Information Systems for Managers is a text for managerial/MBA students intended to actively engage them in discussions and activities around information systems and information technology. Piccoli has interwoven many real-world examples into the text that show students how IS will effect their futures in management positions. Each chapter starts off with a mini-case to get the student's attention, build excitement, and foster interactive discussions. A plethora of unique, full-length cases are also composed within the text to hold student's attention and show them how IS and IT are of great interest to them as managers.
Gabriele Piccoli is Professor at the Stephenson Department of Entrepreneurship & Information Systems at Louisiana State University (LSU). Piccoli is the Edward G. Schlieder Chair of Information Sciences and a member of the Cultural Computing group at the Center for Computation and Technology. He has held tenured academic positions at Cornell University (USA), the Grenoble Ecole de Management (France) and the University of Sassari and Pavia (Italy). Gabe's academic, teaching and consulting interest has traditionally been in the area of Strategic Information Systems and Customer Service Systems.
This book is interesting . The way the writer writes , and approach subjects are very clever and makes it easy to understand . The book is full of cases , mini and full ones . I highly recommend it for Managers with no/some IT background as well as IT people to understand some important managerial aspects .
كتاب جداً رائع ، مكتوب بلغة سهلة وبسيطة . أثناء تصفحك للكتاب ، ستجد أنه مدعّم بأمثلة وتجارب في بداية كل فصل منه . أنصح بهذا الكتاب ، للمدراء أصحاب الخلفية التقنية البسيطة / بدون خلفية تقنية ، وكذلك متخصصي تقنية المعلومات الذين ينون الانتقال للجانب الإداري لتقنية المعلومات .
Parts of it is are good, but it is so densely and confusingly written that I had trouble answering the "review" questions at the bottom. The author made a lot of assumptions about what you "should" already know or understand and often expected you to extrapolate from the information given - something an introductory textbook should not be doing.