CHOOSE YOUR CURRENCY

BUSINESS MANAGEMENT SYSTEM SOFTWARE

Amount: ₦5,000.00 |

Format: Ms Word |

1-5 chapters |



ABSTRACT

Businesses   (Manufacturing,   Merchandising   or   Service   Delivery)   have   similar organizational   structures   like   Administration,   Human   Resources,    Marketing, Accounting and Customer Care/Public Relations. Stand alone software products have been  developed  to  enhance  operations  in  each  of  these  business.  The  business management system software developed in this project is aimed at integrating these software  products  into  a  single  system  that  will   provide  solution  to  different management  challenges  that each  type of  business  encounters.  The software  was successfully developed using Hypertext  Preprocessor (PHP), My Structured  Query Language (MySQL), Hypertext  Markup Language (HTML), Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and  Javascript  programming  languages  to  reside and run  on any network topology and to enhance the efficiency and productivity of any business venture that will use it.

CHAPTER ONE:  INTRODUCTION

1.1        BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY

Beyond reasonable  doubt, effective and efficient human  existence is not possible without food,  shelter  and  clothing.  In order  to provide  these  essential  necessities,  man  involves himself in different activities. Such activities could generally be referred to as business.

Businesses have evolved over time since the creation of man. From fruit gathering through hunting to the present day ‘white collar jobs’, man strives to fulfil basic necessities required to sustain life. But as he tries to provide these necessities, he is faced with different business managerial challenges.

These business  managerial  challenges  include accounting,  human resources  management, financial    management,    business    operations    management    and    customer    resources management.

Because these business management  challenges are human problems, engineers are faced with providing  lasting solutions  in order  to make life better. Various  attempts  have been made to tackle these problems but there are areas that are either overlooked or tackled less unsatisfactorily.   In  This  project,  the  researcher  attempts   to  solve  this   problem   using software development strategy.

This  Business  Management  System  Software  is  designed  to  provide  effective  Business management tool for individuals and corporate bodies. Specifically, the thesis targets small scale  businesses.  It  will  also  include  new  features  and  innovation  to  existing  business software packages.

1.2        STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM

There are some challenges  facing business  establishments.  These could be represented as requisitions,    export,    budget,    operations,    staff   discipline,    salary    and   emoluments, promotions, transfers etc.

      Requisitions:     These  represent  what  come  into  the  establishment.  They  include employee  recruitment,  raw materials,  customer  requests  etc. The  challenges  that are noticed at this point are over invoicing, insufficient materials, etc.

      Export: During  service  to customers,  fraudulent  sales staff  gives  excess  goods  to costumers   they  like  thereby  liquidating  the  company.  Some  even  remove  the company’s property without due approval.

      Budget:Budget challenges are not always problematic since the excesses are usually carried forward to the next fiscal year while for deficits; supplementary budgets are made to take care of   inadequacies.

      Operations:  These  challenges  manifest  more  often  with  field  work  staff.  Cases abound where they are paid lodging allowances  more than three times  the actual amount,  some do not visit the work site on time.  In the office,  information  flow, reaction or feedback of customers and members of staff are also problematic.

      Staff  Discipline:   In  most  establishments,   staff  punctuality   have  become  a  big problem.  For example,  staff that have the duty of opening  offices  by 0800  hours report for duty by 0900 hours. The challenge created here is that staff daily input is not adequate compared to their salary/wages.

    Staff  Salary  and  Emoluments:  Staff  salary  challenges  are  of  different  forms:  1.

Omitted members of Staff; 2. Incorrect pay cheque; 3. Double salary for a staff for one duration; 4 Ghost workers, etc. Other problems include late or non payment of incentives,  leave allowance,  gratuity and pension for retired  members of staff and death benefit for dead members of staff.

      Promotion:        Problems with promotion include delayed promotion, favouritism in promotion etc.

      Transfers:           Transfer of members of staff is carried out to meet up with lagging human resources in a particular section or department in the industry. The problem here is that some members of staff are transferred to areas where they do not have the knowledge to work efficiently. Some are either over or under qualified for the vacant position.

