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This book addresses the dilemma that firms face in engaging in
corporate social responsibility (CSR) while maintaining a
financially sustainable business model in the era of digital
transformation. Several strategies that firms have taken to
integrate CSR within the business model are also highlighted. To
explicate the problems involved, the book primarily focuses on
entrepreneurial ventures, given their nascent business model that
best illustrates how business leaders can embed the social mission
in the firm at the beginning of organizational founding. In this
age, sustainability is an innovation's new frontier. For
sustainable competitive advantage, the book argues for how
companies can build more sustainable products, processes, and
practices that benefit the firm and society through maintaining an
entrepreneurial philosophy. The target readership consists of
academics, students, and practitioners in the areas of
entrepreneurship, organizational behavior, organizational theory,
and strategic management. This book clarifies the critical
practices of sustainability-oriented innovative firms and creative
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Through a review of
recent trends in CSR, the authors emphasize that CSR is no longer a
"bolt-on" or some kind of window-dressing to satisfy public
relations (PR) needs. Credible CSR is critical to business
legitimacy and sustainability. Aware of the public's increasing
scrutiny, companies are increasingly ramping up their focus on
social responsibility, whether by championing women's rights,
protecting the environment, or attempting to obliterate poverty, on
local, national, or global levels. Simultaneously, more firms face
accusations of "greenwashing" - backlash due to consumer mistrust
in the intentions behind their CSR practices. While numerous works
have highlighted this dilemma and how companies fall short in their
prosocial goals or financial objectives (or both), there is a lack
of understanding of the ingredients and crucial processes required
for the successful implementation of CSR in entrepreneurial
enterprises. This book serves to fill that gap.
This book discusses the ways in which characteristics of innovative
firms and innovative talents with core competence in Japanese,
Korean, German, and American contexts are developed and nurtured,
and compares innovative firms with a long history of business
operations from these four countries. Firstly, the book examines
innovation practices of long-lived Japanese firms and compares them
with those of German, American and Korean firms. Based on extensive
interviews with executives and field studies, it identifies the
essential qualities of each country in which these innovative firms
and innovative talents are found. It then focuses on theoretical
and practical aspects, using the theoretical framework to define
organizational and technological factors for long-term innovation
success. Further, the book provides recommendations based on
organizational practices for developing innovative talents in
Japanese, German, American and Korean contexts. Intended for
academics, students and practitioners in the areas of
organizational theory and strategic management, this book clarifies
the critical practices of long-lived innovative firms and
organizational innovators.
This book provides a framework and real case analyses concerning
business architecture strategy and platform-based ecosystems.
Firstly, the book introduces a framework of business architecture
strategy and suggests an engineering process that employs a
business architecture analysis system in which the various business
best-practices information technology (IT) tools are integrated
into an interface. More specifically, this architecture analysis
provides the means to realize two essential features: a strategy
that allows global firms to sense changing market needs, and a tool
that combines mechanical engineering with electronics and software
IT tools. Secondly, the book discusses platform-based ecosystems.
Crucial issues for today's firms are associated with value creation
through their platform and ecosystem framework. With a major
emphasis on modular product architecture, US firms have focused
heavily on platform development in modular industries. Their base
is operation system (OS) software, so that IT firms in general
focus on software capabilities-and digital control in particular.
In contrast, the advantage for Japanese firms is not digital but
analog control. Without any drastic changes in their industry
practices, Japanese firms are likely to sustain their analog
platform advantage. The book subsequently puts forward a holistic
view through the connection of business architecture strategy and
platform-based ecosystems. The theoretical framework and case
illustrations are especially useful to firms involved in a variety
of industries that must respond to the turbulent environmental
changes of the digital era. Most of the cases target not only
Japanese firms but also many other global firms. Readers are
systematically shown how to balance technological competence and
customer competence by using the framework of business architecture
strategy and platform-based ecosystems.
This book offers a systematic literature review and a set of
empirical studies on supply chain integration. Supply chain
management is recognized as an essential means for firms to achieve
competitive advantages, in which supply chain integration is
regarded as the core for operational excellence: shorter lead time,
lower inventory, faster delivery, and higher product and service
quality. Using data from an international survey of manufacturing
firms, an interrelated set of studies that investigate supply chain
integration from different perspectives at multiple levels are
conducted. Intra-organizational factors such as products,
production systems, and socio-technical systems are examined to
understand their effects on supply chain integration, indicating
that firms need to implement different types of supply chain
integration for specific competitive priorities. Then, the outcomes
of supply chain integration, including its impact on risk
management and sustainability management, are investigated from an
inter-organizational perspective. The firm is embedded in a
manufacturing network, a global supply chain, or both, and it can
use supply chain integration as a strategic action for risks.
