98,004 research outputs found

    Influence of sustainability practices and green image on the re-visit intention of small and medium-size towns

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    This study set a model to predict the e ect of corporate social responsibility and green image on visit intention in small and medium-size towns (SMST). At present, there is a keen social awareness towards environmental problems, and cities are required to reduce their ecological footprint and make more sustainable use of natural resources. Increasingly, tourists are considering “green options” in their decision making. The questionnaire responses, obtained from a sample of 221 tourism in Malaga town (Spain) were analyzed using a Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) to test the research hypothesis related to the positive influence of sustainability practices, green image, trust with the intention of revisiting related to the loyalty of the destination. This study shows that there is a positive relationship between sustainability practices and re-visit intention and between the green image and re-visit intention, both directly and indirectly, through trust. Also, the fact that this relationship is more significant if it is part of the green image than if it is part of sustainability actions. To practice, this study provides managerial implications to help executives adopt green actions, thanks to their positive e ects on tourist loyalty and the di erent way of manifesting this loyalty.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    A phenomenological study of the impact of knowledge intensity and environmental velocity on in source or hosted contact centres.

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    Contact centres exist in order to focus the final step of the intra organisational value chain which then delivers optimalcustomer satisfaction. In this paper we analyse a centre with a view to investigating the impact of outsourcing or the inhouselocus of provision. Such centres exhibit agency/principal characteristics, bringing knowledge management into sharp focus, aspects of information intensity which impact on the organisational dynamics, and the learning of the employees. A phenomenological approach to determine the essence of the activities was deployed rather than a methodological initiative based post positivistic strategic analysis. The characteristics of contact centres investigated coalesce into two distinct categories; a framework to depict this is presented

    Semantic discovery and reuse of business process patterns

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    Patterns currently play an important role in modern information systems (IS) development and their use has mainly been restricted to the design and implementation phases of the development lifecycle. Given the increasing significance of business modelling in IS development, patterns have the potential of providing a viable solution for promoting reusability of recurrent generalized models in the very early stages of development. As a statement of research-in-progress this paper focuses on business process patterns and proposes an initial methodological framework for the discovery and reuse of business process patterns within the IS development lifecycle. The framework borrows ideas from the domain engineering literature and proposes the use of semantics to drive both the discovery of patterns as well as their reuse

    Government response to the Bristol University report on high cost credit

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    Consumer reaction and perception of the physical, visual presentation of Debenhams’ Discounting Prime Trading versus Sale Visual Merchandising Standards

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    This case study centers on the potential effects of a department store window display and its impact on sales in the bricks-and-mortar retail environment. As the “high street” battles with the internet, visual presentation is key to driving sales in the bricks-and-mortar environment. Prime trading and promotion of new season lines (e.g. spring/summer) and seasonal promotions (e.g. Christmas, Mother’s Day) are highly designed and pleasing aesthetically as they are calendar driven and financial targets are high. In the UK, sale (discounting) often has a much lower standard of presentation that is not aesthetically pleasing and that some consumers dislike (or even avoid) on account of the basic nature of the window (often a poster, fallen off the glass in front of a dressed window) and fragmented store merchandising. As existing literature on the subject tends to focus on the “best,” prime trading windows, this case study of Debenhams department store puts forward the argument that discount promotions are treated as “second best” visually and asks students to consider the risks of such a strategy and to suggest potential alternatives

    IT Project Management from a Systems Thinking Perspective: A Position Paper

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    We proposes a Systems Thinking approach to the study of IT project management and show how this approach helps project managers in controlling their projects. To illustrate our proposal, we present an example model of the dynamics of IT out-sourcing projects. The example model explains these dynamics in terms of feedback loops consisting of causal relations re-ported in the literature. The model provides insight in how coordination, trust, information exchange and possibilities for op-portunistic behaviour influence each other and together influence delivery quality, which in turn influences trust. The integra-tion of these insights provided by applying the Systems Thinking perspective helps project managers to reason about how their choices influence project outcome. The Systems Thinking perspective can serve as an additional tool in the academic study of IT project management. Applying the Systems Thinking perspective also calls for additional research in which this perspective is itself the object of study
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