1.3        SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY

It is expected that at the realisation of the Business Management System Software, it will be possible to counter these managerial challenges experienced in Business ventures by:

1.           Increasing the profit margin of any company that makes use of the software.

2.           Reducing operational cost for companies using the software.

3.           Increasing the efficiency and productivity of both manpower and machinery.

4.           Promoting discipline, loyalty and respect among employees and their employers.

5.           Creating virtual office for employee and customer access anytime, anywhere.

6.            Providing more conducive and enabling environment for higher turnover in any given business venture.

1.4        LIMITATION OF THE STUDY

The Business Management System Software is designed specifically for all business classes; whether  small  scale,  medium  scale  or  large  scale.  It  is  also  expected  to  be  applied  in different forms of business like Manufacturing,  Merchandising,  Service Delivery and so on, but the researcher has limited it to small scale merchandising industry that is managed by about ten administrators,  having between twenty to fifty members of staff, selling limited number of items and have about five branches.

1.5        CONTEXTUAL DEFINITION

1.5.1     BUSINESS

Business is an organized approach to providing customers with the goods and services they want.  The  word  business  also  refers  to  an  organization  that  provides  these  goods  and services. Most businesses seek to make a profit – that is, they aim to achieve revenues that exceed  the costs  of operating  the business.  Prominent  examples  of  for-profit  businesses include   Mitsubishi   Group,   Shoprite,   Innoson   Limited,   Chitis   Limited,   General   Motors Corporation,  Ibeto Group,  Microsoft  Corporation,  and Royal  Dutch/Shell  Group.  However, some businesses only seek to earn enough to cover their operating costs. Commonly called nonprofits, these organizations are primarily non-governmental  service providers. Examples of non-profit businesses  include such organizations  as social service agencies,  foundations, advocacy groups, and many hospitals.

Business  plays  a  vital  role  in the  life  and  culture  of  countries  with  industrial  and  postindustrial (service- and information-based)  free-market economies such as the United States and  Nigeria.   In  free-market   systems,   prices  and  wages  are  primarily   determined   by competition,  not  by governments.  In the United  States,  for  example,  73  percent  of  the

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people  buy and  sell  goods  and  services  as their  primary  occupations.  In 2001  American companies  sold  in excess  of $10  trillion  worth  of goods  and services  (Microsoft  Encarta Premium, 2009). Businesses provide just about anything consumers want or need, including basic necessities such as food and housing, luxuries such as whirlpool baths and wide-screen televisions,    and   even   personal    services   such   as    caring   for   children   and   finding companionship.

1.5.1.1  TYPES OF BUSINESSES

There are many types of businesses in a free-market economy. The three most common are

(1) manufacturing firms, (2) merchandisers, and (3) service enterprises. MANUFACTURING FIRMS

Manufacturing   firms  produce  a  wide  range  of  products.   Large  manufacturers  include producers of airplanes, cars, computers, and furniture. Many manufacturing firms construct only  parts  rather  than  complete,  finished  products.  These  suppliers  are  usually  smaller manufacturing  firms, which supply parts and components  to larger  firms. The larger firms then assemble final products to sell to consumers. For example, suppliers provide many of the components  in personal  computers,  automobiles,  and  home appliances  to large firms that create the finished or end products. These larger end-product manufacturers  are often also  responsible  for  marketing  and  distributing  the  products.  The  advantage  that  large businesses  have  in  being  able  to  efficiently  and  inexpensively   control  any  parts  of  a production process is known as economies of scale. But small manufacturing firms may work best  for  producing   certain  types  of   finished  products.   Smaller  end-product   firms  are common in the food industry and among artisan trades such as custom cabinetry.

MERCHANDISERS

Merchandisers are businesses that help move goods through a channel of distribution—that is,  the  route  goods  take  in  reaching  the  consumer.  Merchandisers  may  be  involved  in wholesaling or retailing, or sometimes both.

