In an information system, input is the raw data that is processed to produce output. During the input design, the developers must consider the input devices such as PC, MICR, OMR, etc.
Therefore, the quality of system input determines the quality of system output. Welldesigned input forms and screens have following properties −
It should serve specific purpose effectively such as storing, recording, and retrieving the information.
It ensures proper completion with accuracy.
It should be easy to fill and straightforward.
It should focus on user’s attention, consistency, and simplicity.
All these objectives are obtained using the knowledge of basic design principles regarding −
What are the inputs needed for the system?
How end users respond to different elements of forms and screens.
The objectives of input design are −
To design data entry and input procedures
To reduce input volume
To design source documents for data capture or devise other data capture methods
To design input data records, data entry screens, user interface screens, etc.
To use validation checks and develop effective input controls.
It is important to design appropriate data input methods to prevent errors while entering data. These methods depend on whether the data is entered by customers in forms manually and later entered by data entry operators, or data is directly entered by users on the PCs.
A system should prevent user from making mistakes by −
Some of the popular data input methods are −
Input integrity controls include a number of methods to eliminate common input errors by end-users. They also include checks on the value of individual fields; both for format and the completeness of all inputs.
Audit trails for data entry and other system operations are created using transaction logs which gives a record of all changes introduced in the database to provide security and means of recovery in case of any failure.
The design of output is the most important task of any system. During output design, developers identify the type of outputs needed, and consider the necessary output controls and prototype report layouts.
The objectives of input design are −
To develop output design that serves the intended purpose and eliminates the production of unwanted output.
To develop the output design that meets the end users requirements.
To deliver the appropriate quantity of output.
To form the output in appropriate format and direct it to the right person.
To make the output available on time for making good decisions.
Let us now go through various types of outputs −
Manufacturers create and design external outputs for printers. External outputs enable the system to leave the trigger actions on the part of their recipients or confirm actions to their recipients.
Some of the external outputs are designed as turnaround outputs, which are implemented as a form and re-enter the system as an input.
Internal outputs are present inside the system, and used by end-users and managers. They support the management in decision making and reporting.
There are three types of reports produced by management information −
Detailed Reports − They contain present information which has almost no filtering or restriction generated to assist management planning and control.
Summary Reports − They contain trends and potential problems which are categorized and summarized that are generated for managers who do not want details.
Exception Reports − They contain exceptions, filtered data to some condition or standard before presenting it to the manager, as information.
Output integrity controls include routing codes to identify the receiving system, and verification messages to confirm successful receipt of messages that are handled by network protocol.
Printed or screen-format reports should include a date/time for report printing and the data. Multipage reports contain report title or description, and pagination. Pre-printed forms usually include a version number and effective date.
Both forms and reports are the product of input and output design and are business document consisting of specified data. The main difference is that forms provide fields for data input but reports are purely used for reading. For example, order forms, employment and credit application, etc.
During form designing, the designers should know −
who will use them
where would they be delivered
the purpose of the form or report
During form design, automated design tools enhance the developer’s ability to prototype forms and reports and present them to end users for evaluation.
A good form design is necessary to ensure the following −
To keep the screen simple by giving proper sequence, information, and clear captions.
To meet the intended purpose by using appropriate forms.
To ensure the completion of form with accuracy.
To keep the forms attractive by using icons, inverse video, or blinking cursors etc.
To facilitate navigation.
Flat Forms
It is a single copy form prepared manually or by a machine and printed on a paper. For additional copies of the original, carbon papers are inserted between copies.
It is a simplest and inexpensive form to design, print, and reproduce, which uses less volume.
Unit Set/Snap out Forms
These are papers with one-time carbons interleaved into unit sets for either handwritten or machine use.
Carbons may be either blue or black, standard grade medium intensity. Generally, blue carbons are best for handwritten forms while black carbons are best for machine use.
Continuous strip/Fanfold Forms
These are multiple unit forms joined in a continuous strip with perforations between each pair of forms.
It is a less expensive method for large volume use.
No Carbon Required (NCR) Paper
They use carbonless papers which have two chemical coatings (capsules), one on the face and the other on the back of a sheet of paper.
When pressure is applied, the two capsules interact and create an image.