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This two-volume edited work explores how businesses shape, and are
shaped by, sustainability forces and phenomena. Major global
developments are inexorably being led by a sustainability agenda,
which, in itself constitutes an integral part of business
evolution. And as context shapes content, shifts in society have
gradually given rise to new regulations, new types of markets,
environmental-excellence criteria for businesses, new economic
standards, and a wide range of green technologies. Reflecting the
purpose of the series, both volumes offer a cross-section of
multi-disciplinary perspectives within business studies. Volume 1
focuses on strategic and managerial approaches to sustainability in
business, including accounts on the historic origins of
sustainability and its contemporary corporate sustainable models.
Volume 2 explores, more contextually, how business and social
sustainability constitute indivisible and inextricable components
of the same nexus. Taken together, they offer an original
perspective on how businesses can help achieve the SDG goals and
targets.
From recurring episodes of great depression, oil crises, political
crises, wars, debt crises, to the ongoing climate change, there is
a constant pressure on businesses to cope with critical events.
However, throughout history, crises have been pivotal in advancing
businesses and societies. This contributed volume approaches crisis
not simply as a source of problems, but also as a set of choices.
It seeks to explore critical events as possible opportunities for
sustainability, through process improvement, creativity, innovation
and entrepreneurship. Chapters reveal that times of crisis provide
opportunities for new start-ups, creativity, resilience,
organisational change, and revitalisation. This book also
emphasises the importance of sustainability, driven either by the
market or as a response to critical events. Within the wider
attempt to explore avenues for Innovation, Entrepreneurship and
Sustainability at times of crisis, the book is loosely organised in
three thematic sections: organisational responses to crisis;
digitisation, and how technology facilitates or hinders
sustainability under conditions of crisis; and SMEs, Family Firms
(FF), Entrepreneurship, which explores how critical events offer
opportunities for innovation.
Crises present significant challenges for organizations. But, while
critical events are inevitable, not every business is sufficiently
equipped for when things don't go according to plan. This book
focuses on business under crisis conditions, along with
organizational responses and adaptation. Adaptation can be seen as
a learning process. It encompasses meaningful ways that help
companies sustain their viability over the long term. Companies
that respond quickly, often achieve more than just surviving. Some
organizations will learn from a crisis, develop reactive
resilience, and emerge stronger from the period of turbulence. They
will be able to explore possibilities and create new patterns of
relationships. Bringing together descriptive and prescriptive
research studies, chapters explore adaptation in different sectors,
including public health, tourism, garment, Information Technology,
high-tech companies, global trade networks, hospitality, security
and the social sector. Ultimately, the book covers wide range of
topics, linking strategy, entrepreneurship, and leadership to
reciprocal organizational adaptations that help us delineate
crisis, as well as its interconnections in differing settings.
This book examines businesses under crisis conditions through a
composition of contextual accounts. The Editors argue that crises
are transformative, evolutionary and even revolutionary in the
development of organizations, industries and markets. Moreover,
crises reform the context in which organizations operate, including
customers and their behaviour. As such, they need to be viewed as
conduits to change, accelerators of evolution and catalysts of
innovation in organizations. Emphasising the importance of
'context' and its complexities, the book argues that for crisis, as
a concept and notion, context is crucial to any understanding of
the meaning that should or could be attached to it. Drawing on
different types of changes and crises that substantially affect
business, including economic, technological, political, and
environmental, chapters Bringing together scientific research and
case studies on contextual transformations, the book provides a
balanced selection of works across business disciplines, including
management, strategy, marketing and finance as well as geographic
regions, market types and industries. The book examines the context
of crises, its indicators and triggers, and encompasses topics such
as Artificial Intelligence, e-mobility, changes in consumption
patterns, militancy and the impact of pandemics.
Triple Bottom Line (TBL or 3BL) was coined as a wide and inspiring
approach for businesses aimed at understanding how to create, track
and manage economic, social, and environmental value added. The
sustainability sector is strongly increasing its relevance among
academics and practitioners, and the market opportunities
associated with the Sustainable Development Goals are estimated in
over $ 12 trillion per year by 2030. Although this is a promising
context, a recent article suggested a rethinking of the TBL,
arguing that sustainability goals' value should not be assessed in
terms of profit and loss, but of people wellbeing and planet
health, looking for a societal profit. Technology plays a crucial
role in our society. Respectively, the Agenda 21 and the Paris
Agreement consider technology to be essential in the pursue of the
sustainable development and the achievement of the SDGs. Adding to
this, the Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the adoption of digital
solution in several field, from the way of working to the way of
buying and consuming. Companies are becoming more aware of the
responsibility they have with the environmental and human context,
and people are looking for a work reflecting their values and
purposes to motive them. This book aims to contribute to the
understanding on the role of technology and its emerging and
innovative solutions in the achievement of a sustainable
development while making profit. It will be of value to
researchers, academics, practitioners, and students in the fields
of strategic management, entrepreneurship, management of technology
and innovation, and sustainable development.
