Summary:
For the Week 1 Case Study, you will review the videos and below case information about how UPS is driven by its information systems technology. Upon thorough review of the case, you will then answer the questions below regarding the case. It is not sufficient to state your opinions alone; you must be able to backup your responses by applying MIS concepts from the text with the case data that supports your findings.Expected response length is 3 sentences per question. Please restate the question you are answering in your case study.
VIDEO 1: UPS Package Flow Technology – DIAD (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aS97ypMwAgg;%20L=1:21)
VIDEO 2: UPS’s Next-Generation Mobile Devices are Here (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0B2-o6BKMM;%20L=3:22)
VIDEO 3: UPS Worldport Tour (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVLHEN1-jN8;%20L=4:58)
CASE: United Parcel Service’s global operations are driven by its information systems technology.
What UPS can do is largely a function of its information technology investments. Beginning as a local delivery service in 1907, UPS expanded on the West coast initially, reached New York in the 1930s, and went international in the 1970s. Today, UPS delivers over 18 million packages daily to 220 countries and territories, requiring the talents of 70,000 drivers who are wirelessly connected to UPS databases located in seventeen major data centers throughout the world. UPS maintains a fleet of 95,000 delivery vehicles, and 230 aircraft worldwide.
A multiyear, multi-billion-dollar investment in technology drove the growth of UPS over the last twenty-five years, beginning in 1990. This investment enabled the development of the DIAD, the Delivery Information Acquisition Device, now in its fifth generation. The DIAD has been a key element in UPS’s business technology platform because it connects the drivers to UPS central systems for tracking and delivering packages. UPS was the first firm to use mobile wireless technology for day-to-day operations, and it achieved this distinction twenty years before the iPhone and other smartphones. In 2015, it expects to have deployed over 100,000 new DIAD V units. The new DIAD V performs all the functions of the previous models, but adds additional functionality, better hardware and software, resulting in an ergonomically superior fit for drivers, as well as advances in productivity. For customers, the DIAD platform ensures their packages are tracked in real time from pickup to delivery.
DIAD V:The DIAD V takes full advantage of newer consumer technologies with this version’s touch-screen, camera, speedy processor, and 1 GB of memory, at half the size of its predecessor. DIAD V was developed with Honeywell International Inc. and it is the first in the industry to leverage Gobi radio technology that allows instant switching of cellular carriers if one carrier’s signal is lost, ensuring the device stays connected to the UPS network throughout the day. The new DIAD V also has a color camera that could be used to enhance proof-of-delivery information. It also has a color display and microprocessor with expanded memory to support driver training and future applications including navigation. For example, the DIAD V could be used to enable maps to help a driver avoid a traffic jam.
Here’s a look at the new features of the latest mobile device:
Roaming: The DIAD V monitors wireless performance and can switch automatically to the strongest carrier signal. The cell connection is vital to the system because it enables continuous reporting to the data center on the progress of packages through the system, and provides customers with instant online access to their package location. The new roaming software also means that UPS can choose to use the least expensive cell service for any given service area assuming signal strength is the same for each carrier.
Touchscreen: The new DIAD has a touchscreen that will likely boost driver productivity. UPS puts the devices through a gauntlet of tests like drops from six feet, heat, cold, and torrential rain that would kill most smartphones.
New Hardware: The DIAD V weighs in at about half the size and weight of the DIAD IV (about 1.5 lbs). It has 1 GB of flash memory, with a micro-SD slot that lets it expand to 32 GB (compared to the older DIAD 4 with 128 megabytes of storage). Its 1 GHz processor means it can run much more powerful apps than the previous version, apps that integrate via the wireless connection with server-side systems. That computer power will let UPS offer more personalized services, building on the My Choice service it launched last year, which lets customers create personalized delivery options, such as leaving packages with a particular neighbor if they’re not home.
Camera: A small camera of 3 megapixels has been added to the DIAD V although it has not yet been enabled. In the future UPS plans to use the camera to document proof of delivery and the extent of damage to packages. The images are uploaded over the company Wi-Fi networks when the trucks are parked for the night.
Navigation: The new device lets UPS upload the route information a driver needs to go from site to site throughout the day. Like the DIAD IV, the new devices have GPS, so UPS knows where the driver is at any time and provides real-time navigation, telling drivers the best way to get to their next destination.
UPS Worldport: The information provided by the mobile DIAD devices is fed into local and regional data centers, and from there to UPS Worldport, the largest automated package handling facility in the world. It is also one of the largest data centers in the United States. Located in Lexington, Kentucky, Worldport occupies 5 million square feet (about 90 football fields), and can sort 400,000 packages an hour. UPS started building Worldport in 2000, and has continuously expanded the facility to handle hundreds of thousands of packages generated everyday by customers ordering online. UPS is by far the largest package delivery service for e-commerce packages. Without UPS, it is doubtful that e-commerce could have grown so rapidly.
Outside of FedEx, UPS has no competitors of equal scale and IT sophistication. But this situation could change in the future as Amazon considers developing its own package delivery fleet of trucks, planes, and drones. Uber is considering creating a same-day delivery service using its on-demand services business model, and relying on private contractors who own their own vehicles to deliver packages. And the United States Post Office has extended its traditional package delivery service into a highly automated system with over 150,000 collection boxes, 200,000 vehicles, and 70,000 drivers. USPS already delivers one-third of all the packages delivered in the United States. UPS faces a number of challenges keeping up with mobile technology. The pace of technological change is arguably faster now than in the past. It took UPS seven years after deployment of DIAD IV to deploy the DIAD V. If UPS waits this long again, it’s possible another competitor will be faster to market with a superior technology platform.
Summary:Using smart people and smart technology, in 2016 UPS, the largest package delivery firm in the world, delivers over 18 million packages daily to 220 countries and territories, requiring the talents of 70,000 drivers in the United States who are wirelessly connected to UPS main databases. Standing behind the UPS delivery people we are all familiar with in their brown trucks is an army of 300,000 people who operate the systems that deliver the packages to their destinations. This case describes the information systems and technologies used to manage the flow of 18 million UPS packages. At the customer-facing, front end of the process is the UPS DIAD technology platform which drivers use when interacting with customers, both when picking up and dropping off packages. Behind the scenes supporting the drivers is the UPS Worldport Airhub in Louisville, Kentucky, that processes the data generated by DIAD and coordinates the flow of physical packages to their destinations. Although commonly thought of as a package delivery company, UPS is also an information technology company, and an example of a digital firm.
Answer the following questions:
- How has UPS used information systems to transform its business?
- What competitive advantages has UPS realized by using technology?
- Do you think UPS invested in technology as a means of survival in the industry? Why or why not?
- List the various ways that DIAD improves customer service.
- In what ways has information technology improved the business processes of UPS?
Through writing this case study you will be required to demonstrate a knowledge of how to integrate MIS concepts with the case data, how to conduct research, and how to properly cite sources using APA formatting guidelines. You will be responsible for using a minimum of 2 scholarly/peer reviewed sources.
Be as thorough as possible when writing your responses, and remember, this is an academic assignment, so no “text-talk,” no conversational tone, and ABOVE ALL OTHER THINGS… don’t plagiarize!! Lastly, spell-check and proofread your work! Failure to follow these steps will negatively impact your grade.
General APA Formatting Guidelines:
The case study should have an APA title page and an APA reference page. An APA abstract page is NOT required!
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