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„Bürgerrechtler klagen gegen Weitergabe von Gesundheitsdaten“ – so titelt (spiegel.de, 2022) am 29.04.2022. Dabei geht es um die Weitergabe pseudonymisierter Daten von 73 Millionen Versicherten durch die gesetzlichen Krankenkassen. Diese Daten sollen der Forschung zur Verfügung gestellt werden. Die Kläger bezweifeln, dass die Daten nicht deanonymisiert werden können. Dieses aktuelle Beispiel zeigt einen konkreten und relevanten Anwendungsfall des Themas Anonymisierung/Pseudonymisierung im aktuariellen Kontext auf. Es ist davon auszugehen, dass die Relevanz in den kommenden Jahren weiter zunehmen wird.
Spätestens seit dem Inkrafttreten der DSGVO ist das Thema Datenschutz allgegenwärtig und stellt uns Aktuare vor große Herausforderungen. Europäische Initiativen zur Schaffung eines Binnenmarktes für Daten sollen zwar die Möglichkeit schaffen, Daten einfacher zu teilen und so beispielsweise Dritten für Forschungszwecke zur Verfügung zu stellen, werfen aber auch viele Fragestellungen auf. Eine naheliegende Lösung ist es, Daten zu anonymisieren oder zu pseudonymisieren. Aber was bedeutet das konkret und welche Konsequenzen ergeben sich daraus? Bis zu welchem Grad müssen Daten anonymisiert werden und welche ReIdentifikationsrisiken bestehen weiterhin?
Der Beitrag gibt einen Überblick zum Stand der Vertrauensforschung in Marketing und Vertrieb. Dabei ist Vertrauen als Gegenstand der Forschung innerhalb des Relationship Marketing Ansatzes sehr gut etabliert. Bei der Definition des Vertrauensbegriffs stützt sich das Marketing auf die Erkenntnisse der sozialwirtschaftlichen Nachbardisziplinen. Soweit Kunden ihren Anbietern vertrauen, gehen sie grundsätzlich ein Risiko ein und machen sich hierdurch angreifbar. Man vertraut in einen Anbieter, ohne vorab genau zu wissen, ob das gewünschte Resultat einer Kooperation mit Sicherheit eintritt. Dies gilt umgekehrt auch für den Anbieter, der zum Teil erhebliche Vorinvestitionen tätigen muss, ohne vorab zu wissen, ob tatsächlich eine Geschäftsbeziehung mit einem Kunden entsteht. Vertrauen ist daher v.a. in komplexen und langfristigen Beziehungen zwischen Anbietern und Kunden eine wesentliche Ressource. Entsprechend thematisiert der Beitrag die Bedingungen und Auswirkungen von Vertrauen auf unterschiedlichen Ebenen. Dabei dominiert in Marketing und Vertrieb noch immer eine interpersonale Perspektive. Die Potentiale organisationaler Beziehungsstrategien sind zum gegenwärtigen Zeitpunkt eher schwach beleuchtet, jedoch greift der Beitrag einige Trends für die weitere Ausrichtung der Vertrauensforschung auf, die zukünftig stärker an Bedeutung gewinnen werden. Dabei ist grundsätzlich davon auszugehen, dass bei zunehmend volatilen Rahmenbedingungen das Interesse an Vertrauensfragen auch in Marketing und Vertrieb weiter zunimmt.
Turning complainers into fans : towards a framework for customer services in social media channels
(2012)
In recent years, marketing scholars have invested heavily in exploring the role of social media in marketing theory and practice. One valuable strategy for using social media in marketing communication is to provide customer services in applications like Facebook or Twitter. This paper evaluates a) the concept of perceived service quality in different service channels and b) the impact customer service strategies have on customer loyalty, word of mouth communication, and cross-sell preferences. The framework presented here is tested cross-channel against data collected from the customer service department of a large telecommunication provider. The results elucidate the effectiveness of customer service strategies in different channels.