There has been growing interest on business models among academics
and practitioners in recent years, as business model describes how
an organization creates, distributes and captures value and,
therefore, can be considered the DNA of the organization. Recently,
factors related to digital transformation, the vital role of
sustainability and social aspects, along with an increasing
globalization, have pushed towards radical transformations in
business models. This book aims to further our knowledge on
business model innovation in new contexts of analysis and with new
perspectives of investigation. Insights from business model
innovation are presented from studies focusing on start-ups, small
businesses and large businesses to provide a bigger picture on new
dynamics connected to digital transformation, sustainability, new
global relationships. As such, the scope is on new ways to create
value, new components and dynamics (such as digitalization and
sustainability) concerning the key elements of the business model
(value creation, value configuration and value capture), and new
relationships between actors that may foster business model
innovation. It represents a valuable resource for practitioners
willing to innovate business models, academics aiming at finding
new research lines, and students keen to learn more about business
models.
This book explores how contemporary organisations are abandoning
conventional tactics in order to survive and grow in an incessantly
shifting business landscape, analysing fundamental aspects of
management, marketing and strategy from an interdisciplinary
perspective. Focusing on the paradigms of neuro-marketing,
innovative change management, motivational creativity, and customer
data management, to name a few, the authors provide practical
learning outcomes which reflect how organisations are seeking to
adopt innovative means to innovative ends, targeting capacity
building in multiple ways. Ultimately, this edited collection
implicitly defines an organisational philosophy that incorporates
functionality, but also embraces business notions pertaining to
wider contextual transformations and environmental developments.
Theoretical and practical contributions highlight the importance of
multidisciplinary research to practical business success, making
this book an invaluable read to both scholars and business
executives.
SMEs are significant job creators and drivers of innovation and
competition in most economic sectors. Furthermore, the traditional
constraints of small and medium enterprises, such as geographic
operations, are now being dissolved by technological developments.
This means that there are new opportunities for SMEs, and their
fundamental principles are being redefined: the aims, competencies,
strategy, management, practice, and scope of these businesses are
changing, with wide-ranging implications. This is the first part of
a two volume work that incorporates scientific chapters on SME
business theory and practice. Authors provide a balanced
perspective of the present and future of SMEs across all business
disciplines, including management, strategy, marketing, economics,
and finance. While Volume II explores external issues such as
contextual forces, the effects of the financial crisis, and
macro-economic effects, this first volume focuses on the individual
SME and internal issues such as innovation, quality, and
digitization.
This cross-disciplinary business book develops insight into the
management of businesses operating in various economic sectors that
take a proactive approach to the triple dimension of sustainability
(economic, social and environmental), positioning itself as a key
reference for both academics and practitioners in the wide area of
business management. The concept of sustainability is today at the
heart of international policies and debate, and plays a key role in
deep changes to the organizational models of companies operating in
a wide range of sectors of economic activity. In particular, this
book aims to gain a deeper understanding of how stakeholder
engagement can contribute to value co-creation both in the company
and along the supply chain, and what distinguishes the differing
involvement of stakeholders, in particular between public
involvement and stakeholder participation. Each chapter of this
book presents different modalities of stakeholder involvement and
develops the concept of value co-creation from organizational and
marketing perspectives. This book is recommended reading for those
interested in the fields of stakeholder engagement and theory,
sustainability, business studies, and sustainable development.
Diverse kinds of knowledge are vital for each organization that
would successfully compete today in an international scenario. The
emergent relevance of knowledge and its management in an even more
complex environment opens up the possibility to analyze,
investigate and deepen our understanding on different aspects
related to several functional areas in business management.
