In this section, you will learn the basic of Risk Management Information System and how you can apply it in business. What is RMIS? Why Consider an RMIS? Key Benefits of RMIS Types of Business Risk Tips to avoid Business Risk What Is RMIS? A risk management insurance system, also known as RMIS (Risk Management […]
The Competitive Engine of Modern Commerce
ICT (information and communication technology) is facilitating the process of socio-economic development in nations. ICT has offered new ways of exchanging information, and transacting businesses, efficiently and cheaply. It has also changed the dynamic natures of financial, entertainment and communication industries and provided better means of using the human and institutional capabilities of the nation in both the public and private sectors.
Increasingly, ICT is rapidly moving nations towards knowledge-based economic structures and information societies, comprising networks of individuals, firms and states that are linked electronically and in interdependent global relationships. This remarkable success of ICT has cushioned advancements in many industrial sectors, accelerating productivity in production systems. Largely, ICT has become the competitive engine of modern commerce and industry as every business has become a technology business.
In this note, I present an overview of information systems for business.
Table of Contents
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What is Information System?
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Information System Competitive Advantage
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Risk Management Information System
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Business Continuity Planning
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Disaster Recovery
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Extended Topics (read this book)
Happy New Year
Happy New Year NIGERIA and the world.
I am wishing everyone a GREAT New Year in wisdom, wealth and health.
All the way to your special moments.
We love having you here – thanks.
Nigeria Governorship Election: One Thing INEC Must Demand from States
There is a trend in Nigerian governorship campaigns: promise you would fix the states, pay workers better and advance the welfare of citizens. Then once you become a governor, you would issue a statement: we have looked at the state accounts, and unfortunately, we cannot deliver our campaign promises because there is no money.
The Nigeria Governors Forum dropped one today on the minimum wage debate: $84 per month salary ‘neither realistic nor sustainable.’ Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) cannot understand, and certainly feels betrayed because most of the governors promised to be different.
I absolutely understand the challenge of the Nigerian governors: it is a very risky game to promise to pay what you cannot afford. Yes, it is better you do not promise. Yet, if in 2018, going into 2019, Nigeria cannot afford to pay some public workers $84 per month, insisting on about $63, it means more work needs to be done in the nation.
The N30,000 minimum wage demand of labour unions is “neither realistic nor sustainable,” the Nigeria Governors Forum has said.
Instead, the NGF said, states should pay a minimum wage of N22,500 but any governor who can pay more than this is free to do so.
The forum also said insinuations by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) that its members were unwilling to pay N30,000 minimum wage were untrue. It said its members were willing but unable to meet the demand of the workers’ union.
This is a tough one: the labour union wants to see at least $84 but states have no money. The most troubling is that state revenues are dropping despite jacking-up efforts on internally generated revenue. As revenue flattens or drops, with increasing population, you may ask: these current governorship aspirants, do they know what they are going in for?
“Yet, NLC remains adamant that its will must be done, or the heavens will fall. Already, revenue to states has dropped drastically while demands by competing needs keep rising astronomically. Last year alone, revenue to states dropped from N800 billion when the Tripartite Committee was appointed (November 2017) to between N500 billion and N600 billion by the time Ms Amma Pepple submitted its report in October 2018,” he said.
Certainly, I am not sure many do. And this is my suggestion: INEC should mandate states to publish their books comprehensively and conclusively so that governorship aspirants can see what lies ahead. By doing that, the recurring excuses would be meaningless since the shocks of discovering “empty treasury” on assumption of office will fade.
Happy New Year’s Eve: Write a Great 365-Page Book
I just scheduled with my elder brother, Engr Dr Okey Ekekwe, Area Pastor RCCG (Redeemed Christian Church of God) in Port Harcourt for a yearly tradition: a New Year prayer.
A chemical engineer in one of the largest global corporations, he takes a practical approach to this: you want this, but God would also want to see your work to qualify into it. Largely, you cannot have these expectations without clarity on how to execute them despite the grace that abides.
Once that prayer is concluded, the new book with 365 pages will have its first entry. I am hoping to have a really “great book” for 2019; 2018 was supremely awesome. Yes, we exceeded all expectations we set except my personal desire to join a public company board. Sure, we joined boards of super category-king private companies.
Enter 2019 with confidence because despite the headlines, this world is getting better, and abundance is ahead of us. The energy to triumph comes from the optimistic exuberance that the future is bright.
I want to wish you all Happy New Year ahead.





