Refine
Document Type
- Book chapter (71) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (71)
Institute
- Texoversum (71) (remove)
Publisher
- Springer (45)
- Books on Demand (11)
- Deutscher Fachverlag (6)
- Elsevier (3)
- kopaed (2)
- Duale Hochschule Baden-Württemberg (1)
- Haufe (1)
- Raabe (1)
- Wissenschaft und Praxis (1)
Was ist Unternehmenskultur?
(2010)
Mitte der siebziger Jahre wurde die Unternehmenskultur als wichtige Einflussgröße für den Unternehmenserfolg erkannt. Der Begriff der Kultur wird jedoch auf vielfache Weise definiert und interpretiert, so dass in der Literatur auch kein Mangel an verschiedenen Auslegungen des Begriffes herrscht. Darüber hinaus werden in Theorie und Praxis häufig weitere Ausdrücke verwandt, die inhaltlich mit dem Begriff Unternehmenskultur übereinstimmen, wie z.B. "Firmenkultur", "Organisationskultur", oder "Corporate Culture". Dadurch ist die Diskussion über Unternehmenskultur geprägt von Missverständnissen. Im Folgenden soll daher ein Überblick gegeben werden, wie Unternehmenskultur definiert werden kann, wie sie entsteht und welche Schlussfolgerungen daraus gezogen werden können.
Obwohl dem Menschen derzeit über 60 verschiedene Faserstoffe aus natürlicher und chemischer Produktion zur Verfügung stehen, reichen die Funktionen bzw. Funktionskombinationen dieser Fasern für die Anforderungen in den unterschiedlichsten Anwendungsgebieten von Textilien nicht immer aus. Um sich auch in Zukunft in diesem innovativen Markt behaupten zu können, müssen die Anbieter technischer und funktionaler Textilien stets auf dem Stand der Technik bleiben. Einen sehr wichtigen Anteil an neuen Entwicklungen haben dabei die Technologien der Textilveredlung.
Qualitätssicherung aus Sicht einer unternehmensnahen Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften
(2015)
Mit der Umstellung auf Bachelor- und Masterstudiengänge zur Harmonisierung des europäischen Hochschulsystems wurden die Hochschulen mit der Akkreditierung ihrer Studiengänge konfrontiert. Neben der formalen Erfüllung der Kriterien kristallisieren sich mittlerweile verschiedenste Qualitätssysteme heraus, die den Prozess der Qualitätsverbesserung unterstützen sollen. Leider geht damit gerade ein verwirrender Gebrauch verschiedener in der QM-Praxis eingeführter Begriffe einher. Bei dem Thema Qualität, Qualitätssicherung oder -management sind alle verantwortlich Handelnden gefragt. Sobald ihnen klar ist, dass ein Qualitätsmanagementsystem nicht automatisch immer nur überbordende Dokumentation bedeutet, sondern ein Managementwerkzeug ist, das sich in der Praxis bei richtiger Ausgestaltung zur Steuerung von Unternehmen und zur Erreichung der Ziele bewährt hat, wird die Scheu vor einer Einführung verfliegen.
Purpose: Emotions play a central role in approach-avoidance customer conflicts in retailing. The purpose of this paper is to assess the influence of emotions in the fashion retail environment, in particular to investigate how emotions can be best defined and clustered as well as how emotions affect the costumer behavior.
Findings: The conceptual paper reveals a framework explaining diverse theories of emotional models existing in literature. Moreover, the stimulus-organism-response model is applied to costumer behaviour in the fashion retail to explain the shopping experience under the influence of cognitive and affective emotional processes. Finally, it is concluded that point of sales have to be turned to point of emotions in order retailers are able to develop sustainable relationships with their customers.
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze if omni-channeling is a prerequisite for physical stores to create an emotional shopping experience.
Findings: Due to the technological developments an changes in consumer behavior, the retailer needs to adapt digital tools and to offer services that link on- and offline channels ensuring an emotional shopping experience. Multi-channel retailers need to integrate their channels to satisfy the customer.
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze if the practice of emotional fashion advertising has ethical dimensions, which must be considered by the companies using those advertising approaches in order to adhere to their general ethical and social responsibility.
Findings: First it was shown that companies have a social and hence ethical responsibility toward the society they operate in and that this responsibility includes their marketing and advertising activities. Furthermore it was examined how emotional advertising works in order to analyze this practice from an ethical point of view. It was shown that an emotional advertising approach can have negative effects on consumers and therefore could jeopardize a company's ethical responsibility.
Purpose: This research paper provides a general assessment and analysis of social media in digital marketing context and highlights its current use, risks, but also its enormous potential for companies to extent their customer reach by using such new channels, which has not been broadly established yet.
Findings: Key findings demonstrate the importance of social media engagement for companies and present respective difficulties in designing a social media strategy. Since marketers are under constant pressure to justify social media spending, measurement methods need to be established. Expressing the return on social media spending in actual numbers has so far represented major obstacle for firms.