Nowadays, firms that create new knowledge and apply it effectively
and efficiently will be successful at creating competitive
advantages. The choices of the firms in selecting and applying
different knowledge process (such as knowledge sourcing,
transferring and exploiting) as well as knowledge tools may be
crucial. Thus, the role of knowledge as the key source of potential
advantage for organizations and indeed whole economies is still a
hot debate in the international landscape. This book develops
insights for the management of knowledge in cross-functional
business areas to originate an innovative approach to the classical
Knowledge Management (KM) field. This book provides a fresh
perspective on different knowledge related topics in an
international landscape, highlighting the key role of knowledge and
its management in business activities. Overall, the primary aim of
this book is to extend our understandings on how KM can be helpful
in several cross-functional management areas, such as strategic
management, finance, HRM and innovation as well as in different
business circumstances such as M&A, internationalization
processes and risk management.
This book extends our understanding of how different cross-
functional business and management disciplines, such as innovation
and entrepreneurship, strategic management, marketing and HRM,
individually and collectively underpin innovation in business
management. Business Models for Strategic Innovation develops
insights from cross-disciplinary business knowledge streams and
their cutting edge discipline-specific practical implications to
create a cross- functional business innovation management model.
Novel cross- disciplinary knowledge plays an imperative role in
business innovation and we know that innovative management
processes have significant implications for effective cross-
functional management. In this context, each chapter of the book
presents fresh insights on diverse business knowledge- streams as
well as their applied implications on cross- functional business
innovation management. Finally, centred on these cross-
disciplinary business theories and their cutting edge implications,
the last chapter of this book proposes a model of strategic cross-
functional business innovation management process. This
academically rigorous work uses innovative theoretical propositions
and state- of- the- art empirical analysis in order to enable
cross- functional management teams to support organisation- wide
business innovation processes.
This cross-disciplinary business book develops insight into the
management of businesses operating in various economic sectors that
take a proactive approach to the triple dimension of sustainability
(economic, social and environmental), positioning itself as a key
reference for both academics and practitioners in the wide area of
business management. The concept of sustainability is today at the
heart of international policies and debate, and plays a key role in
deep changes to the organizational models of companies operating in
a wide range of sectors of economic activity. In particular, this
book aims to gain a deeper understanding of how stakeholder
engagement can contribute to value co-creation both in the company
and along the supply chain, and what distinguishes the differing
involvement of stakeholders, in particular between public
involvement and stakeholder participation. Each chapter of this
book presents different modalities of stakeholder involvement and
develops the concept of value co-creation from organizational and
marketing perspectives. This book is recommended reading for those
interested in the fields of stakeholder engagement and theory,
sustainability, business studies, and sustainable development.
Diverse kinds of knowledge are vital for each organization that
would successfully compete today in an international scenario. The
emergent relevance of knowledge and its management in an even more
complex environment opens up the possibility to analyze,
investigate and deepen our understanding on different aspects
related to several functional areas in business management.
Nowadays, firms that create new knowledge and apply it effectively
and efficiently will be successful at creating competitive
advantages. The choices of the firms in selecting and applying
different knowledge process (such as knowledge sourcing,
transferring and exploiting) as well as knowledge tools may be
crucial. Thus, the role of knowledge as the key source of potential
advantage for organizations and indeed whole economies is still a
hot debate in the international landscape. This book develops
insights for the management of knowledge in cross-functional
business areas to originate an innovative approach to the classical
Knowledge Management (KM) field. This book provides a fresh
perspective on different knowledge related topics in an
international landscape, highlighting the key role of knowledge and
its management in business activities. Overall, the primary aim of
this book is to extend our understandings on how KM can be helpful
in several cross-functional management areas, such as strategic
management, finance, HRM and innovation as well as in different
business circumstances such as M&A, internationalization
processes and risk management.
This textbook provides students with comprehensive insights on the
classical and contemporary marketing theories and their practical
implications. A fourth, revised edition of Marketing Management,
the text features new classical and contemporary cases, new
interdisciplinary and cross-functional implications of business
management theories, contemporary marketing management principles
and. futuristic application of marketing management theories and
concepts. The core and complex issues are presented in a simplified
manner providing students with a stimulating learning experience
that enables critical thinking, understanding and future
application. Each chapter features a chapter summary, key terms,
review and discussion questions and a practice quiz. Throughout the
text there are also specific teaching features to provide students
and instructors with an enhanced pedagogical experience. These
features include: The Manager's Corner: These sections provide
real-world examples that instructors may highlight to exemplify
theory or as mini-cases for discussion. Marketing in Action: These
sections ask students to apply concepts and theories to actual
business situations. Web Exercises: These mini sections provide
students with real world issues and suggest websites for more
information. In addition, the authors provide ancillary lecture
notes and Solution/Instructors manual online to aid instructors in
their teaching activities.