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) play a fundamental role in the economic system of the European Union: SMEs represent over 99 percent of all companies and provide two-thirds of the jobs in the private sector. Their innovativeness and economic success have significant influence on growth, jobs and prosperity in Europe.
Information technologies are regarded as key drivers of innovation in small and medium-sized enterprises (SME). Modern information technologies (IT) offer SMEs today many opportunities to improve their competitiveness and market position. Thus, business processes can be designed efficiently, open up new market segments and strengthen the innovation capacity significantly. However, many SMEs still have difficulties in utilizing these new technologies efficiently in order to foster process and product innovation. This is partly due to the fact that many SMEs don’t use IT Service Management and waste resources in running basic IT-functions like the maintenance of printers, software or servers.
Information Technology Service Management (ITSM) is a discipline for managing IT systems centred on the customer’s perspective of IT’s contribution to the business. Thus, by strengthening the performance of SME’s IT departments, ITSM enables process innovation (e.g. eProcurement) and product innovations (e.g. client services) can be promoted. The EU-funded project "IT Service Management for small and medium-sized Enterprises of the Danube Region" (ITSM4SME) aims to make SMEs in the Danube Region aware of the potential of ITSM, to inspire SMEs about the use of information technology and to allow IT-enabled innovations. The aims of the project have been achieved inter alia through a simplified method for IT service management for small IT organisations, practical case studies, a "do-it-yourself" service management modelling tool, an eLearning portal and by training more than 300 participants from SMEs in pilot training courses in Bulgaria, Romania and Slovenia.
Die Entwicklung eines Medizinproduktes benötigt in der Regel mehrere Jahre. Gesetzliche Vorgaben, wie zum Beispiel das Medizinprodukte Durchführungsgesetz, bestimmen, welche Schritte während der Entwicklung durchgeführt werden müssen. Deren Einhaltung muss in der technischen Dokumentation nachgewiesen werden. Die darin enthaltenen technischen Dokumente entstehen im Verlauf der Entwicklung. Diese bauen aufeinander auf und verweisen sich gegenseitig. Dadurch entstehen heterogene und unübersichtliche Strukturen. Eine Lösung für dieses Problem bietet Traceability. Traceability sorgt dafür, dass die Anforderungen an das Medizinprodukt mit Dokumenten, wie dem Anforderungskatalog, Lastenheft oder der Spezifikation verknüpft werden können. Somit ist jederzeit nachvollziehbar, welche Anforderungen mit welchem Test, welchen Änderungen oder welchen Ergebnissen zusammenhängen. Ein wichtiger Prozess bei der Entwicklung von Medizinprodukten ist zudem das Usability Engineering, wodurch die Sicherheit eines Medizinprodukts sichergestellt und Risiken bei der Anwendung minimiert werden sollen. In diesem Prozess entstehen viele Artefakte, wie zum Beispiel Usability-Berichte. Um den Überblick über alle Usability-Daten behalten zu können, können diese mithilfe von Traceability verknüpft werden. In diesem Artikel wird herausgestellt, welche Voraussetzungen für das Usability Engineering in der Medizintechnik an Traceability gestellt
werden.
Due to the consequential impact of technological breakdowns, companies have to be prepared to deal with breakdowns or even better prevent them. In today's information technology, several methods and tools exist to downscale this concern. Therefore, this paper deals with the initial determination of a resilient enterprise architecture supporting predictive maintenance in the information technology domain and furthermore, concerns several mechanisms on how to reactively and proactively secure the state of resiliency on several abstraction levels. The objective of this paper is to give an overview on existing mechanisms for resiliency and to describe the foundation of an optimized approach, combining infrastructure and process mining techniques.
Purpose: This study aims to conceptualize and test the effect of consumers´ perceptions of complaint handling quality (PCHQ) in both traditional and social media channels.
