ISBN-13: 9783030519940 / Angielski / Twarda / 2020 / 426 str.
ISBN-13: 9783030519940 / Angielski / Twarda / 2020 / 426 str.
Chapters
Authors
Not published
Chapter 1:
Technological Innovation and International Competitiveness for Business Growth: State-of-the-art
João J. Ferreira
jjmf@doe.upv.es
University of Beira Interior, Portugal
Sérgio J. Teixeira
jesusteixeira1984@gmail.com
University of Madeira, Portugal
Hussain G. Rammal
hrammal@gmail.comUniversity of Technology Sydney, Australia
Not published
Chapter 2:
Cross-national teams and the remote management of team members in Indian IT MNCs: The onsite-offshore phenomenon
Parth Patel
parth.patel@ncl.ac.uk
Newcastle University Business School, UK
Not published
Chapter 3:
Brazilian National Development Bank’ impact on the steel industry’s efficiency: a two-stage Malmquist model usage
Ricardo Kalil Moraes
ricardo.kalil@coppead.ufrj.br
Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil
Peter Fernandes Wanke
peter@coppead.ufrj.br
Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil
Not published
Chapter 4:
New approaches to the analysis of competitiveness in the tourism sector. The necessary balance between growth and respect for the locals
José María Martín Martín
josemaria.martin@unir.net
University of La Rioja, Spain
José Manuel Guaita Martinez
josemanuel.guaita@campusviu.es
Valencian International University, Spain
José Antonio Salinas Fernández
jasalinas@ugr.es
University of Granada, Spain
Domingo Enrique Ribeiro Soriano
domingo.ribeiro@uv.es
Universitat de València, Spain
Not published
Chapter 5:
Internal Barriers to the Brazilian Economy Achieving External Competitiveness
Arilda M. C. Teixeira
arilda@fucape.br
Fucape Business School – Brazil
Emerson Wagner Mainardes
emerson@fucape.br
Fucape Business School – Brazil
Chapter 6:
Technological Innovation and Exports: Effects on Firm Growth
María Jesús Rodríguez-Gulías
maria.gulias@udc.es
Universidade da Coruña, Spain
Sara Fernández-López
sara.fernandez.lopez@usc.es
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain
David Rodeiro-Pazos
david.rodeiro@usc.es
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Chapter 7:
Service Business Growth: A Spinner Model application
Bouchaib Bahli
bahli@ryerson.ca
Ryerson University, Canada
Ronnie Figueiredo
ronnie.andrade@ubi.pt
Research Unit in Business Sciences (NECE), University if Beira Interior, Portugal
Chapter descriptions (Short Abstract)
Chapter 1: Knowledge, innovation and sustainable development in organizations: State-of-the-art
The concept of technology and innovation ecosystem is receiving increasing attention worldwide. Governments and academics are keen to foster innovation ecosystems to systematically cultivate favorable environments and encourage companies to create knowledge and competitive advantage to leverage growth and business value. This chapter attempts to examine the current paradigms, theories and frameworks contributing for our understanding of the technology-innovation-competitiveness linkages of business growth.
Chapter 2: Cross-national teams and the remote management of team members in Indian IT MNCs: The onsite-offshore phenomenon
There is a substantial body of research that has looked at multinational corporations (MNCs) and their evolution into globally integrated networks (Salk and Brannen, 2000) with distributed and transnational teams spanning across multiple geographic, physical, and cultural boundaries (Connaughton and Shuffler, 2007; Earley and Gibson, 2002; Lagerstrom and Andersson, 2003; Schweiger, Atamer and Calori, 2003; Snow, Snell, Davison and Hambrick, 1996). Given this backdrop, there is growing academic interest on learning about the MNC’s use of globally distributed network (GDNs) using cross-national (CNTs) and remote teams (RTs) to manage their foreign operations in host countries (Goodall and Roberts, 2003; Hinds, Liu and Lyon, 2011). However, despite the growing scholarly interest, our understanding of how MNC’s use distributed work (GDW) and cross-national teams has remained very limited due to a lack of contextualised understanding surrounding this issue. This chapter will explore the role of globally distributed work and cross-national teams in a rare breed of MNCs originating from India and operating in the information technology (IT) industry. More particularly, this chapter will examine how Indian MNCs operating in the IT sector use their “onsite-offshore” business model to manage cross-national remote teams within their global network of subsidiaries to achieve international competitiveness. Based on in-depth interviews from senior directors based in the Australian subsidiaries of top five Indian IT MNCs, the findings suggest that Indian MNCs are born-global firms that effectively use their highly skilled, flexible and low-cost talented labour pool available in their home country, and combine it with their “onsite-offshore” business model to achieve international competitive advantage for business growth. The implications of this finding for MNC’s use of CNTs and GDW are further discussed.
