907 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The application of performance measures in the UK retail sector: an exploratory analysis
Abstract: An empirical investigation of the use of performance measurement by small and medium sized online retailers in the UK. The purpose of the study is to investigate type and range of performance measures applied and extent to which measures are likely to affect business performance and strategy development. The key findings are that whilst a good range of measures are applied, the measures are more likely to be used for checking strategy implementation rather than strategy formulation or for informing corrective action to ensure longer term strategic success. Further work is required to explore relationships between strategy and business performance
Recommended from our members
THE ROLE OF PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT ON BUSINESS PERFORMANCE: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED INTERNET RETAILERS BASED IN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND INDONESIAN
This study investigates the application of performance measurement and considers how its use might affect the business performance of small and medium-sized retail businesses in the United Kingdom and Indonesia, which are using the Internet a as channel to market. In both countries, retailers were surveyed and the study has produced some interesting results, which have theoretical, practical and managerial implications. At the outset of the study, little was known about the extent of Internet adoption by retail businesses in Indonesia and it was not surprising to find that in the United Kingdom, Internet retailing is well established but in Indonesia, it is in the early stages of development. Nevertheless, there was sufficient Internet activity by Indonesian retailers to enable comparison of the use of performance measures by retailers in a mature economy and its use in a developing economy. The findings revealed similarities and differences in the number and type of performance measures used by retailers but more interestingly found evidence of different strategic orientations, which suggested that certain types of organizational behavior could be used to predict the type of performance measures that might be applied by a retailer. More specifically, in both countries, retailers adopting a conservativeness-oriented strategy were more likely to make greater use of performance measurement than those classified as applying an aggressiveness-oriented strategy but level of aggressiveness, was found to be an indicator of financial performance. In the United Kingdom low aggressiveness was an indicator of better financial performance whereas in Indonesia high aggressiveness was an indicator of better financial performance. This study has explored complex issues, by investigating strategic orientation and performance measurement and made suggestions as to how these constructs might affect business performance in Internet retailing within developed and less-developed countries. The findings have important managerial implications for Internet retailers about how performance measures might be used effectively to enhance business performance
Climate change and rising energy costs will change everything: A new mindset and action plan for 21st Century public health
Western governments currently prioritize economic growth and the pursuit of profit above alternative goals of sustainability, health and equality. Climate change and rising energy costs are challenging this consensus. The realization of the transformation required to meet these challenges has provoked denial and conflict, but could lead to a more positive response which leads to a health dividend; enhanced well-being, less overconsumption and greater equality. This paper argues that public health can make its best contribution by adopting a new mindset, discourse, methodology and set of tasks
Cost-effectiveness of methenamine hippurate compared with antibiotic prophylaxis for the management of recurrent urinary tract infections in secondary care: a multicentre, open-label, randomised, non-inferiority trial
\ua9 Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024.Objectives To estimate the cost-effectiveness of methenamine hippurate compared with antibiotic prophylaxis in the management of recurrent urinary tract infections. Design Multicentre, open-label, randomised, non-inferiority trial. Setting Eight centres in the UK, recruiting from June 2016 to June 2018. Participants Women aged â„18 years with recurrent urinary tract infections, requiring prophylactic treatment. Interventions Women were randomised to receive once-daily antibiotic prophylaxis or twice-daily methenamine hippurate for 12 months. Treatment allocation was not masked and crossover between arms was allowed. Primary and secondary outcome measures The primary economic outcome was the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained at 18 months. All costs were collected from a UK National Health Service perspective. QALYs were estimated based on responses to the EQ-5D-5L administered at baseline, 3, 6, 9, 12 and 18 months. Incremental costs and QALYs were estimated using an adjusted analysis which controlled for observed and unobserved characteristics. Stochastic sensitivity analysis was used to illustrate uncertainty on a cost-effectiveness plane and a cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. A sensitivity analysis, not specified in the protocol, considered the costs associated with antibiotic resistance. Results Data on 205 participants were included in the economic analysis. On average, methenamine hippurate was less costly (â\ua340; 95% CI: â684 to 603) and more effective (0.014 QALYs; 95% CI: â0.05 to 0.07) than antibiotic prophylaxis. Over the range of values considered for an additional QALY, the probability of methenamine hippurate being considered cost-effective ranged from 51% to 67%. Conclusions On average, methenamine hippurate was less costly and more effective than antibiotic prophylaxis but these results are subject to uncertainty. Methenamine hippurate is more likely to be considered cost-effectiv
Quantifying the frequency and volume of urine deposition by grazing sheep using tri-axial accelerometers
