Skip to content | Change text size

M O N A T A R

InfoTech Unit Avatar

BUS3600 Business case development

Chief Examiner

This field records the Chief Examiner for unit approval purposes. It does not publish, and can only be edited by Faculty Office staff

To update the published Chief Examiner, you will need to update the Faculty Information/Contact Person field below.

NB: This view restricted to entries modified on or after 19990401000000

Unit Code, Name, Abbreviation

BUS3600 Business case development [Business Case (01 Mar 2007, 4:46pm)]

Reasons for Introduction

Obsolete Reasons for Introduction

Change of recommended reading to modify prescribed texts for Semester 2 2005.

Reasons for Introduction (27 Mar 2006, 2:52pm)

The aim of The School of Business Systems is to provide teaching and research to develop IT related business solutions for a wide range of strategic and operational decision-making problems that occur in every area of business activity. In particular, many businesses have undertaken business process re-engineering (BPR) projects under the premise of re-organising or changing their business operations to improve profits, maintain or gain competitive advantage. This aspect of business systems was introduced in this unit following consultations with and a request from the school's industry partners. At present, school units cover quantitative decision-making and computing subjects addressing specific industry areas such as manufacturing, finance, quality, tourism, service and health care. This unit addresses the broader business aspects of industry as a whole whilst focusing on IT, BPR, change management, organisational and ethical issues of the business improvement process.

Reasons for Change (01 Mar 2007, 4:47pm)

Due to significant changes to course demand over the last five years the Faculty has restructured all coursework courses. During this restructure the Faculty has been mindful of changes in the profession and has consulted with relevant professional associations and senior IT executives. The new programs have been accredited by the Australian Computer Society. A key consideration in deciding which units are being taught in 2007 and beyond has been maintaining the educational objectives of each program. A consequence of the downsizing of the Faculty has been the reduction of electives in a number of programs. For 2007, the Dean has approved a once off co- teaching of some undergraduate and graduate units. This decision has been made to allow elective choice in the undergraduate degrees that are being taught out. While the units will have common lectures, the different student groups will have different tutorials and assessment

Role of Unit (27 Mar 2006, 3:00pm)

This unit focuses on the broader aspects of business improvement as a whole including the analysis and modelling of the current system, benchmarking to identify improved processes and industry best practice, developing impoved processes, and then presenting a business case including change management, orally and in writing, to obtain approval to change the business processes.

Objectives

Statement of Objectives (27 Mar 2006, 3:05pm)

At completion of this unit, students will have obtained core knowledge in the area of business processes, analysis and modelling, acquired skills for analysing and solving business problems, i.e. recognize where problems are amenable to solution, which problem solving and decision-making techniques are the most appropriate ones to use for business case development, developed an attitude of exploration engendered by the opportunity to analyse business improvement issues, acquired basic skills in problem solving in a small team environment and public presentation of business cases.

Unit Content

Recommended Reading (27 Mar 2006, 2:18pm)

Prescribed Text: Business Case Development (2002) published by Pearson Education Australia, ISBN 1 74009 406 9, Yen Ping Cheung and Ian Martin.

Prescribed Text: Reengineering the Corporation (2001) published by Nicholas Brealey, ISBN 1 85788 097 8, Michael Hammer and James Champy.

Teaching Methods

Strategies of Teaching (27 Mar 2006, 2:20pm)

Assessment breakdown is as follows: Assignments 40%, One 2 hour examination 60%. Students must pass the examination in order to pass the unit.

Teaching Methods Relationship to Objectives (27 Mar 2006, 2:25pm)

Students do assignments to ensure that they have the necessary skills to undertake the group project and that they have attained a sufficient understanding of basic concepts of business case development. The project undertaken in small groups tests the students' ability to conduct a comprehensive analysis of a particular real business problem, including fact-finding, business modelling, benchmarking, analysis, decision-making, recommendation and implementation stages. The exam tests students' knowledge and application of the concepts of Business Case Development.

Assessment

Strategies of Assessment (27 Mar 2006, 2:25pm)

Assignments: 40% Examination :(2 hours): 60%. Students must pass the examination in order to pass the unit

Workloads

Resource Requirements

Staff Requirements (27 Mar 2006, 2:19pm)

1 full time lecturer, tutors as determined by student numbers, unit co-ordinator: Ian Martin

Software Requirements (27 Mar 2006, 2:27pm)

Nil

Teaching Responsibility (Callista Entry) (27 Mar 2006, 2:38pm)

100% School of Business Systems (Clayton). 100% School of Business amd Information Technology (Malaysia). 100% School of ????? (South Africa).

Other Resource Requirements (27 Mar 2006, 2:36pm)

Nil

Prerequisites

Research Interest (27 Mar 2006, 2:35pm)

Students are required to research industries nominated in their business case scenarios, benchmark other companies, identify industry leadersand best practice to develop business improvement cases.

Enrolment (01 Mar 2007, 4:51pm)

In 2006 Clayton 172, Malaysia 17, South Africa 22

Faculty Information

Proposer

Y P Cheung

Approvals

School:
Faculty Education Committee:
Faculty Board: 08 May 2003 (Ralph Gillon)
ADT:
Faculty Manager:
Dean's Advisory Council:
Other:

Version History

13 Sep 2002 Caitlin Slattery Add South Africa offering
26 Feb 2003 Caitlin Slattery Textbook update (added prescribed and recommended reading).
27 Feb 2003 John Betts Updated prescribed text approved School of Business Systems meeting 24/2/2003
20 May 2003 Caitlin Slattery Remove lab requirement from "resource requirements"
17 Oct 2005 David Sole Added Software requrirements template
21 Oct 2005 David Sole Updated requirements template to new format
27 Mar 2006 Ian Martin modified UnitContent/RecommendedReading; modified ResourceReqs/StaffReqs; modified Teaching/Strategies; modified Teaching/Objectives; modified Assessment/Strategies; modified ResourceReqs/SoftwareReqs; modified ResourceReqs/SoftwareReqs; modified Enrolment; modified Research; modified ResourceReqs/OtherResources; modified ResourceReqs/SchoolReqs; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RObsolete; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RIntro; modified Abbreviation; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RObsolete; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RIntro; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RRole; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RRole; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RObsolete; modified UnitObjectives/ObjText; modified UnitObjectives/ObjText; modified UnitObjectives/ObjText
01 Mar 2007 Ian Martin modified Abbreviation; modified ReasonsForIntroduction/RChange; modified Enrolment; modified Enrolment

This version: