15 research outputs found
Advertising and knowledge intermediaries:Managing the ethical challenges of intangibles
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and communication technologies (ICT) have increased the role of "intangible" values of assets and resources for all industries. As a result there is an increased role for knowledge intermediaries; one of these, advertising, plays an important role in affecting consumer choice and knowledge. Ethical issues which arise for traditional purveyors of intangibility-cultural industries such as art, music, or film, spread to advertising. Building on our perspective of the measurement of intangibles we propose a new categorisation of types of goods or services, and a framework for identifying some future ethical challenges in today's global knowledge based society
MNCs, Worker Identity and the Human Rights Gap for Local Managers
MNCs, Worker identity, Human rights, Globalisation, Institutions, Psychic distance,
Non-market strategies within conflicting institutional pressures: The case of western multinationals in a post-socialist context
This chapter investigates how multinational subsidiaries develop political strategies within the conflicting pressures of the host country’s institutional context and the MNE’s parent strategies in a high-risk, emerging market context. The chapter links the literatures on institutional duality and corporate political activity (CPA)corporate political activity (CPA) and makes three distinct theoretical contributions. First, the chapter transfers the analysis of non-market strategies from the institutional to the firm level, by opening the black box of how subsidiaries develop host country strategies. Second, by focusing on the process of how subsidiaries turn external and internal resources into political capabilities, it argues that institutional duality should be viewed as an endogenous aspect of the institutional framework, which equips firms with political capabilities, rather than an exogenous factor that constrains them in the host environment. Third, it contributes to the theory of MNE parent-subsidiary management literature by extending our knowledge on how parent strategies affect the development of subsidiary’s political strategies
Commercialization strategies of technology: lessons from Silicon Valley
Venture capital, Entrepreneurial financing, Industrial clusters, National system of innovation, Technology commercialization, O32,