighbors.
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Examples:
Physicians in India are reading X-rays for US hospitals
JetBlue Airways ticket agents take plane reservations for the company from the comfort of their Utah homes
Technology has eliminated some of the economic and cultural advantages developed countries enjoy, making the world a level playing field for all participants.
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“You are the architect of your own future”