case study

 Using the Case study 1-A or Case study 1-B, write a 2-page paper addressing all of  the questions in either Case you choose. Provide a minimum of one scholarly reference in your paper (cited and referenced in APA format). 

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CASE STUDY 1

UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS AT BOEING

The Boeing Company (http://www.boeing.com/), headquartered in Chicago,

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Illinois, is the world’s largest manufacturer of military aircraft and

commercial jetliners. Boeing has more than 159,000 employees working in

70 different countries who require effective communication to develop and

build some of the world’s most complex products using components from

more than 22,000 global suppliers.

The company’s workforce is one of the most highly educated in the

world. Most employees hold a college degree and many hold advanced

degrees. Collectively Boeing employees have very broad and deep

knowledge that can be harnessed to solve problems and design next

generation products.

Like many major corporations, Boeing has experienced an uptick in the

number of employees who work remotely or travel the majority of each work

week. Boeing’s engineers number in the thousands and are purposely

scattered worldwide to support the company’s global operations.

Boeing organizes its employees into work and project teams. Given the

company’s size and geographic footprint, many of Boeing work’s teams

include globally dispersed members. Engineers on the same team may be

separated by multiple time zones and thousands of miles. Time zone

differences and distance frequently present teams with communication

challenges when they are faced with time sensitive issues that must be

resolved quickly.

http://www.boeing.com/

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Additional communication issues are associated with the sheer breadth

and depth of Boeing’s knowledge base. When faced with questions about a

particular part included in one of Boeing’s new airliners, an engineer can be

challenged to identify the right person in the company to contact for

answers.

  • Collaboration Technologies
  • Boeing knows that continual innovation is important to its long term success.

    It also recognizes that effective communication among its employees,

    customers, and suppliers is an important enabler of continual innovation.

    Boeing has traditionally relied on a variety of systems to facilitate

    collaboration among its employees and business partners. As illustrated in

    Figure C1-1a, Web conferencing, audio conferencing, desktop sharing, and

    mobile voice and data services have been used by Boeing employees to

    facilitate communication among geographically dispersed team members.

    Historically, these capabilities have been provided by different third-party

    providers who were selected on the basis of their ability to provide high-

    quality communication services at competitive rates.

    By the mid-2000s, Boeing had begun its migration toward unified

    messaging and unified communications. At that time, instant messaging (IM)

    was one of the more popular messaging services used Boeing employees. At

    Boeing, IM has traditionally been supplemented by Web and audio

    conferencing services as well as by desktop sharing services. The capabilities

    provided by these services are especially important when answers to

    complex questions are needed. During the mid-2000s, more than 100,000

    employees used conferencing services each year. As you might expect,

    conferencing services represented a significant percentage of Boeing’s

    annual communication expenses.

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    As collaboration technologies, the desktop sharing and conferencing

    systems worked well alone, but it was not easy to get them to use them

    simultaneously for a virtual team meeting. To use them in combination

    required scheduling conference rooms equipped with at least one phone lines

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    and data drop. It also required reserving conferencing time with one or both

    service providers, getting all locations logged in to each service, and

    performing some quick set up tasks and tests at the beginning of each

    session. Hence, while it was possible to use multiple collaboration capabilities

    at the same time, this was not easily or transparently done. Advanced

    planning was needed at all locations to have satisfactory interactive

    conferencing and desktop sharing sessions.

    Over time, it became increasingly more apparent to Boeing that a

    superior collaboration platform was needed. While the company’s

    subscriptions to third-party services did support collaboration among

    geographically dispersed team members, Boeing began to feel that it needed

    something that was both easier and more robust to achieve the levels of

    collaboration, innovation and responsiveness that it aspired to have.

  • Converged Network Project
  • In 2008, Boeing signed a $400 million contract with AT&T to consolidate its

    existing voice and data networks into an IP-network. Boeing began using

    AT&T’s WAN services, audio conferencing services, and wireless voice and

    data services. Moving the bulk of its communication facilities to a common

    IP-based network infrastructure enabled Boeing to roll out unified messaging

    services to more of its employees. The converged network project also set

    the stage for its subsequent move to unified communications.

    To better serve its mobile workers, one of the first enterprise-wide

    applications that Boeing deployed on its converged IP network was

    Mircosoft’s Office Communication Server. This was implemented to provide

    desktop sharing, VoIP, audio conferencing, instant messaging, and presence

    capabilities to all of its workers worldwide. This quickly became a popular

    supplement or alternative to the company’s traditional collaboration services.

    Boeing subsequently made the decision to upgrade to Mircosoft’s Lync

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    Server to enable its employees to leverage enhanced presence, ad hoc

    collaboration, desktop sharing, and online meeting

    capabilities.