Sustainability has been a vital issue for manufacturers, and supply
chain integration can enhance its success. This book makes
significant contributions to the relevant literature on supply
chain integration and offers insights to supply chain managers in
manufacturing industries.
This book provides an overview of evolving patterns of trade
partnership with historical perspective. It presents changing
requirements of industry competitiveness and explains the vital
relationships between trade partnerships and industry
competitiveness. As well, it further examines the interactive
relationships between trade partnerships and industry
competitiveness. In recent years, with decreasing strategic
alliances among nations and less visibility of international
governance mechanisms (e.g., WTO) and counter to globalization,
preferential trade agreements and free-trade agreements have
proliferated among nations. At the same time, industrial
competitiveness is becoming a serious strategic policy priority of
nations-both advanced and emerging economies. Theoretical
discussion focuses on the practices of global network capabilities
for the top of the pyramid (ToP) and base of the pyramid (BoP).
Special focus is on trade partnerships and industry competitiveness
in the Asian economies (China, Japan, South Korea, India,
Indonesia), three ASEAN nations (Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia),
and Mexico. Extensive industry and firm-level case studies discuss
ToP and BoP interface capabilities in the form of manufacturing and
services life-cycle management, which extends value creation and
delivery of manufacturing and services. This extension integrates
the cloud ecosystem, such as timely data/information/knowledge
flows via the virtual world; and ground value chains, such as the
flow of complex real goods and services in the visible world.
Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRIC) are among the largest and
fastest-growing economies in the world. The enormous size of the
customer base in these emerging markets is the strategic concern of
global business firms. Successful market performance in these
markets requires sound understanding of dynamic environmental
factors and timely investment of appropriate resources. This book
presents strategies for recognizing the challenges and optimizing
the opportunities for building network capabilities and competitive
advantage within the context of these emerging markets. Building
Network Capabilities in Turbulent Competitive Environments provides
a thorough review of the literature and an unparalleled abundance
of fascinating case studies featuring Japanese, Korean, and
indigenous business examples. To gather real-world information,
research teams made numerous field visits to many firms in the BRIC
markets to meet and interview executives and observe their
manufacturing and supply chain practices. The information in this
book is presented within a fully formulated theoretical framework
of three core competencies: technology competence (capability to
offer innovative products that fit these markets), customer
competence (capability to understand and satisfy different customer
needs), and linkage competence (ability to integrate technology and
customer competence). The book also covers the concepts of product
architecture and supply chain management to provide a more in-depth
analysis of global firms operating in BRIC markets.
This book addresses the dilemma that firms face in engaging in
corporate social responsibility (CSR) while maintaining a
financially sustainable business model in the era of digital
transformation. Several strategies that firms have taken to
integrate CSR within the business model are also highlighted. To
explicate the problems involved, the book primarily focuses on
entrepreneurial ventures, given their nascent business model that
best illustrates how business leaders can embed the social mission
in the firm at the beginning of organizational founding. In this
age, sustainability is an innovation's new frontier. For
sustainable competitive advantage, the book argues for how
companies can build more sustainable products, processes, and
practices that benefit the firm and society through maintaining an
entrepreneurial philosophy. The target readership consists of
academics, students, and practitioners in the areas of
entrepreneurship, organizational behavior, organizational theory,
and strategic management. This book clarifies the critical
practices of sustainability-oriented innovative firms and creative
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Through a review of
recent trends in CSR, the authors emphasize that CSR is no longer a
"bolt-on" or some kind of window-dressing to satisfy public
relations (PR) needs. Credible CSR is critical to business
legitimacy and sustainability. Aware of the public's increasing
scrutiny, companies are increasingly ramping up their focus on
social responsibility, whether by championing women's rights,
protecting the environment, or attempting to obliterate poverty, on
local, national, or global levels. Simultaneously, more firms face
accusations of "greenwashing" - backlash due to consumer mistrust
in the intentions behind their CSR practices. While numerous works
have highlighted this dilemma and how companies fall short in their
prosocial goals or financial objectives (or both), there is a lack
of understanding of the ingredients and crucial processes required
for the successful implementation of CSR in entrepreneurial
enterprises. This book serves to fill that gap.
This book provides an overview of evolving patterns of trade
partnership with historical perspective. It presents changing
requirements of industry competitiveness and explains the vital
relationships between trade partnerships and industry
competitiveness. As well, it further examines the interactive
relationships between trade partnerships and industry
competitiveness. In recent years, with decreasing strategic
alliances among nations and less visibility of international
governance mechanisms (e.g., WTO) and counter to globalization,
preferential trade agreements and free-trade agreements have
proliferated among nations. At the same time, industrial
competitiveness is becoming a serious strategic policy priority of
nations-both advanced and emerging economies. Theoretical
discussion focuses on the practices of global network capabilities
for the top of the pyramid (ToP) and base of the pyramid (BoP).