A wholesaler is a merchandiser who purchases goods and then sells them to buyers, typically retailers,  for  the  purpose  of  resale.  A  retailer  is  a  merchandiser   who  sells  goods  to consumers. A wholesaler often purchases products in large quantities and then sells smaller quantities of each product to retailers who are unable to either buy or stock large amounts

of the product. Wholesalers operate somewhat like large, end-product manufacturing firms, benefiting from economies of scale. For example, a wholesaler might purchase 5,000 pairs of work gloves and then sell 100 pairs to 50 different retailers. Some large American discount chains, such as Kmart Corporation and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., serve as their own wholesalers. These  companies  go  directly  to  factories  and  other  manufacturing  outlets,  buy  in  large amounts and then warehouse and ship the goods to their stores.

The division between  retailing and wholesaling  is now being blurred by new  technologies that   allow   retailing   to   become   an   economy   of   scale.   Telephone   and   computer communications allow retailers to serve far greater numbers of customers in a given span of time  than  is  possible   in  face-to-face   interactions   between   a  consumer   and  a  retail salesperson.  Computer  networks  such  as the  Internet,  because  they  do not  require  any physical  communication   between  salespeople  and  customers,  allow  a  nearly  unlimited capacity for sales interactions  known as 24/7—that  is, the Internet site can be open for a transaction 24 hours a day, seven days a week and for as many transactions as the network can handle. For  example,  a typical transaction  to purchase a pair of shoes at a shoe store may  take  a  half-hour  from  browsing,  to fitting,  to the transaction  with a cashier.  But  a customer  can purchase  a pair of shoes  through a computer  interface  with a retailer  in a matter of seconds.

Computer  technology  also provides  retailers  with another  economy  of scale  through  the ability  to sell  goods  without  opening  any physical  stores,  often  referred  to as  electronic commerce   or   e-commerce.    Retailers   that   provide   goods   entirely   through   Internet transactions  do not incur the expense of building so-called  brick-and-mortar  stores or the expense of maintaining them.

SERVICE ENTERPRISES

Service enterprises  include many kinds of businesses.  Examples  include dry cleaners,  shoe repair  stores,  barbershops,  restaurants,  ski resorts,  hospitals,  and  hotels.  In  many cases, service enterprises are moderately small because they do not have mechanized services and limit service to only as many individuals as they can accommodate at one time. For example, a waiter may be able to provide good service to four tables at once, but with five or more tables, customer service will suffer.

In recent years the number of service enterprises  in wealthier free-market  economies  has grown  rapidly,  and spending  on services  now accounts  for a significant  percentage  of all spending.  By the late 1990s,  private services  accounted  for more  than 21 percent of U.S.

spending  (Microsoft   Encarta   Premium,   2009).  Wealthier   nations  have  developed   post industrial  economies,  where entertainment  and recreation  businesses  have  become  more important than most raw material extraction such as the mining of mineral ores and some manufacturing  industries in terms of creating jobs and stimulating economic growth. Many of these extractive industries have moved to developing nations, especially with the rise of large  multinational  corporations.  As post  industrial  economies  have  accumulated  wealth, they have come to support systems of leisure, in which people are willing to pay others to do things for them. In the United States, vast numbers of people work rigid schedules for long hours in indoor offices,  stores, and factories.  Many employers  pay high enough wages so that  employees  can  afford  to  balance  their  work  schedules  with  purchased  recreation. People in the United States, for example,  support thriving travel, theme park, resort, and recreational sport businesses.

1.5.1.2  FORMS OF BUSINESS OWNERSHIP

There  are  a  number  of  different  forms  of  business  ownership.  These  include  (1)  sole proprietorships,  (2) partnerships, (3) corporations, (4) joint ventures, and (5) syndicates.

SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP

The most common form of ownership is a sole proprietorship – that is, a business owned by one individual. At the beginning of the 21st century, there were more than 17 million sole proprietorships  in the United States. These businesses have the advantage of being easy to set up and to dissolve because few laws exist to regulate them. Proprietors, as owners, also maintain  direct  control  of their businesses  and  own  all  their profits.  On the other  hand, owners  of proprietorships  are personally  responsible  for all business  debts  and, because they are constrained  by the limits  of their  personal  financial  resources,  they  may find it difficult to expand or increase their profits. For those reasons, sole proprietorships  tend to be small, primarily service and retail businesses.

