Search results for "FIRMS"

showing 10 items of 158 documents

INTER-ORGANIZATIONAL INNOVATION PROMOTERS IN SMALL, KNOWLEDGE-INTENSIVE FIRMS

2009

This paper examines the relationship between external relations and innovation in small, knowledge-intensive Norwegian firms. Our findings indicate that external relations are beneficial for innovation. The analysis shows that it is necessary to treat innovation as more than a concept. Our independent variables related differently to product innovation, process innovation, and market innovation.We found that market participation in product development has a positive impact on product, process and market innovation. We also found that top management interaction with other firms had a positive effect on market innovation and that top management interaction with external R&D had a positive…

VariablesProcess (engineering)Product innovationbusiness.industryStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectInnovation managementContext (language use)Inter organizationalInnovation innovation promoters external relations small knowledge-intensive firms NorwayManagement of Technology and InnovationNew product developmentProduct (category theory)BusinessBusiness and International ManagementMarketingIndustrial organizationmedia_commonInternational Journal of Innovation Management
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The use of intellectual property rights by French firms

2012

International audience

[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesFrench Firms[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceIntellectual property rights[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Agglomeration Externalities and the Productivity of Italian Firms

2015

Despite the richness of contributions on the effects of agglomeration on economic activity, the empirical evidence still falls short, especially at the microeconomic level, where they should matter the most. This paper adds to this literature by performing an empirical exploration of the role of Marshallian, Jacobian, and Porterian externalities for the productivity of Italian firms. In particular, a large dataset of small and medium enterprises is first employed to estimate firm-level total factor productivity (TFP). Then dynamic panel and instrumental variables estimation methods are used to assess the effects of agglomeration externalities. The findings seem to suggest that these effects…

agglomeration externalities firm-level productivity Italian firms
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PIE statutory audit market concentration: evidence from Latvia

2019

The reform of EU audit legislation was adopted by the Council of the EU in April 2014. The legislation consists of an audit Directive and an audit Regulation. The Directive applies to all statutory audits; the Regulation contains specific requirements for the statutory audits of public-interest entities (PIEs). The Regulation aims both at enhancing audit quality and at promoting competition in the audit market. Mandatory rotation, together with the incentives for joint audit and tendering, as well as the prohibition of certain non-audit services to audit clients - requiring de facto that another audit firm provides these services - are examples of measures that should make the market more d…

audit firmsaudit market concentrationpublic-interest entities:SOCIAL SCIENCES::Business and economics [Research Subject Categories]audit market
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Export Barrier Perceptions in Tanzania: The Influence of Social Networks

2012

In this article, the author empirically examines export barriers Tanzanian firms encounter in attempting to initiate and/or expand export activities and the strategies they use for overcoming these barriers. Based on a social network perspective, the research hypothesizes that firms exploiting diverse networks should normally encounter fewer export barriers. Using a survey dataset collected from 122 manufacturing firms, the findings support the notion that networking reduces export barriers. More specifically, exploiting a large number of strong ties relative to weak ties, and a large number of institutional ties relative to business ties, can substantially enhance firms’ capabilities of ov…

biologySocial networkbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectGeography Planning and DevelopmentComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTINGDevelopmentStrong tiesbiology.organism_classificationInternationalizationInterpersonal tiesTanzaniaPerceptionManufacturing firmsMarketingbusinessIndustrial organizationBusiness tiesmedia_commonJournal of African Business
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Reconsidering learning by exporting

2012

Self-selection and learning by exporting are the main explanations for the higher productivity of exporting firms. But, whereas evidence on self-selection is largely undisputed, results on learning by exporting are mixed and far from conclusive. However, recent research by De Loecker (J Int Econ 73(1):69–98, 2007) has shown that the conclusions from previous learning by exporting studies may have been driven by strong assumptions about the evolution of productivity and the role of export status. Relaxing these assumptions turns out to be critical to find evidence of learning by exporting in a representative sample of Spanish manufacturing firms. Our results indicate that the yearly average …

business.industryEuropean integrationEconomicsManufacturing firmsInternational tradeInternational economicsbusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceProductivityReview of World Economics
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Entry Barriers of Small and Medium-sized Software Firms in the Japanese Market

2007

The Japanese software market size was 131,773 million U.S. dollars in 2004. Due to limited domestic software production, Japan is highly dependent on imported software products. Despite the market potential for foreign software firms in Japan, almost no research exists on what kind of challenges foreign software firms encounter when they are entering the market. To fill this gap, this paper investigates the entry barriers of small and medium-sized software firms in the Japanese market by using a multi case-study. The findings suggest that most of the barriers are firm-specific and mainly related to firms’ resources and capabilities to operate in the market. The entry barriers encountered al…

business.industryGeography Planning and Developmentsoftware firmsJapanese marketJapanese marketPersonalizationsmall and medium-sized firmsCommerceSoftwareJapanPolitical Science and International RelationsMarket potentialentry barriersInformation flow (information theory)Business and International ManagementbusinessSoftware marketSoftware productionBarriers to entry
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Distance Factors in the Foreign Market Entry of Software SMEs

2010

Recent studies have indicated that the internationalization process of software SMEs is somewhat independent on the effect of psychic or geographic distance. However, these studies have analyzed the general pattern of entries where software SMEs not commonly follow a step-wise entry route from nearby countries to distant ones. Thus, it remains unknown what the effect of psychic and geographical distance is when these firms enter a distant foreign market. The findings in this case study reveal that psychic and geographic distance inhibited the foreign market entry of software SMEs. However, the distant foreign market entry of these firms was facilitated by distance-bridging and distance-comp…

business.industryProcess (engineering)software firmsSMEsBusiness operationsPsychicInternationalizationSoftwareGeographical distancegeographic distancePsychic distanceMarketingbusinesspienet ja keskisuuret yrityksetIndustrial organizationpsychic distanceForeign market
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In-house versus external basic research and first-to-market innovations

2016

This paper explores to what extent conducting internal basic research, as opposed to external basic research (i.e. outsourcing and collaboration with universities) encourages firms to bring new products into the market ahead of competitors, and contributes to innovation performance. The analysis is based on a sample of Spanish manufacturing firms over the period 2006–2012. Our findings suggest that conducting in-house basic research affects firm's propensity to introduce product novelties. Furthermore, performing this activity continuously affects the probability of being product-pioneer in low and medium–low tech sectors. Collaboration with universities also helps in introducing new produc…

business.industryStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSample (statistics)Competitor analysisManagement Science and Operations ResearchOutsourcingProduct (business)Basic researchManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessEconomicsManufacturing firmsFirst-mover advantage050207 economicsMarketingbusinessImitation050203 business & managementmedia_commonResearch Policy
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Causation and Effectuation in the Foreign Market Entry and Selection of Software SMEs

2012

Current research emphasizes several factors impacting on SME internationalization. However, it remains unclear that how entrepreneurs in SMEs think and implement their internationalization and select target countries for foreign operations. In this qualitative case study, foreign market selection and entries of five Finnish software firms are analyzed by using the theory of causation and effectuation. The findings imply that software SMEs used more causation logic in their foreign market selection and effectuation logic in their foreign market entries. The case firms that followed causation logic in FMS entered more distant countries. peerReviewed

causationsoftware firmsforeign market selectioneffectuationforeign market entry
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