Task 1: You are hired as an IT professional/consultant to assess current state and prepare a report on how IT systems and infrastructure can support continued growth and future e-commerce activities. Analyze
Task 1: You are hired as an IT professional/consultant to assess current state and prepare a report on how IT systems and infrastructure can support continued growth and future e-commerce activities. Analyze TechHouse IT needs aUnit 1: Information Technology Systems (Axborot Texnologiyalari Tizimlari)
- Learning aim (for NQF): Explore how IT infrastructure can meet the needs of organizations and their stakeholders.
- Assignment title: IT infrastructure and systems assessment report for TechHouse.
- Context: TechHouse is a growing retail company selling consumer electronics (fridges, washing machines, TVs, air conditioners, small kitchen appliances). Demand is rising; company currently operates five physical stores and plans to launch a fully integrated e-commerce platform.
- Owner: Michael Turner. As business expands, managing sales, inventory, staff, suppliers, and customers becomes more complex. Many processes are semi-manual and not fully integrated, causing inefficiency, data duplication, and delays in decision-making.
- IT goals for TechHouse: improve overall business efficiency, centralize operations across five stores, implement online sales and digital services, improve in-store and online services, provide instant and convenient access to business data.
- Task 1: You are hired as an IT professional/consultant to assess current state and prepare a report on how IT systems and infrastructure can support continued growth and future e-commerce activities.
- Analyze TechHouse IT needs and explain how suitable IT systems can be used to support stores and the e-commerce platform, employees, and customers.
- IT requirements (TechHouse):
- IT systems enabling all staff to perform duties efficiently.
- Centralized data storage for employees, suppliers, products, customers, and sales operations.
- E-commerce system enabling: product viewing/selection, real-time stock checks, ordering and secure payments, delivery or in-store pickup options.
- POS systems across all stores with automatic stock updates.
- Inventory management tools: monitor stock on hand, supplier management, low-stock alerts.
- Communication systems enabling effective information sharing between stores, head office, warehouses, and customer service.
- Online system for leadership to view reports, sales data, and stock securely.
- Reliable internet connectivity for all stores, secure networks for staff, and optional free customer Wi-Fi.
- Security measures for business and customer data: access control, data encryption, regular backups.
- Evidence checklist: Written IT report, identified solutions with examples, at least one real solution per requirement (diagrams, tables, screenshots/mockups, e-commerce screenshots).
- Criteria references: A.D1, A.M1, A.P1, A.P2, A.P3 (various analyses on infrastructure, software, hardware, networks).
- Recommended sources: Turban et al., Laudon & Laudon, O’Brien & Marakas, etc.
- Suggested report structure (with content prompts)
- Title page
- TechHouse IT Infrastructure & Systems Assessment
- Date, author, course/unit details
- Executive summary
- Key findings: current state, gaps, recommended IT architecture, quick wins.
- Business context and stakeholder needs
- Summarize TechHouse business objectives and stakeholder groups (owners, store managers, staff, customers, suppliers, IT team).
- Current state assessment
- Processes: sales, inventory, supplier management, customer data handling (brief diagram).
- Technology: current tools (if any), manual processes, data silos, security posture.
- Gaps: lack of central data store, no integrated e-commerce, inconsistent stock data, limited reporting.
- Target architecture (high-level)
- Proposed IT stack overview: core ERP/ERP-lite, CRM, e-commerce platform, POS, inventory management, integration layer, data warehouse/mart, reporting.
- Data model overview: key entities (Employees, Suppliers, Products, Customers, Orders, Shipments, Inventory).
- Security and compliance considerations.
- IT solution options (each requirement mapped to a solution)
- Centralized data store: cloud-based database/ERP or data lake.
- E-commerce system: features list; example platforms ( Shopify Plus, Magento, etc. ) with rationale.
- Real-time stock checks: real-time inventory sync across POS, e-commerce, and warehouses.
- Ordering and payments: PCI-DSS compliant gateway, fraud prevention.
- Delivery vs in-store pickup: order orchestration, logistics integration.
- POS systems and stock auto-update: integrated POS with inventory module.