PARTNERSHIP

A partnership is an association of two or more people who operate a business as co-owners. There  are different  types  of  partners.  A general  partner  is  active  in  the  operation  of  a business and is liable for all of its debts. In small businesses with only two or three owners, all typically will be general partners. A limited partner, by contrast, invests in a business but is not involved  in its daily operations.  Partnerships,  like sole proprietorships,  are relatively easy to establish. Furthermore,  partners can pool financial resources to fund expansion and can divide their duties and responsibilities according to personal expertise and abilities. For

example, one partner may be very good at selling, while another has a knack for maintaining good  financial  records.  As  with  sole  proprietorships,   however,  partnerships  may  entail substantial  financial  risks,  as  all  of  the  general  partners  are  liable  for  the  debts  of  the business. And unlike proprietorships,  disagreements  among partners can harm partnership businesses.

CORPORATION

A corporation  is a legal entity that exists as distinct from the individuals  who control  and invest in it. As a result, a corporation can continue indefinitely through complete changes of ownership,   leadership,   and  staffing.   Current  owners  can  sell  their   holdings  to  other individuals or, if they die, have their assets transferred  to heirs. This is possible because a corporation creates shares of stock that are sold to investors. One strength of the corporate business  structure  is that stockholders  have limited  liability,  as opposed  to the unlimited liability of general partners, so they cannot lose more than their initial investment. Investors may  also  easily  buy  and  sell  stocks  of  public  corporations  through  stock  exchanges.  By offering stock publicly, a corporation enables anyone with some money to buy the stock and become a part-owner of the company. As a result, corporations can more easily raise capital for business expansion than can sole proprietorships and most partnerships.

Investors control a corporation through the election of a managing body, known as a board of  directors.  In  a  large  corporation,  investors  collectively  decide  who  will  oversee  the operation of the enterprise. In turn, the board chooses a president, who decides on the key company personnel and helps formulate company strategy.

Many corporations  are highly successful  business organizations,  with profits far  exceeding those  of  many  sole  proprietorships  and  partnerships.  However,  they  traditionally  have higher tax burdens than other kinds of businesses.  Also, the fees  involved  in creating and organizing a corporation can be very high.

JOINT VENTURES AND SYNDICATES

In  joint  ventures  and  syndicates,  individuals  or  businesses  cooperate  to  create  a  single product or service package. A joint venture is a partnership agreement in which two or more individual- or group-run businesses join together to carry out a single business project. For example, U.S.-based  General Motors Corporation  and Toyota  Motor Corporation,  based in Japan, have a joint venture called New United Motor  Manufacturing,  Inc., created for the purpose of producing cars in California.

A syndicate  is an association  of individuals  or corporations  formed  to conduct  a  specific financial transaction  such as buying a business. Quite often syndicates  are created for the purpose of buying sports franchises.  For example, the Miami Heat basketball team and the New York Yankees baseball team are each owned by syndicates of individuals. Each member of these syndicates is also involved in the operation of other businesses.

1.5.1.3  BUSINESS OPERATIONS

A variety  of operations  keep businesses,  especially  large  corporations,  running  efficiently and effectively. Common business operation divisions include                     (1) production, (2) marketing, (3) finance, and (4) human resource management.

PRODUCTION

Production  includes  those  activities  involved  in  conceptualizing,   designing,  and  creating products and services. In recent years there have been dramatic changes in the way goods are produced.  Today,  computers  help  monitor,  control,  and even  perform work. Flexible, high-tech  machines  can do in minutes  what it used  to take  people  hours to accomplish. Another  important  development  has  been  the  trend  toward  just-in-time  inventory.  The word inventory refers to the amount of goods a business keeps available for wholesale or retail. In just-in-time inventory, the firm stocks only what it needs for the next day or two. Many businesses  rely on fast, global  computer  communications  to allow them to respond quickly to changes in consumer demand. Inventories are thus minimized and businesses can invest more in product research, development, and marketing.