This book extends our understanding of how different cross-
functional business and management disciplines, such as innovation
and entrepreneurship, strategic management, marketing and HRM,
individually and collectively underpin innovation in business
management. Business Models for Strategic Innovation develops
insights from cross-disciplinary business knowledge streams and
their cutting edge discipline-specific practical implications to
create a cross- functional business innovation management model.
Novel cross- disciplinary knowledge plays an imperative role in
business innovation and we know that innovative management
processes have significant implications for effective cross-
functional management. In this context, each chapter of the book
presents fresh insights on diverse business knowledge- streams as
well as their applied implications on cross- functional business
innovation management. Finally, centred on these cross-
disciplinary business theories and their cutting edge implications,
the last chapter of this book proposes a model of strategic cross-
functional business innovation management process. This
academically rigorous work uses innovative theoretical propositions
and state- of- the- art empirical analysis in order to enable
cross- functional management teams to support organisation- wide
business innovation processes.
The lack of congruence between theory and practice in business
remains a widely discussed topic. This lack of synergy is quietly
and elusively becoming the Achilles' heel of contemporary scholarly
business research and, by extension, of business in general.
Focusing on the deviation of means and ends between business theory
and practice, this book comprises thirteen chapters, which present
an array of theoretical and geographical contexts, and aim to bring
scholarly thinking and scientific analysis together with managerial
rationale and practical applications. Presenting valuable insights
and demonstrating an equalised perception of the theorisation of
practice, and reversely, the practicality of theory, this
innovative book signifies a new philosophy of scientific work and
provides thought-provoking reading for scholars in a range of
business sub-disciplines.
There has been growing interest on business models among academics
and practitioners in recent years, as business model describes how
an organization creates, distributes and captures value and,
therefore, can be considered the DNA of the organization. Recently,
factors related to digital transformation, the vital role of
sustainability and social aspects, along with an increasing
globalization, have pushed towards radical transformations in
business models. This book aims to further our knowledge on
business model innovation in new contexts of analysis and with new
perspectives of investigation. Insights from business model
innovation are presented from studies focusing on start-ups, small
businesses and large businesses to provide a bigger picture on new
dynamics connected to digital transformation, sustainability, new
global relationships. As such, the scope is on new ways to create
value, new components and dynamics (such as digitalization and
sustainability) concerning the key elements of the business model
(value creation, value configuration and value capture), and new
relationships between actors that may foster business model
innovation. It represents a valuable resource for practitioners
willing to innovate business models, academics aiming at finding
new research lines, and students keen to learn more about business
models.
This book examines businesses under crisis conditions through a
composition of contextual accounts. The Editors argue that crises
are transformative, evolutionary and even revolutionary in the
development of organizations, industries and markets. Moreover,
crises reform the context in which organizations operate, including
customers and their behaviour. As such, they need to be viewed as
conduits to change, accelerators of evolution and catalysts of
innovation in organizations. Emphasising the importance of
'context' and its complexities, the book argues that for crisis, as
a concept and notion, context is crucial to any understanding of
the meaning that should or could be attached to it. Drawing on
different types of changes and crises that substantially affect
business, including economic, technological, political, and
environmental, chapters Bringing together scientific research and
case studies on contextual transformations, the book provides a
balanced selection of works across business disciplines, including
management, strategy, marketing and finance as well as geographic
regions, market types and industries. The book examines the context
of crises, its indicators and triggers, and encompasses topics such
as Artificial Intelligence, e-mobility, changes in consumption
patterns, militancy and the impact of pandemics.
From recurring episodes of great depression, oil crises, political
crises, wars, debt crises, to the ongoing climate change, there is
a constant pressure on businesses to cope with critical events.
However, throughout history, crises have been pivotal in advancing
businesses and societies. This contributed volume approaches crisis
not simply as a source of problems, but also as a set of choices.
It seeks to explore critical events as possible opportunities for
sustainability, through process improvement, creativity, innovation
and entrepreneurship. Chapters reveal that times of crisis provide
opportunities for new start-ups, creativity, resilience,
organisational change, and revitalisation. This book also
emphasises the importance of sustainability, driven either by the
market or as a response to critical events. Within the wider
attempt to explore avenues for Innovation, Entrepreneurship and
Sustainability at times of crisis, the book is loosely organised in
three thematic sections: organisational responses to crisis;
digitisation, and how technology facilitates or hinders
sustainability under conditions of crisis; and SMEs, Family Firms
(FF), Entrepreneurship, which explores how critical events offer
opportunities for innovation.