Chapter 3: Brazilian National Development Bank’ impact on the steel industry’s efficiency: a two-stage Malmquist model usage
Using a two-stage Malmquist Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA), this
paper aims to evaluate how the Brazilian National Development Bank
(BNDES) impacts the steel industry financial performance, as part of a industrial policy focused on fostering business competitiviness. To do so, a Malmquist Index decomposition and non-linear robust regression is carried out to test the impact from the contextual variables considered. At this index decomposition, technological
innovation can be evaluated by the frontier shift effect. In addition, the catching-up effect shows how fast firms are reducing their technology gap. The research hypothesis of a positive impact on the steel industry performance cannot be supported by the model results, which suggest a negative coefficient on the catching-up effect. A few examples of quantitative research on this theme can be found, but most have a theoretical and qualitative focus. This paper contributes to this field of research by using a settled methodology to identify and measure the efficiency performance of the firms.
Chapter 4: New approaches to the analysis of competitiveness in the tourism sector. The necessary balance between growth and respect for the locals
The tourism industry represents for many countries a key sector in its economic growth. The achievements obtained after years of impulse policies have been very different, and in many occasions, the result is not compatible with the environmental and social sustainability of the environment. In fact, some destinations are beginning to suffer problems arising from the success of policies that have taken precedence over the growth of arrivals. In this context, this chapter reflects on the conditioning factors of competitiveness in the tourism sector. As a novelty, it is proposed to include as a competitiveness factor the social sustainability of tourism development and the commitment of the locals. Without sustainability, there is no long-term project, and within sustainability in the tourism sector, the social aspect has been neglected. As a consequence, competitiveness contributes to business growth in a sustained manner under pillars of innovation.
Chapter 5: Internal Barriers to the Brazilian Economy Achieving External Competitiveness
The Brazilian economy has been stagnant competitive and technologically for at least 30 years because she underestimated: (i) the role of the necessary prerequisites for an innovative environment - quality basic education system; tax and regulatory legislation without restrict the animal spirit of the entrepreneurs; R&D for generation and dissemination of the technical progress, and openness to the foreign market that allows she to complete domestic supply and learn to compete; (ii) the impact of interaction between them to promote a dynamic and thriving business environment. In this sense, it has built an internal environment that is refractory to efficiency, productivity and innovation. The aim of the paper is to point out how it came to this situation, and how the internal factors are inhibiting the constitution of an environment favorable to the technical progress and its immediate by product that is innovation. It will assume both as prerequisites for an economy to achieve the level of efficiency necessary to be competitive in her domestic Market and abroad markets, because competitiveness is the result of a continuous process of structural change; and to accommodate it the markets must meet structural and institutional conditions. It will show that availability of resources is not a sufficient condition for an economy to be developed; and that technological backwardness and competitive deficiency are a matter of choice.
Chapter 6: Technological Innovation and Exports: Effects on Firm Growth
It has been acknowledged that exporting and innovation activities become key performance drivers of firm growth. However, previous research has often neglected the perils of simultaneously developing both activities for resource-constrained firms. In this chapter, using a sample of 3,267 Spanish manufacturing firms over the period 2004 to 2014, we explore whether the effect of exports and technological innovation on firm growth differs depending on firm size.
Chapter 7: Service Business Growth: A Spinner Model application
In general, innovation and technology services are the key factor for business growth. In service innovation, Knowledge-Intensive Business Services (KIBS) develop organizational competencies, creating and transferring knowledge intensive, which is crucial for survival and maintaining competitiveness in the rapid global growth. In this chapter, the effective factor of KIBS in service innovation has been introduced and two economies have been compared. This is a qualitative and quantitative research, using data collected from Web of Science (WOS) and Scopus data bases. The authors conducted an analysis applying the Spinner Model (2019) in an emerging in comparison to a developed country, Brazil and Canada, comparing the three dimensions: knowledge create, knowledge transfer and innovation for business growth. We expect that results can contribute for practitioners and researchers to support business growth using knowledge intensive services.Sérgio J. Teixeira is Assistant Professor and researcher at the Higher Institute of Administration and Languages – ISAL, Portugal He is an integrated member of the Research Unit for Business Sciences (NECE-UBI), Covilhã, and collaborator of the CITUR Research Unit, Leiria, Portugal, and Coordinator of the ISAL Research Center. His research interest includes competitiveness, entrepreneurship and innovation in tourism.
Hussain G. Rammal is Associate Professor of International Business & Strategy at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia. He is co-editor-in-chief of the Review of International Business and Strategy and founding editor of the Emerging Issues in International Business and Global Strategy book series. Hussain’s research interests include knowledge management, service innovation, and internationalization strategies of firms.
Hussain G. Rammal is Associate Professor of International Business & Strategy at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia. He is co-editor-in-chief of the Review of International Business and Strategy and founding editor of the Emerging Issues in International Business and Global Strategy book series. Hussain’s research interests include knowledge management, service innovation, and internationalization strategies of firms.
1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa