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A variety of management policy definitions exist due to different
viewpoints and different intentions. Common to all, the following
definition can be given [Koch 97]:
A management policy defines the desired behaviour of a system or of
several system components.
There are a number of reasons why management policies are advantageous
for the specification of the desired behaviour. Most of them are a
result of the properties of policies:
- Management policies provide for the possibility of centralising
knowledge. They are defined at a single or just a few
places. This reduces the danger, that similar situations might be
interpreted differently by managers reacting differently to the same
problem.
- The policy definition extracts management knowledge from
experts. This knowledge can be reused. Repeatedly solving the same
management problems can be avoided.
- The policy concept is very expressive and can be used for a variety
of different management areas.
- As opposed to a reactive management approach, policies aim at
describing operational strategies.
- A common format for describing management information in many areas
creates a potential for higher rate of automation.
- Policies can support narrowing down the gap between high-level
management objectives and enforceable management actions.
The last item is one of the strengths of the policy approach although
it is not easy to accomplish. Refinement is necessary to create
a set of enforceable management actions from a high-level policy
(objective). By refinement, a policy is bound to the actual information
systems environment and a policy hierarchy is created.
In the following sections, different policy approaches are described
giving a more complete definition and understanding of management
policies.
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