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This book showcases how the latest and most advanced types of
analytical modeling and empirical analysis can help to create value
in the global supply chain. Focusing on practical relevance, it
shares valuable management insights and addresses key issues in
operations management (OM), demonstrating how past research has led
to various practices and impacts, while also exploring the
aspirations of the latest research. It presents current research on
various topics such as global supply chain design, service supply
chains, product design, responsible supply chains, performance and
incentives in operations, data analytics in health services, new
business models in the digital age, and new digital technology
advances such as blockchain. In addition, it presents practical
case studies on the aforementioned topics. Beyond the value of its
contents, the book is intended as a tribute to Professor Morris
Cohen, who has been a major contributor to advancing the research
frontier in operations management and a driving force in shaping
the field. Given its scope, the book will appeal to a wide
readership, from researchers and PhD students to practitioners and
consultants.
Shared value is a management strategy in which companies find
business opportunities in social problems. While philanthropy and
CSR focus efforts focus on "giving back" or minimizing the harm
business has on society, shared value focuses company leaders on
maximizing the competitive value of solving social problems in new
customers and markets, cost savings, talent retention, and more.
This book takes the concept of shared value to the next level, with
the concept of "Me to We" (also abbreviated as "M2W") and discusses
the current state of the business-environment-government
relationship and shows how the shared value model can contribute to
each entity. Citing real cases and examples from multiple
industries, the authors show that shared value promotes shareholder
interests while serving as a successful business strategy. Chapters
explore the emerging phenomenon of shared value, the
shareholder-stakeholder comparisons, the role of government in the
stakeholder environment, shared value as it related to
competitiveness, and operational issues such as implementation,
communication, and leadership in their relationship to shared
value. Readers will find useful strategies of Me to We and its
implementation by firms that have become leaders in their market.
They will receive ideas and insights into business strategies that
will overshadow CSR activities as a differentiation or brand
development strategy of the past. Featuring interviews with
corporate executives offering their perspectives on shared value,
this book will discuss shared value within the context of business
and society, competitiveness, and globalization.
Shared value is a management strategy in which companies find
business opportunities in social problems. While philanthropy and
CSR focus efforts focus on "giving back" or minimizing the harm
business has on society, shared value focuses company leaders on
maximizing the competitive value of solving social problems in new
customers and markets, cost savings, talent retention, and more.
This book takes the concept of shared value to the next level, with
the concept of "Me to We" (also abbreviated as "M2W") and discusses
the current state of the business-environment-government
relationship and shows how the shared value model can contribute to
each entity. Citing real cases and examples from multiple
industries, the authors show that shared value promotes shareholder
interests while serving as a successful business strategy. Chapters
explore the emerging phenomenon of shared value, the
shareholder-stakeholder comparisons, the role of government in the
stakeholder environment, shared value as it related to
competitiveness, and operational issues such as implementation,
communication, and leadership in their relationship to shared
value. Readers will find useful strategies of Me to We and its
implementation by firms that have become leaders in their market.
They will receive ideas and insights into business strategies that
will overshadow CSR activities as a differentiation or brand
development strategy of the past. Featuring interviews with
corporate executives offering their perspectives on shared value,
this book will discuss shared value within the context of business
and society, competitiveness, and globalization.
This book argues that three powerful symbiotic forces
(globalization, competitiveness, and governability) are disrupting
business in the 21st century, resulting in an impact on the
economic and business environment far greater than the effects of
any of these three individually. Both globalization and
competitiveness are governed essentially by market forces that
force the introduction of significant changes aimed at increasing
efficiency so that a better use may be made of the advantages of
globalization (i.e., the traditional "invisible" hand).
Responsibility for bringing about these changes lies not only with
the private sector but also with the government (i.e., the
"visible" hand). Readers will find in this book an explanation of
how globalization, competitiveness, and governability define the
context of global business.
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Hedda Gabler
Henrik Ibsen
Hardcover
R1,431
Discovery Miles 14 310
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