Management Information Systems, 14e, is designed for readers who want an in-depth view of how business firms nowadays use information technologies and systems to achieve operational excellence, develop new products and services, improve decision making, and achieve competitive advantage. Learners will find here the most up-to-date and comprehensive coverage of information systems used by business firms today.
Kenneth C. Laudon was an American professor of Information Systems at the Stern School of Business at New York University and a leading scholar on the social, political, and economic impacts of information technology. He earned his undergraduate degree from Stanford University and a Ph.D. from Columbia University. Laudon authored several influential books examining computing, democracy, and privacy, including Computers and Bureaucratic Reform, Communications Technology and Democratic Participation, and Dossier Society, in which he introduced the concept of data-driven identity. His widely cited article Markets and Privacy proposed that individuals hold property rights over their personal information, a foundational idea in modern privacy debates. He also co-authored major textbooks such as Management Information Systems: Managing the Digital Firm and E-commerce. Business. Technology. Society, used internationally. Laudon remained an influential voice in information systems scholarship until his death in 2019.
One of the most useless book that I have ever read. I read it while taking Management Information System course, one of the most useless course that I ever took in my life.
If you read and understand the book in ONE SITTING, what is the point of making it a ONE SEMESTER course! I rest my case here...