Special focus is on trade partnerships and industry competitiveness
in the Asian economies (China, Japan, South Korea, India,
Indonesia), three ASEAN nations (Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia),
and Mexico. Extensive industry and firm-level case studies discuss
ToP and BoP interface capabilities in the form of manufacturing and
services life-cycle management, which extends value creation and
delivery of manufacturing and services. This extension integrates
the cloud ecosystem, such as timely data/information/knowledge
flows via the virtual world; and ground value chains, such as the
flow of complex real goods and services in the visible world.
This book provides a framework and real case analyses concerning
business architecture strategy and platform-based ecosystems.
Firstly, the book introduces a framework of business architecture
strategy and suggests an engineering process that employs a
business architecture analysis system in which the various business
best-practices information technology (IT) tools are integrated
into an interface. More specifically, this architecture analysis
provides the means to realize two essential features: a strategy
that allows global firms to sense changing market needs, and a tool
that combines mechanical engineering with electronics and software
IT tools. Secondly, the book discusses platform-based ecosystems.
Crucial issues for today's firms are associated with value creation
through their platform and ecosystem framework. With a major
emphasis on modular product architecture, US firms have focused
heavily on platform development in modular industries. Their base
is operation system (OS) software, so that IT firms in general
focus on software capabilities-and digital control in particular.
In contrast, the advantage for Japanese firms is not digital but
analog control. Without any drastic changes in their industry
practices, Japanese firms are likely to sustain their analog
platform advantage. The book subsequently puts forward a holistic
view through the connection of business architecture strategy and
platform-based ecosystems. The theoretical framework and case
illustrations are especially useful to firms involved in a variety
of industries that must respond to the turbulent environmental
changes of the digital era. Most of the cases target not only
Japanese firms but also many other global firms. Readers are
systematically shown how to balance technological competence and
customer competence by using the framework of business architecture
strategy and platform-based ecosystems.
This book deals with the importance of ambidexterity in innovation
activities and global strategies. Ambidextrous global strategy
(AGS) is crucial for global firms in the turbulent twenty-first
century. Here, AGS is defined as simultaneous achievements of
global integration and local adaptation, or responsiveness, through
utilization of a firm's core facilities and organizational
capabilities. To illustrate the specific implementation mechanism,
a framework of AGS with global market strategy and organizational
capability is shown for the purpose of analysis. There is also a
focus on effective ambidextrous business strategies for the digital
transformation era. Distinctive features of the book include,
first, a framework of ambidextrous innovation and AGS. Second,
there are analyses of examples of many industries to implement
ambidexterity strategies, including Korean shipbuilding firms,
Korean and Japanese steel firms, LCD panel flat-glass
manufacturers, Japan's trucking industry, agricultural
corporations, and other Japanese manufacturing firms. Finally, the
book focuses on effective ambidextrous business strategies for the
digital transformation era with the integration of open and closed
innovation. The book presents specific business strategies for
survival in the digital transformation era and then suggests an
architectural analysis using artificial intelligence (AI) for the
realization of AGS. The target readership is made up of academics,
students, and practitioners in the areas of global management,
organizational theory, and strategic management. Especially for
those readers, the book clarifies the critical practices and
business strategies of innovative global firms in the era of
digital transformation.
Since the start of the recent financial crisis, as most global
firms struggle to remain competitive, an increasing number of
Korean and Japanese firms have experienced an amazing rate of
growth and expansion. Although academic researchers and business
leaders in the United States, China, Brazil, India, and Europe seek
out the secrets to these businesses' success, little is known about
their business practices. Supplying an insider's perspective,
Building Network Capabilities in Turbulent Competitive
Environments: Practices of Global Firms from Korea and Japan
unveils the strategic and operational practices that have allowed
these firms to catch and surpass their competitors in North America
and Europe. Based on fieldwork studies and extensive interviews
with senior executives, it explains how these companies have
developed and enhanced their core competencies through effective
integration of product architecture, supply chain management, and
IT strategy. The book provides practical insight into changing
business patterns while avoiding extensive mathematical algorithms
and drawn-out theoretical descriptions. It uses cutting-edge case
studies to illustrate the innovative manufacturing strategies of
these rapidly emerging companies. Accessible to anyone with a basic
understanding of business, it reveals the organizational processes
of strategy formulation and implementation that are required for
success. Providing a clear understanding of both the career
implications of the changing business landscape and how to deliver
products and services that meet and exceed the needs of your
customers, this book will help you develop the socio-technical
skills needed to succeed in an increasingly competitive and
turbulent business environment.
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