MARKETING

Marketing  is the process  of identifying  the goods  and services  that consumers  need  and want and providing those goods and services at the right price, place, and time. Businesses develop  marketing  strategies  by  conducting  research  to  determine  what  products  and services  potential  customers  think  they  would  like  to  be  able  to  purchase.  Firms  also promote   their   products   and   services   through   such   techniques   as   advertising   and personalized   sales,  which  serve  to  inform  potential  customers   and  motivate  them  to purchase. Firms that market products for which there is always some demand, such as foods and household  goods, often advertise if they face competition  from other firms marketing similar products. Such products rarely need to be sold face-to-face. On the other hand, firms that market products and services that buyers will want to see, use, or better understand before  buying,  often  rely  on personalized  sales.  Expensive  and  durable  goods  – such as

automobiles,   electronics,   or  furniture  –  benefit  from  personalized   sales,  as  do   legal, financial, and accounting services.

FINANCE

Finance involves  the management  of money.  All businesses  must have enough capital  on hand  to  pay  their  bills,  and  for-profit  businesses   seek  extra  capital  to   expand   their operations. In some cases, they raise long-term capital by selling ownership in the company. Other common financial activities include granting,  monitoring,  and collecting on credit or loans and ensuring that customers pay bills on time. The financial division of any business must also establish a good working relationship  with a bank. This is particularly important when a business wants to obtain a loan.

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

Businesses  rely on effective human resource management  (HRM) to ensure that they hire and keep good employees and that they are able to respond to conflicts between workers and management.  HRM specialists  initially determine  the number  and type of  employees that a business will need over its first few years of operation. They are then responsible for recruiting new employees to replace those who leave and for filling newly created positions. A business’s HRM division also trains or arranges  for the training of its staff to encourage worker productivity,  efficiency, and satisfaction,  and to promote the overall success of the business. Finally, human resource managers create workers’ compensation plans and benefit packages for employees.

BUSINESS IN A FREE MARKET ECONOMY

The  economy  of  the United  States,  Nigeria,  as  well  as  that  of  most  developed  nations, operates according to the principles of the free market. This differs from the economies of Socialist or Communist  countries,  where governments  play a strong role  in deciding what goods and services will be produced, how they will be distributed, and how much they will cost.  Businesses  in  free-market   economies  benefit  from  certain  fundamental   rights  or freedoms. All people in free-market  societies have the right to  own, use, buy, sell, or give away property, thus permitting them to own and operate their own businesses  as private, profit-seeking   enterprises.   Business  owners  in  free  markets  may  choose  to  run  their businesses however they like, within the limits of other, mostly non-business-oriented laws. This right gives businesses the authority to hire and fire employees, invest money, purchase machinery and equipment,  and choose the markets where they want to operate. In doing

so, however, they may not violate or infringe on the rights of other businesses and people. Free-market businesses also have the right to keep or reinvest their profits.

All free-market economies, however, keep the rights of businesses in check to some degree through laws and regulations  that monitor business activities. Such laws vary from country to country,  but they generally  encourage  competition  by protecting  small  businesses  and consumers from being hurt by more powerful, large enterprises. For example, in the United States the Sherman  Antitrust  Act, enacted in 1890, and the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 forbid business agreements  that impede interstate and most international  commerce.  The Clayton  Antitrust  Act  also  protects  against  unfair  business  practices  aimed  at  creating monopolies   and  guarantees   the  rights  of   labour   to  challenge   management   practices perceived  as unfair.  The U.S. Federal  Trade Commission  Act of 1914 prohibits  businesses from attempting  to control the prices of its products  or services,  among other provisions. Other laws prohibit mergers that decrease competition within an industry and require large merging companies to notify the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for approval [1].

1.5.2     MANAGEMENT

Management,  in  all  business  and  organizational  activities,  is  the  art  of  getting  people together to accomplish desired goals and objectives using available resources efficiently and effectively.  Management  comprises  planning,  organizing,  staffing,  leading or directing, and controlling  an organization  (a group  of two  or more people  or entities)  or effort for the purpose of accomplishing a goal. Resources encompass the deployment and manipulation of human resources, financial resources, technological resources and natural resources.

Because  organizations  can  be  viewed  as  systems,  management  can  also  be  defined  as human  action,  including  design,  to  facilitate  the  production  of  useful  outcomes  from  a system. This view opens the opportunity to ‘manage’ oneself, a pre-requisite to attempting to manage others.