Urine patches deposited in pasture by grazing animals are sites of reactive nitrogen (N) loss to the environment due to high concentrations of N exceeding pasture uptake requirements. In order to upscale N losses from the urine patch, several urination parameters are required, including where, when and how often urination events occur as well as the volume and chemical composition. There are limited data available in this respect, especially for sheep. Here, we seek to address this knowledge gap by using non-invasive sensor-based technology (accelerometers) on ewes grazing in situ, using a Boolean algorithm to detect urination events in the accelerometer signal. We conducted an initial study with penned Welsh Mountain ewes (n = 5), with accelerometers attached to the hind, to derive urine flow rate and to determine whether urine volume could be estimated from ewe squat time. Then accelerometers attached to the hind of Welsh Mountain ewes (n = 30 at each site) were used to investigate the frequency of sheep urination events (n = 35 946) whilst grazing two extensively managed upland pastures (semi-improved and unimproved) across two seasons (spring and autumn) at each site (35â40 days each). Sheep urinated at a frequency of 10.2 ± 0.2 and 8.1 ± 0.3 times per day in the spring and autumn, respectively, while grazing the semi-improved pasture. Urination frequency was greater (19.0 ± 0.4 and 15.3 ± 0.3 times per day in the spring and autumn, respectively) in the unimproved pasture. Ewe squat duration could be reliably used to predict the volume of urine deposited per event and was thus used to estimate mean daily urine production volumes. Sheep urinated at a rate of 16.6 mL/s and, across the entire dataset, sheep squatted for an average of 9.62 ± 0.03 s per squatting event, producing an estimated average individual urine event volume of 159 ± 1 mL (n = 35 946 events), ranging between 17 and 745 mL (for squat durations of 1 to 45 s). The estimated mean daily urine volume was 2.15 ± 0.04 L (n = 2 669 days) across the entire dataset. The data will be useful for modelling studies estimating N losses (e.g. ammonia (NH3) volatilisation, nitrous oxide (N2O) emission via nitrification and denitrification and nitrate (NO3â) leaching) from urine patches
Anomalous Magnetism of Uranium(IV)-Oxo and -Imido Complexes Reveals Unusual Doubly- Degenerate Electronic Ground States
A fundamental part of characterizing any metal complex is understanding its electronic ground state, for which magnetometry provides key insight. Most uranium(IV) complexes exhibit low-temperature magnetic moments tending to zero, consistent with a non-degenerate spin-orbit ground state. However, there is a growing number of uranium(IV) complexes with low-temperature magnetic moments â„1 ÎŒB, suggesting a degenerate ground state, but the electronic structure implications and origins have been unclear. We report uranium(IV)-oxo and -imido complexes with low-temperature magnetic moments (ca. 1.5â1.6 ÎŒB) and show that they exhibit near-doubly degenerate spin-orbit ground states. We determine that this results from the strong point-charge-like donor properties of oxo and imido anions generating pseudosymmetric electronic structures and that traditional crystal field arguments are useful for understanding electronic structure and magnetic properties of uranium(IV). This suggests that a significant number of uranium(IV) complexes might benefit from a close re-evaluation of the nature of their spin-orbit ground states
A âquiet revolutionâ? The impact of Training Schools on initial teacher training partnerships
This paper discusses the impact on initial teacher training of a new policy initiative in England: the introduction of Training Schools. First, the Training School project is set in context by exploring the evolution of a partnership approach to initial teacher training in England. Ways in which Training Schools represent a break with established practice are considered together with their implications for the dominant mode of partnership led by higher education institutions (HEIs). The capacity of Training Schools to achieve their own policy objectives is examined, especially their efficacy as a strategy for managing innovation and the dissemination of innovation. The paper
ends by focusing on a particular Training School project which has adopted an unusual approach to its work and enquires whether this alternative approach could offer a more profitable way forward. During the course of the paper, five different models of partnership are considered:
collaborative, complementary, HEI-led, school-led and partnership within a partnership
Effects of an acute bout of aerobic exercise on immediate and subsequent three-day food intake and energy expenditure in active and inactive pre-menopausal women taking oral contraceptives
This study examined the effects of an acute bout of exercise of low-intensity on food intake and energy expenditure over four days in women taking oral contraceptives. Twenty healthy, active (n=10) and inactive (n=10) pre-menopausal women taking oral contraceptives completed two conditions (exercise and control), in a randomised, crossover fashion. The exercise experimental day involved cycling for one hour at an intensity equivalent to 50% of maximum oxygen uptake and two hours of rest. The control condition comprised three hours of rest. Participants arrived at the laboratory fasted overnight; breakfast was standardised and an ad libitum pasta lunch was consumed on each experimental day. Participants kept a food diary to measure food intake and wore an Actiheart to measure energy expenditure for the remainder of the experimental days and over the subsequent 3 days. There was a condition effect for absolute energy intake (exercise vs. control: 3363±668kJ vs. 3035±752kJ; p=0.033, d=0.49) and relative energy intake (exercise vs. control: 2019±746kJ vs. 2710±712kJ; p<. 0.001, d=-1.00) at the ad libitum lunch. There were no significant differences in energy intake over the four days in active participants and there was a suppression of energy intake on the first day after the exercise experimental day compared with the same day of the control condition in inactive participants (mean difference=-1974kJ; 95% CI -1048 to -2900kJ, p=0.002, d=-0.89). There was a group effect (. p=0.001, d=1.63) for free-living energy expenditure, indicating that active participants expended more energy than inactive participants during this period. However, there were no compensatory changes in daily physical activity energy expenditure. These results support the use of low-intensity aerobic exercise as a method to induce a short-term negative energy balance in inactive women taking oral contraceptives
- âŠ