- Inventory management: cycle counting, supplier performance, low-stock alerts.
- Communication tools: unified messaging/CRM, inter-store communication.
- Management reporting: secure online dashboards, role-based access.
- Networking: stores with reliable broadband, secure Wi‑Fi for staff, optional guest Wi‑Fi for customers.
- Security: access controls, encryption at rest/in transit, backups, disaster recovery.
- Detailed IT requirements mapping (A.M1, A.P1–P3)
- For each requirement, discuss how software, hardware, and networks meet stakeholder needs.
- Proposed architecture diagrams
- Diagram 1: High-level system diagram (core systems, data flows).
- Diagram 2: Data model/entities diagram.
- Diagram 3: Network topology (store sites, head office, data center/cloud).
- Hardware and network considerations (P2)
- Store hardware (POS devices, barcode scanners, printers), servers/cloud backend, networking gear, redundancy.
- Communication and network types (P3)
- WAN, VPN, MPLS considerations (if applicable), secure remote access for HQ and field staff.
- Implementation plan (phased)
- Phase 1: foundation (centralized data store, basic POS integration, e-commerce skeleton).
- Phase 2: inventory, supplier and order management, reporting.
- Phase 3: full e-commerce + omnichannel features, security hardening, backups.
- Change management and training.
- Risk assessment and mitigations
- Data migration risks, downtime planning, vendor risk, security threats.
- Evidence appendix
- Include diagrams, tables, mock-ups or screenshots, e-commerce screens, sample reports.
- References
- List of books provided.
- Example diagrams to include (you can create these in your assignment)
- Diagram: High-level IT architecture
- Boxes: POS, E-commerce, ERP/Inventory, CRM, Data Warehouse, Reporting, Networking, Security.
- Arrows showing data flows: orders, inventory updates, customer data, payments.
- Diagram: Data model
- Entities: Employee, Supplier, Product, Customer, Order, Inventory, Shipment.
- Key attributes and relationships.
- Diagram: Store network topology
- Branch stores connected to HQ via secure VPN; cloud services as backbone; guest Wi-Fi for customers; POS devices at stores.
- Example table snippet (simple starter)
- Table: IT Requirements vs Proposed Solutions
- Row: Centralized data storage
- Proposed: Cloud-based ERP/Data Platform (e.g., NetSuite, SAP Business One, or an open-source alternative) depending on budget.
- Row: E-commerce capabilities
- Proposed: Integrated storefront with product catalog, real-time stock, secure payments; platform choice with rationale.
- Row: POS integration
- Proposed: Modern POS with real-time stock sync and offline mode.
- Row: Inventory management
- Proposed: Inventory module with supplier management and low-stock alerts.
- Row: Centralized data storage
- Real-world examples you could include as references
- If you want to illustrate real solutions, you can mention vendors generally and not commit to a single product unless you’ve chosen one. For example:
- Cloud ERP/Inventory: NetSuite, SAP Business One, Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central.
- E-commerce: Shopify Plus, Magento Commerce, WooCommerce (with enterprise features).
- POS: Lightspeed, Square for Retail, Vend.
- CRM/Analytics: Salesforce, Zoho CRM, Power BI for dashboards.
- Security/backups: Azure/AWS backup services, encryption at rest (AES-256), MFA, IAM.
- How I can help next
- I can generate:
- A complete draft report tailored to TechHouse, with structured sections, sample diagrams (text-based descriptions you can convert to visuals), and example content aligned to the criteria A.D1, A.M1, A.P1–P3.
- Mock-up screenshots or UI sketches for the e-commerce flow and admin dashboards.
- A scoring rubric mapping each criterion to the report section so you can ensure all requirements are covered.
- A checklist for evidence submission referencing the required components.
If you’d like, tell me:
- Target language for translation (to ensure the final deliverable matches your needs). If you want, I can translate this brief into another language or produce an English-language version suitable for submission.
- Which section you want me to draft first (e.g., executive summary, architecture diagram descriptions, or the implementation plan).
- Any preferred e-commerce platform or technology stack you want me to base examples on.