Management Information Systems (MIS) MCQs with Answers
Solved Management Information Systems (MIS) MCQs with answers — TPS, DSS, ESS, EIS, GIS, SDLC, CASE & EDI. Free quiz + PDF for PPSC, FPSC, NTS, CSS & PMS.
Management Information Systems — Master Reference for Pakistani Competitive Exams
The chapter Management Information Systems (MIS) is a high-frequency Computer Science topic in Pakistan’s PPSC, FPSC, NTS, CSS, PMS, OTS, CTS, BPSC, KPPSC and SPSC One Paper exams — and it is heavily tested for IT Officer, Computer Science Lecturer, Assistant Director, MIS Officer, BS Public Administration and BPS-14 to BPS-17 management cadre posts. This page consolidates solved MCQs with answers covering the full MIS syllabus — core definitions, MIS structure, types of information systems (TPS, MIS, DSS, ESS, EIS, GIS, Strategic, Personnel, Marketing), the System Development Life Cycle (SDLC), CASE tools, prototyping, batch processing, top-down approach, EDI & functional business areas. For wider context, see the Wikipedia overview of Management Information System and the Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) reference — the foundation of every IT project methodology.
The Four Key Components of MIS
People → Data → Software → Hardware. Together these four resources form every Management Information System. Some authors add Procedures and Networks as a sixth and seventh component.
Structure of MIS — Seven Components
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Hardware | Physical devices and equipment used in the MIS. |
| Software | Programs and applications that process data. |
| Database | Organised collection of stored data. |
| Medium and Message | Communication channels and the data transmitted. |
| Input and Output | Data entered into and results produced by the system. |
| Operating Personnel | People who operate and manage the system. |
| Procedure | Rules and methods governing system operations. |
Types of Information Systems
| System | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Operational-Level Systems | Monitor elementary activities and daily regular business transactions. |
| TPS — Transaction Process System | Information processing for business transactions — collection, modification, retrieval of all transaction data. |
| MIS — Management Information System | Receives input from the TPS. Provides managers with weekly, monthly and yearly summaries (not day-to-day). |
| DSS — Decision Support System | Supports structured and semi-structured decision making. |
| ESS — Executive Support System | Transforms enterprise data into quickly accessible executive-level reports. Output: projections & query responses. |
| EIS — Executive Information System | A combination of a MIS and DSS. |
| GIS — Geographical Information System | Stores and manipulates data viewed from a geographical reference. |
| Strategic Planning Systems | Deal with projections of the future. |
| Personnel Information System | Flow of information about people working in the organisation. |
| Marketing Information System | Effectiveness depends largely on feedback from the marketplace to the firm. |
System Development Life Cycle (SDLC)
| SDLC Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| SDLC stands for | Software Development Life Cycle (System Development is also called the System Development Life Cycle). |
| First step | Problem / Opportunity Identification. |
| Most creative phase | Design. |
| First phase of IT planning | Strategic Planning. |
| NOT in the software life cycle | Abstraction. |
| NOT an attribute of software engineering | Dependability. |
| CASE Tools | Computer Aided Software Engineering — tools that support different SDLC stages. |
| Classical method of processing data | Batch Processing. |
| Top-Down Approach | Stepwise design / decomposition — break a system to gain insight into its sub-systems. |
| Prototyping Model | Build a prototype, test it, rework it until acceptable, then build the full system. |
Key Acronyms — MIS Glossary
| Acronym | Full Form |
|---|---|
| MIS | Management Information Systems |
| TPS | Transaction Process System |
| DSS | Decision Support System |
| ESS | Executive Support System |
| EIS | Executive Information System |
| GIS | Geographical Information System |
| SDLC | Software Development Life Cycle |
| CASE | Computer Aided Software Engineering |
| EDI | Electronic Data Interchange |
| EDP | Electronic Data Processing |
| SRS | Software Requirements Specification |
Other Key Facts to Memorise
- Starting point of MIS planning — General business planning.
- MIS information inputs — Summary transaction data, high-volume data, and simple models.
- Functional Business Areas — Accounting, Finance, Marketing, Human Resources.
- Major drawback in decision making by MIS — Difficult due to rules for business problems.
- Most rapidly growing application for computer-assisted decision making — Simulation.
- EDI — Direct, computer-to-computer exchange of standardised business transaction documents between partners, suppliers and customers.
- Sub-system closest to stress — Will change the most.
- Integration in system concepts — Refers to the holism of systems.
- Marketing IS effectiveness — Depends largely on feedback from the marketplace.
- Knowledge-level sales & marketing IS — Identifies customers and markets using demographics, consumer behaviour and trends.
- Operational-Level Systems — Keep track of daily regular business transactions.
Exam tip: Lock six anchors and you cover ~80% of all MCQs from this chapter — MIS = planned system + 4 components (People, Data, Software, Hardware), MIS receives input from TPS, EIS = MIS + DSS, SDLC first step = Problem Identification / most creative phase = Design, CASE = Computer Aided Software Engineering, and EDI = direct computer-to-computer document exchange.
Frequently Asked Questions
MIS is a planned system of collecting, storing and disseminating data in the form of information needed to carry out the functions of management. It comprises four key components: People, Data, Software and Hardware.
TPS processes daily business transactions. MIS receives input from the TPS and provides managers with weekly/monthly/yearly summaries. DSS supports structured and semi-structured decision making. ESS transforms enterprise data into executive-level reports. EIS = MIS + DSS.
SDLC = Software Development Life Cycle (also called System Development Life Cycle). The first step is Problem / Opportunity Identification, and the most creative phase is Design.
CASE stands for Computer Aided Software Engineering — tools that support the different stages of the software development life cycle.
EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) is the direct, computer-to-computer exchange of standardised, common business transaction documents between business partners, suppliers and customers.
Simulation is the most rapidly growing application for computer-assisted decision making — used to model complex business and engineering scenarios.
Yes — essential. MIS MCQs are tested in every One Paper, NTS NAT, GAT, OTS, CTS, BPSC, KPPSC, SPSC, PPSC and FPSC exam — and very heavily for MIS Officer, IT Officer, Lecturer (CS / Public Administration) and BPS-14 to BPS-17 management cadre posts.
Yes. Click the Download PDF button to get all Management Information Systems MCQs with correct answers as a branded QuizWing PDF for offline revision.