    Boeing’s collaboration capabilities before and after the creation of the

    converged IP network are illustrated in Figure C1.1. It is important to note

    that Boeing continues to subscribe to many of the collaboration services that

    it used prior to implementing its unified communications solutions. Hence,

    UC is best observed to be a supplement not a replacement to the

    collaboration systems that were already in place.

    One of the key changes associated with Boeing UC system has been the

    ability of employees to use the same softphone headset to support both

    office and mobile phone calls. Phone capabilities follow the mobile worker

    who can specify which device to route calls to on the fly. Their Boeing phone

    number is always the same whether they are in their office, at home, on the

    road, or working on the other side of the world. Detailed presence

    information about team members is provided via Lync’s location and activity

    feed capabilities. Supply chain partners are also able see the presence

    information of their key contacts at Boeing; this facilitates their interactions

    with engineering and maintenance teams at Boeing.

  • UC Benefits
  • Boeing’s converged IP network and unified communications capabilities

    enable employees share information and knowledge more quickly and

    effectively, regardless of their location. Boeing’s geographically dispersed

    engineers use these systems to share expertise with one another just as

    they could if they were in the same place at the same time. The ability to

    support unified communications capabilities over the converged IP network

    facilitates knowledge sharing and has become an important facet of Boeing’s

    collaboration and knowledge management strategies.

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    The company’s unified communications system enables employees at

    remote locations to have the same capabilities that have in their home

    offices. Virtual teams benefit from being able to adjust their interactions to

    the communication mode that makes the most sense. For example, they are

    able to transition from instant messaging to a voice communication and/or

    desktop sharing session depending on what the situation requires. The UC

    system’s enhanced presence capabilities also provides real time information

    about the current availability and activities of other Boeing employees so

    that they can be brought into conversations about how to address time

    sensitive problem issues about parts, maintenance issues, or assembly line

    delays.

    Boeing has benefitted from increased productivity and efficiency at both

    the individual and team levels. Its UC capabilities and converged IP network

    have also helped the company rein in its Web and audio conferencing costs.

    Prior to the UC implementation, Boeing experienced double-digit growth in

    costs associated with Web conferencing. Web conferencing continues to be

    widely used by Boeing employees, but the annual costs associated with Web

    conferencing have leveled off as employees increasingly use UC desktop

    sharing and audio conferencing capabilities instead of third-party

    conferencing services.

    Boeing’s annual costs for audio conferencing services have decreased by

    more than 15% since implementing the UC system. While Boeing still

    subscribes to third-party audio conferencing services, these are being used

    less frequently for team meetings as the result of the company’s UC

    capabilities.

    The UC system has been positively received by Boeing employees. It is

    widely viewed as a platform that facilitates collaboration in an engaging

    manner. Boeing continues to have the reputation of being one of the world’s

    most innovative companies and its decision to implement unified

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    communications on a converged IP network demonstrates its commitment to

    deploy technologies that enable innovation.

  • Discussion Points
  • 1. Some virtual teams at Boeing have discussions focused on military

    aircraft. Do some Internet research on UC security mechanisms and
    identify and briefly describe several that Boeing should have in
    place to ensure the privacy and integrity of such discussions.

    2. To what extent do the UC benefits experienced by Boeing mirror

    those of other firms that have deployed UC capabilities over
    converged IP networks?

    3. To date, Boeing has not implemented the full range of capabilities

    available through UC systems. If you were the CIO at Boeing, what
    additional UC capabilities would you implement? What benefits
    would you expect Boeing to derive from deploying these
    capabilities?

  • Sources
  • [MICR10] Microsoft Case Studies. “Boeing Expects to Lower Costs and
    Improve Productivity with Messaging Solution.” March 16, 2010. Retrieved
    online at:
    http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Case_Study_Detail.aspx?casestudyid
    =4000006703.

    [MICR11] Microsoft Case Studies. “Boeing Promotes Knowledge Sharing for
    Global Workforce with Communications Solution.” April 29, 2011. Retrieved
    online at: http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Microsoft-Lync-Server-
    2010/Boeing/Boeing-Promotes-Knowledge-Sharing-for-Global-Workforce-
    with-Communications-Solution/4000009654.