Crises present significant challenges for organizations. But, while
critical events are inevitable, not every business is sufficiently
equipped for when things don't go according to plan. This book
focuses on business under crisis conditions, along with
organizational responses and adaptation. Adaptation can be seen as
a learning process. It encompasses meaningful ways that help
companies sustain their viability over the long term. Companies
that respond quickly, often achieve more than just surviving. Some
organizations will learn from a crisis, develop reactive
resilience, and emerge stronger from the period of turbulence. They
will be able to explore possibilities and create new patterns of
relationships. Bringing together descriptive and prescriptive
research studies, chapters explore adaptation in different sectors,
including public health, tourism, garment, Information Technology,
high-tech companies, global trade networks, hospitality, security
and the social sector. Ultimately, the book covers wide range of
topics, linking strategy, entrepreneurship, and leadership to
reciprocal organizational adaptations that help us delineate
crisis, as well as its interconnections in differing settings.
SMEs are significant job creators and drivers of innovation and
competition in most economic sectors. Furthermore, the traditional
constraints of small and medium enterprises, such as geographic
operations, are now being dissolved by technological developments.
This means that there are new opportunities for SMEs, and their
fundamental principles are being redefined: the aims, competencies,
strategy, management, practice, and scope of these businesses are
changing, with wide-ranging implications. This is the first part of
a two volume work that incorporates scientific chapters on SME
business theory and practice. Authors provide a balanced
perspective of the present and future of SMEs across all business
disciplines, including management, strategy, marketing, economics,
and finance. While Volume II explores external issues such as
contextual forces, the effects of the financial crisis, and
macro-economic effects, this first volume focuses on the individual
SME and internal issues such as innovation, quality, and
digitization.
The lack of congruence between theory and practice in business
remains a widely discussed topic. This lack of synergy is quietly
and elusively becoming the Achilles' heel of contemporary scholarly
business research and, by extension, of business in general.
Focusing on the deviation of means and ends between business theory
and practice, this book comprises thirteen chapters, which present
an array of theoretical and geographical contexts, and aim to bring
scholarly thinking and scientific analysis together with managerial
rationale and practical applications. Presenting valuable insights
and demonstrating an equalised perception of the theorisation of
practice, and reversely, the practicality of theory, this
innovative book signifies a new philosophy of scientific work and
provides thought-provoking reading for scholars in a range of
business sub-disciplines.
This book explores how contemporary organisations are abandoning
conventional tactics in order to survive and grow in an incessantly
shifting business landscape, analysing fundamental aspects of
management, marketing and strategy from an interdisciplinary
perspective. Focusing on the paradigms of neuro-marketing,
innovative change management, motivational creativity, and customer
data management, to name a few, the authors provide practical
learning outcomes which reflect how organisations are seeking to
adopt innovative means to innovative ends, targeting capacity
building in multiple ways. Ultimately, this edited collection
implicitly defines an organisational philosophy that incorporates
functionality, but also embraces business notions pertaining to
wider contextual transformations and environmental developments.
Theoretical and practical contributions highlight the importance of
multidisciplinary research to practical business success, making
this book an invaluable read to both scholars and business
executives.
This two-volume edited collection explores the impact of technology
on business advancement. Technology is a multifaceted and
multidimensional phenomenon, carrying opportunities and risks.
Business advancement therefore, can no longer be considered without
technological mediation. Volume I offers insights into
technological improvements in the field of global marketing.
Covering topics such as mobile banking, social media and
neuromarketing tools, the book examines how technology diffusion
drives, negates and facilitates change in marketing processes.
Volume II, on the other hand, focuses on the implications of
changing technology on work and employment. Taken together, the
books move forward the study of organizations and technology and
are ideal resources for students and researchers.
This two-volume edited collection explores the impact of technology
on business advancement. Technology is a multifaceted and
multidimensional phenomenon, carrying opportunities and risks.
Business advancement therefore, can no longer be considered without
technological mediation. While Volume I offers insights into
technological improvements in the field of global marketing, Volume
II focuses on the implications of changing technology on work and
employment. It covers topics such as the role of technology in
change management, digital transformation, and the impact of AI on
employment. Taken together, the books move forward the study of
organizations and technology and are ideal resources for business
students and researchers.
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