The verb manage comes from the Italian maneggiare (to handle – especially tools), which in turn   derives   from   the   Latin   manus   (hand).   The   French   word   mesnagement   (later ménagement)  influenced the development in meaning of the English word management in the 15th and 16th centuries [2].

Other definitions of management are:

Organization  and coordination  of the activities of an enterprise in accordance with certain policies and in achievement of clearly defined objectives. Management is often included as a

factor   of  production   along   with   machines,   materials   and   money.   According   to   the management  guru Peter Drucker (1909–2005),  the basic task of a management  is twofold: marketing and innovation.

Directors and managers have the power and responsibility to make decisions to manage an enterprise. As a discipline, management comprises the interlocking functions of formulating corporate policy and organizing, planning, controlling, and directing the firm’s resources to achieve  the policy’s  objectives.  The size of management  can range  from one person in a small firm to hundreds or thousands of managers in multinational companies. In large firms the board of directors formulates  the policy which is  implemented  by the chief executive officer [3].

1.5.3     SYSTEM

System is any collection  of component  elements  that work together to perform a  task.  In computer science, system is used in a variety of contexts. A computer is a hardware system consisting of a microprocessor  and allied chips and circuitry, plus an input device (keyboard, mouse,  disk  drive),  an  output  device  (monitor,  disk  drive),  and  any  peripheral  devices (printer, modem). Within this hardware system is an operating system, often called system software,  which is an essential  set of programs  that manage hardware and data files and work  with  application  programs.  External  to  the  computer,  system  also  refers  to  any collection   or  combination   of   programs,  procedures,   data,   and  equipment   utilized   in processing  information:  an  accounting  system,  a billing  system,  a database  management system [4].

1.5.4      SOFTWARE

Software is a set of instructions  that tell a computer  what to do. Software comprises  the entire  set  of  programs,   procedures,   and  routines  associated  with  the  operation  of  a computer  system.  The term was coined  to differentiate  these instructions  from  hardware which is the physical components of a computer system. A set of instructions that directs a computer’s hardware to perform a task is called a program, or software program.

The  two  main  types  of  software  are  system  software  and  application  software.  System software  controls  a computer’s  internal  functioning,  chiefly  through  an  operating  system, and also controls  such peripherals  as monitors,  printers,  and  storage devices.  Application software,  by contrast,  directs the computer  to execute  commands  given by the user and

may be said to include any program that processes data for a user. Application software thus includes  word  processors,   spreadsheets,   database  management,   inventory  and  payroll programs,  and  many  other  applications.   A  third  software  category  is  that  of  network software, which coordinates communication between the computers linked in a network.

Software is typically stored on an external long-term memory device, such as a hard drive or magnetic  diskette.  When  the program  is in use, the computer  reads  it from  the storage device  and  temporarily  places  the  instructions  in  random  access  memory  (RAM).  The process of storing and then performing the instructions is called “running,” or “executing,” a program. By contrast, software programs and procedures that are permanently stored in a computer’s  memory  using  a  read-only  (ROM)  technology  are  called  firmware,  or  “hard software”.  Software which was once a  mysterious  sparkle in the hardware engineer’s  eye has now been democratized,  and its applications in the modern digital world seem infinite [5].

1.6        PROJECT OVERVIEW

In the introductory chapter of this work, a background to the study was discussed as well as the problems were stated. Significance of the study together with the limitation of the study was also put forward. Finally, an elaborate definition of key terms as they apply to the study was carried out.

The second chapter  offered  the opportunity  for the review  of important  literature  in  the study.  The first section was for business  management  followed  by software  development while a review of existing business management softwares was done in the last section.

The  different  methods  adopted  to  ensure  the  successful  realisation  of  this  study  were discussed in the third chapter. This encompassed  the research method, the design and the build methods.

Chapter  four  took  care  of  the  implementation   of  the  Business   Management   System Software. The programming languages used were discussed in the first section. The second section  explained  the coding while the third section  handled the graphical  user interface. The server and the network concluded this chapter.

The  concluding  chapter  enumerated   the  results  emanating  from  testing  the  Business Management  System Software and also the discussion of results. Summary, conclusion and suggestions for further work formed the final sections.


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