    [REED08] Reed, B. “AT&T snags big Boeing voice/data contract.”
    NetworkWorld. August 12, 2008. Retrieved online at:
    http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/081208-boeing-att-contract.html

    http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Case_Study_Detail.aspx?casestudyid=4000006703

    http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Case_Study_Detail.aspx?casestudyid=4000006703

    http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Microsoft-Lync-Server-2010/Boeing/Boeing-Promotes-Knowledge-Sharing-for-Global-Workforce-with-Communications-Solution/4000009654

    http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Microsoft-Lync-Server-2010/Boeing/Boeing-Promotes-Knowledge-Sharing-for-Global-Workforce-with-Communications-Solution/4000009654

    http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Microsoft-Lync-Server-2010/Boeing/Boeing-Promotes-Knowledge-Sharing-for-Global-Workforce-with-Communications-Solution/4000009654

    http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/081208-boeing-att-contract.html

      Collaboration Technologies
      Converged Network Project
      UC Benefits
      Discussion Points
      Sources

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    CASE STUDY 2

    CORE CREDIT UNION

    CORE Credit Union (www.corecu.org)is a state-chartered credit union whose

    main office is located in Statesboro, Georgia. Statesboro is located in Bulloch

    County which is the largest county in east Georgia (in square miles). It is a

    predominantly rural county with a population of 70,000+ where agriculture

    is a significant part of the local economy. Statesboro, with a population of

    28,000, is the county seat and is the central hub for both the public and

    private sectors of the economy. Brooklet is the largest community in the

    eastern part of the county, it is located about 10 miles east of Statesboro.

    Portal, located about 14 miles west of Statesboro, is the largest population

    center in western Bulloch County. Bulloch County is one of the fastest

    growing counties in Georgia and the U.S. Its population grew more than

    25% from 2000 to 2010.

    Credit Unions vs. Banks

    Credit unions are financial institutions that are similar to community

    banks in terms of the products and services that they provide to consumers.

    However, they differ from banks in several important ways. First, credit

    unions are non-profit organizations and unlike for-profit banks, they are not

    subject to federal or state income taxes. Second, credit unions are

    cooperatives and each credit union member owns the equivalent of one

    http://www.corecu.org/

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    share of the organization. Banks on the other hand have shareholders, who

    own shares of the bank’s stocks. Bank managers and their Boards of

    Directors (who are typically paid) operate their banks in ways to maximize

    returns to bank stockholders. Credit union managers and their Board of

    Directors (who are unpaid volunteers) do this as well, but in their case,

    every customer is also a shareholder who owns the equivalent of one share

    of stock. When credit unions are well-managed, everyone benefits, typically

    in terms of higher interest rates on savings accounts and certificates of

    deposit (CD) and/or lower rates on loans. In banks, only a small fraction

    their customers, if any, are stockholders and it is the stockholders who

    benefit most from good decision making on the part of bank managers.

    Third, banks compete openly with one another for consumer and business

    accounts. Credit unions, however, may be restricted to offering their

    services to select employee groups (SEGs) and/or geographic regions. This

    limits their membership and growth opportunities.

    Like banks, accounts at credit unions are insured up to $250,000. The

    Federal Deposit Insurance Agency insures account at banks. The National

    Credit Union Association (NCUA) insures credit union accounts. Both banks

    and credit unions are subject to annual audits by independent auditors.

    State banking agencies, such as the Georgia Department of Banking, also

    audit the banks and credit unions that operate in their states. The FDIC and

    NCUA also perform annual audits for the financial institutions that they

    provide insurance for. In recent years, audit results have resulted in the

    closure or merger of multiple banks. From 2010 to 2012, the state of

    Georgia led the nation with its number of community bank closures.

    Competitive Environment

    CORE CU is classified as state-charted community credit union. For much of

    its 30 year history, it was primarily a credit union for educators (public

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    school teachers and university faculty and staff). The local hospital (East

    Georgia Regional) and several manufacturers (including Briggs & Stratton,

    Great Dane, and Viracon), successfully petitioned for membership and

    eventually the decision was made to change its charter to become a

    community credit union where anyone who “lives, works, or worships” in

    Bulloch County can join the credit union and take advantage of its products

    and services.

    Within Statesboro, CORE competes for members with a federally

    chartered credit union. It also competes with multiple community banks

    (including Colonial, Farmers and Merchants, Heritage, Sea Island) and

    national banks (BB&T, Queensborough, and Wells Fargo) for consumer and

    business accounts.

    Competitively, CORE credit union has held its own. It has approximately

    8,000 members and more than $50M in assets. Over the last decade it has

    experienced double-digit annualized asset growth rates and has one of the

    state’s best performers in the financial services industry in terms of return

    on assets (ROA) and other key financial performance metrics. During the

    economic downturn, CORE continued to grow in assets, members, and

    branch locations. In 2009, it opened a branch in Brooklet, Georgia and in

    2012 it opened a branch in Portal, Georgia.

