13 research outputs found
Family Businesses and Adaptation: A Dynamic Capabilities Approach
The main objective of this research was to propose a framework centred on the dynamic capabilities approach, and to be applied in the context of family businessesâ adaption to their changing business environment. Data were gathered through interviews with ten FBs operating in Western Australia. Based on the findings, the clusters of activities, sensing, seizing, and transforming emerged as key factors for firmsâ adaptation, and were reinforced by firmsâ open culture, signature processes, idiosyncratic knowledge, and valuable, rare, inimitable and non-substitutable attributes. Thus, the usefulness of the proposed framework was confirmed. Implications and future research opportunities are presented. © 2018, The Author(s)
Product and process innovation in manufacturing firms: a 30-year bibliometric analysis
Built upon a thirty-year dataset collected from the Web of Science database, the present research aims to offer a comprehensive overview of papers, authors, streams of research, and the most influential journals that discuss product and process innovation in the manufacturing environment. The dataset is composed of 418 papers from more than 150 journals from the period between 1985 and 2015. Homogeneity analysis by means of alternating least squares (HOMALS) and Social Network Analysis (SNA) are used to accomplish the objectives listed above through the keywords given by authors. Initially, the paper highlights and discusses the similarity between the topics debated by the main journals in this field. Subsequently, a wide-range map of topics is presented highlighting five main areas of interests; namely, performance, patent, small firm, product development, and organization. A SNA is also performed in order to validate the results that emerged from HOMALS. Finally, several insights about future research avenues in the manufacturing field are provided
Harnessing the value of open innovation: The moderating role of innovation management
In this paper, we develop and test a firm-level contingency model of inbound open innovation in an attempt to contribute to explaining the substantial disparities in open innovation payoff that exist between firms. Integrating elements from the resource-and knowledge-based views and the absorptive capacity literature, we propose that specific innovation management activities can play an important moderating role as they are likely to enhance firms' capacity to identify, assimilate and utilise external knowledge inputs. Drawing on longitudinal data from 1,170 German manufacturing and service firms, econometric analyses reveal that returns from open innovation are greatest when firms maintain their internal research capacity, employ a dedicated incentive system for innovation and advocate strong cross-functional collaboration. Decision-makers are thus well advised not to take positive returns from open innovation for granted. Rather, they need to achieve excellence in key innovation management activities, if their firm is to fully harness the value of openness. © 2012 Imperial College Press
Organisationslernen
Durch Organisationslernen passen sich Organisationen an verĂ€nderte Umweltanforderungen (Digitalisierung, politische Reformen, usw.) an. Organisationen können die LernfĂ€higkeit erhöhen, indem sie ihre dynamischen FĂ€higkeiten durch eine geringe Arbeitsteilung stĂ€rken, ihren Absorptionsprozess von Wissen hinterfragen, und strukturelle und zeitliche Ambidextrie schaffen. Sie können sich am Leitbild der lernenden Organisation orientieren und flache Organisationsstrukturen sowie Teamarbeit fördern. Insbesondere fĂŒr öffentliche Verwaltungen, die derzeit nicht ausreichend lernfĂ€hig sind, bietet das Organisationslernen sinnvolle Ansatzpunkte
Human resource management's contribution to healthy healthcare
The aim of this chapter is to outline and evaluate the role of human resource management (HRM) in contributing to healthcare provision and to the well-being of those working in healthcare. To achieve this, the chapter is divided into three main sections. The first section describes the nature and importance of HRM, highlighting some of the main theoretical and conceptual debates and some of the research evidence. The second section reviews and evaluates research on HRM in healthcare, illustrating how it has been associated with positive outcomes such as lower mortality rates, better continuity of care and higher patient satisfaction. The third section presents an outline of a distinctive employee-centred approach to HRM that focuses more explicitly on employee well-being and sets out a future research agenda.</p