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to elaborate if video marketing enhance emotional involvement. Therefore a literature research is done in two parts. Firstly there is a review on the development of marketing communication and video marketing. In the second part of the review the focus is set on emotions itself, how emotional involvement is generated and how emotions influence consumption behavior.
Findings: The key finding of this paper is that videos can enhance emotions through their multi-sensory character in an efficient way. Furthermore there could be identified that especially viral videos create emotional enhancement and meet the direct marketing approach.
Purpose: This research paper deals with the question how the degree of transparency of a payment method influences the buying decision in fashion business. Therefore, consumer behavior and the decision-making process in fashion business are reviewed. Furthermore, the impact different degrees of payment transparency have on consumer behavior in general are compiled and evaluated.
Findings: It is assumed that the degree of transparency of a payment method has an impact on consumption in fashion business. Transparency relates positively to the pain of paying, which functions as a self-regulation tool by sending out signals about the conceivable consequences of spending money. Hence, the less transparent a payment is, the higher the willingness to spend will be. Moreover, it is assumed that transparency not only has an impact on consumption in fashion business, but the effect is also reinforced by consumer behavior.
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the main elements of successful customer loyalty programs in general and emotional components of the buying process in order to determine loyalty programs for fashion retailers.
Findings: The results of this study indicate that loyalty programs in fashion retail require considerable non-monetary benefits such as sense of exclusive membership and enhanced status to distinguish from competitors customer loyalty programs.
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the importance of word-of-mouth for fashion companies and to answer the research questions if fashion companies should integrate their customers actively in their marketing communication and if so, how can they approach the conversion of their customers into promoters?
Findings: The integraton of the customer into the marketing mix is inevitable in today's marketplace. Customers are heavily influencing the fashion industry escpecially the transmission of trends. Thereof, a redefinition and proactive integration of the customer as promoter is necessary.
Purpose: This paper is to show what sustainable fashion is and how it has developed in recent years. Also the paper discusses which factors are important in order to be sustainable. Above all, it's about customers who show a lot interest in sustainable fashion. Child labor, working conditions, poor quality and poisonous substances are stricty rejected by these consumers. Amazingly, fashion companies that repeatedly hit the headlines with bad properties are very successful. It's about the sustainable oxymoron, the act and want of the consumer.
Findings: It is difficult to be sustainable. The reasons for that are the consumption, not much transparency in textile chains, fast fashion and much more. It's almost impossible for a product to achieve the 100 percent sustainability. On one hand the consumers want to have sustainable products, on the other hand they purchase for newness and cheap clothes. It has become clear that they buy in a conflict.
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to assess the state of the art concerning the information demand of the sustainable consumer focusing on the characterization of the sustainable customer, the demanded information content with regard to fashion products and the expected information frame.
Findings: Key findings of this paper are that sustainable consumers share certain psychographics such as sustainable knowledge and perceived customer effectiveness. So demanded information content is about general sustainable knowledge and the concrete impact of sustainable purchase behavior. Fashion product attributes demanded are details about production, material and the after-purchase use. Concerning the information frame, consumers expect information to be credible, transparent and comprehensible. Eco-labels play an important role within the information frame.
Today fiber reinforced plastics (FRP) are well established in manifold technical applications, because they provide advantages such as low weight, high stiffness, high strength and chemical resistance. The broad range of production methods starts from cost effective mass production up to the manufacturing of ultra-lightweight composite parts.
Biological materials are also usually composite materials: Higher plants or bones of higher animals are hierarchically organized and are composed of only a few materials such as lignin, cellulose, apatite and collagen. The large variety and the mechanical properties of natural tissues results primarily from an optimized fiber lay-up to adapt to the mechanical requirements of the respective “installation circumstances”.
Advanced lightweight technical solutions need strong materials and structurally optimized structures. In many industries, the structural optimization by an appropriate fiber lay-up has become an important method to save more weight. Corresponding software tools help to optimize topology/shape (e.g. Mattheck: CAO/SKO, Co. Altair: Optistruct), mainly using finite element analyzing technology.
The combination of strong lightweight materials, optimized topology and sophisticated fiber lay-up is also present in many bio-mineralized planktonic shells — for instance diatoms and radiolaria—but also in glass sponges.
Following it is shown, how the high weight-related mechanical properties of plankton are biomimetically transferred into ultra-lightweight technical structures.
Soft, mechanically compliant robots are developed to safely interact with a “human environment”. The use of textiles and fibrous (composite-) materials for the fabrication of robots opens up new possibilities for “softness/compliance” and safety in human-robot interaction. Besides external motion monitoring systems, textiles allow on-board monitoring and early prediction, or detection, of robot-human contact. The use of soft fibers and textiles for robot skins can increase the acceptance of robots in human surroundings. Novel topology optimization tools, materials, processing technologies and biomimetic engineering allow developing ultra-light-weight, multifunctional, and adaptive structures.
Pultrusion of braids
(2016)