    IT Infrastructure

    Information technology has been a key contributor to CORE credit union’s

    growth and solid financial performance. CORE was one of the first credit

    unions in Georgia to have a Web page and it has been among the early

    adopters of other banking applications such as telephone banking, Internet

    banking, online bill paying services, and mobile banking. The credit union’s

    management team and Board of Directors has demonstrated consistent

    interest in IT applications and infrastructure that extend products and

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    services to its members. Because so many of its key products and services

    are delivered online as well as via traditional means, members who move

    out of the area often continue to use CORE as their primary financial

    services after they move out of the area.

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    As illustrated in Figure C2.1a, CORE has a 100 Mbps Ethernet LAN at its

    main office and at each of its operating locations. Tellers, customer service

    personnel loan officers, managers, and back office personnel at the main

    office use computers that are attached to the Ethernet LAN. Teller and loan

    transactions are performed on a Share One server that is also attached to

    the LAN. Each walk-in customer who makes a deposit, withdrawal, or loan

    payment receives a printed record of the transaction and their account

    balances are updated by the Share One server in real time.

    Teller and loan officer computers at the branch offices are logically part

    of the Ethernet LAN at the main office. Each connects to the Share One

    server at the main office via a VPN connection. Like those for customers at

    the main office, transactions for walk-ins at the branches result in real-time

    updates to account balances.

    All transactions on the Share One server are replicated in near-real-time

    at the Share One service center in Memphis, Tennessee. Exact duplicates of

    the Share One server and storage area network (SAN) at CORE’s main office

    in Statesboro are located in the Share One service center. In fact, there are

    two duplicates of each at the Memphis location. Both are configured exactly

    like their counterparts in Statesboro. One is used for data replication (back

    up) and the second is available as a failover or for immediate shipment to

    CORE should some type of disaster (fire, tornado, earthquake, hurricane,

    etc.) strike CORE’s main office.

    Voice Network

    Voice communication has always been an important part of banking and is

    essential to high-quality customer service. As you might expect, phones are

    always ringing at CORE Credit Union and being able to address customer

    needs by phone is an important part of every business day. CORE’s voice

    network is illustrated in Figure C2.1b. CORE has a PBX on premises at the

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    main office to support its staff of 20. Two-dozen phone lines and three

    facsimile lines are supported at the main office. Each of CORE’s branches has

    three phone lines and another line for facsimile. Phone calls between the

    main office and the branches are routed through at least one central office

    (CO). Calls between the main office and the Main Street Village branch are

    connected via the Frontier Communications CO in Statesboro. Calls between

    the main office and either the Brooklet or Portal branch go through two

    CO’s: the Frontier Communication’s CO and a Bulloch Telephone CO.

    One of CORE’s older outreach services is phone banking. For almost two

    decades, members have been able to dial into COREY, an interactive voice

    response (IVR) system that enables members to check account balances,

    transfer money between accounts, and make loans payments. Because

    COREY enables members to do many types of transactions by phone, it

    reduces the need for members to call a customer service representative for

    help in performing routine financial transactions. This means that customer

    service representatives are more likely to be available to help members

    address more complicated issues.

    When customers call the main number at CORE, they are greeted by an

    IVR recording and COREY is one of the menu options. Callers who select the

    COREY option hear another set of menu options. Because some callers select

    IVR options that affect account balances, such as verifying balances or

    transferring money among accounts, the IVR must necessarily be able to

    access account information in the Share One transaction processing system.

    Hence, the IVR server is connected to both the PBX and the Ethernet LAN at

    CORE.

    ATM Network

    CORE has a drive-up ATM the main office and each of its branches. Another

    CORE Credit Union ATM is located in the student union at Georgia Southern

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    University. The ATMs at the branches have specially configured Ventus ATM

    wireless routers to communicate with the Share One server at the main

    office over VPN connections. The ATM at the university has a dial-up

    connection that comes into the main office through the PBX.

    CORE members are not charged a transaction fee for using the credit

    union’s ATM machines. Non-members can also get cash from a CORE ATM

    but they are charged a transaction fee for doing so. Non-member ATM

    transactions are called “foreign” transactions. To encourage non-members

    to use CORE ATMs, CORE’s foreign transaction fees are less than those

    charged by any other financial institution in Bulloch County.

    Consider the logic associated with an ATM transaction:

    1. Determine if ATM is for a member or is foreign.

    2. If the transaction is for a member, check account balance on Share

    One server; issue requested cash when cash request is less than

    account balance; otherwise present “insufficient funds” message.

    3. If the transaction is foreign, send check balance request to ATM

    network; issue requested cash when cash request is less than returned

    account balance; otherwise present “insufficient funds” message.

    Electronic Banking

    CORE relies on numerous third-party partners to deliver banking products

    and services to its members. Its ATMs are connected to ATM networks

    capable of providing international access to money in their accounts. Access

    to global ATM networks is just one of the major electronic banking services

    that are available to CORE Credit Union members (see Figure C2.2).

    INTERNET BANKING

    To reduce expenses, CORE abandoned batching and mailing canceled

    checks to its members more than a decade ago. Instead, members who

    want to verify that a check has been processed can access the check image

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    via the credit union’s Internet banking services. Members who have a CORE

    Credit Union Visa card can also use the Internet banking service to track

    charges made to the card; they can also use the Internet banking service to

    pay the credit card balance via a fund transfer from a checking or savings

    account. CORE members can opt in to receive e-statements and avoid

    receiving monthly account statements by mail. E-statements for the

    previous month are available on the first day of each new month and their

    content is identical to that in printed statements which traditionally were

    only available by mail.

    BILL PAY

    About one-third of CORE’s members use its bill pay services to pay their

    monthly bills. Bill pay enables members to make electronically payments

    without having to write and mail a physical check. After the account

    information for each payment is set up, monthly bills can be paid with a few

    mouse clicks. In some instances, payments go directly to recipient bank

    accounts. In other cases, Automated Clearing House (ACH) services are used

    to transfer payment amounts.

    ONLINE LENDING

    Interest on loans is a typically a major source of revenues for credit

    unions. To maximize revenue flows, it is important for a credit union to get

    as much of its deposits as possible in the hands of credit-worthy borrowers.

    Making it easy and convenient to make loans to borrowers with good credit

    histories is a strategy followed by many credit unions, including CORE. CORE

    allows members with good credit histories to apply for loans online. Instant

    approval may be granted for some types of online loan applications and loan

    processing can be expedited for applications that are made online because

    all or most of the required documentation needed to approve the loan is

    captured electronically.

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    SHARED BRANCHING

    Statesboro is the home of Georgia Southern University and its 20,000+

    students. Many students come from families who are credit union members

    in other communities, states, or countries. To serve these students, CORE is

    a member of the Shared Branching Services networks. This enables

    individuals who are members of other credit unions to use CORE branches

    for the same types of transactions that they would go to do at the credit

    union in their home town. For example, they can access balances of

    accounts in their home town credit union, make deposits, withdrawals, cash

    checks, make loan payments, or transfer money between their accounts.

    Backup and Security Mechanisms

    Protecting the security and integrity of member accounts is important to any

    financial institution. A variety of mechanisms are used by CORE to protect

    member accounts. Several of these are illustrated in Figure C2.1 including

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    VPN connections and near-real-time between the Share One servers in

    Statesboro and the Memphis Share One service center. The data replication

    service ensures that copies of all transactions are stored at both locations.

    The service center is capable of serving as a “hot site” for processing CORE’s

    transaction should disaster strike its main office.

    To provide a failover communication link to the Internet, CORE uses two

    ISPs: Frontier Communications and Northland Cable. Dual ISPs serve the

    Mainstreet Village branch and this arrangement will also be implemented for

    the Brooklet branch. Other security mechanisms include:

     Triple DES (Data Encryption Standard) encryption is used to transport

    ATM transaction messages across the network.

     UPS (uninterrupted power supply) systems are in place for the servers

    and communication technologies at the main office.

     Intrusion protection services are provided by a third-party firm that

    monitors all transactions going through the firewalls at each of CORE’s

    sites.

     Wireless LANs are not used at the main office or branches because of

    their potential security vulnerabilities.

    Discussion Points

    1. To what extent are CORE Credit Union’s networks as converged?

    Identify and briefly describe additional network convergence
    opportunities.

    2. Visit CORE’s Web site (www.corecu.org) to get richer picture of the full
    range of products and services offered by the credit union. Identify

    and briefly describe additional products and services that CORE could
    offer its members.

    3. Many experts expect mobile payment systems to increase in
    popularity. What changes would be needed to CORE’s network

    infrastructure to support mobile payments?

    http://www.corecu.org/

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    4. CORE relies multiple third-parties to deliver its products and services?

    Identify the advantages and disadvantages of using this approach to
    serve its members?

    5. Because it is less expensive to process electronic banking transactions,

    CORE has a financial incentive to increase the number of members
    who use its electronic banking applications. If you were the manager

    at CORE, what would you do to encourage more members to do most
    of their banking transactions electronically?

    6. What additional security and backup mechanisms do you recommend

    for CORE’s networks?

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