Design/methodology/approach: Study 1 systematically reviews the relevant literature and then carries out a consumer and manager survey. This approach aims to conceptualize the dimensionality of PCHQ. Study 2 tests the effect of PCHQ on key marketing outcomes. Using survey data from a German telecommunications company, the study provides an explanation for the differences in outcomes across traditional (hotline) and social media channels.
Findings: Study 1 reveals that PCHQ is best conceptualized as a five dimensional construct with 15 facets. There are significant differences between customers and managers in terms of the importance attached to the various dimensions. The construct shows strong psychometric properties with high reliability and validity, thereby opening up opportunities to treat these facets as measurement indicators for the construct. Study 2 indicates that the effect of PCHQ on consumer loyalty and word-of-mouth (WOM) communication is stronger in social media than in traditional channels. Procedural justice and the overall quality of service solutions emerge as general dimensions of PCHQ because they are equally important in both channels. In contrast, interactional justice, distributive justice and customer effort have varying effects across the two channels.
Research limitations/implications: This study contributes to the understanding of a firm´s channel selection for complaint handling in two ways. First, it evaluates and conceptualizes the PCHQ construct. Second, it compares the effects of different dimensions of PCHQ on key marketing outcomes across traditional and socialmedia channels.
Practical implications: This study enables managers to understand the difference in efficacy attached to different dimensions of PCHQ. It further highlights such differences across traditional and social media service channels. For example, the effect of complaint handling on social media is of particular importance when generating WOM communication.
Originality/value: This study offers a comprehensive conceptualization of the PCHQ construct and reveals the general and channel contingent effects of its different dimensions on key marketing outcomes.
Relationship Marketing (RM) presumes trust as an important antecedent for the performance of interfirm relationships. Current research is dominated by an interpersonal perspective. In this research tack, trust chiefly emerges as a result of interpersonal relationships. But multiple risks arise if customer trust rests solely on elements inextricably linked to single representatives. Hence, this paper evaluates the impact of organizational capabilities and the moderating role of customer preferences on the trust creation process. The framework presented here is tested cross-industry on 220 customers for IT solutions. The results offer significant insight into the effectiveness of individual and organizational RM strategies.
IT Governance (ITG) is crucial due to its significant impact on enabling innovation and enhancing firm performance. Hence, in the last decade ITG has become important in both academic and in practical research. Although several studies have investigated individual aspects of ITG success and its impact on single determinants, the causal relationship of how ITG promotes firm performance remains unclear. Thus, a more comprehensive understanding about the link between ITG and firm performance is needed. To address this gap, this research aims at understanding how ITG and firm performance are related. Therefore, we conducted a systematic literature review (1) to create an overview on how current research structures the link between ITG mechanisms and firm performance, (2) to uncover key constructs as potential mediators or moderators on the general link between ITG and performance, and (3) to set the basis for future studies on the ITG-firm performance relationship.
Context
In a world of high dynamics and uncertainties, it is almost impossible to have a long-term prediction of which products, services, or features will satisfy the needs of the customer. To counter this situation, the conduction of Continuous Improvement or Design Thinking for product discovery are common approaches. A major constraint in conducting product discovery activities is the high effort to discover and validate features and requirements. In addition, companies struggle to integrate product discovery activities into their agile processes and iterations.
Objective
This paper aims at suggests a supportive tool, the “Discovery Effort Worthiness (DEW) Index”, for product owners and agile teams to determine a suitable amount of effort that should be spent on Design Thinking activities. To operationalize DEW, proposals for practitioners are presented that can be used to integrate product discovery into product development and delivery.
Method
A case study was conducted for the development of the DEW index. In addition, we conducted an expert workshop to develop proposals for the integration of product discovery activities into the product development and delivery process.
Results
First, we present the "Discovery Effort Worthiness Index" in form of a formula. Second, we identified requirements that must be fulfilled for systematic integration of product discovery activities into product development and delivery. Third, we derived from the requirements proposals for the integration of product discovery activities with a company's product development and delivery.
Conclusion
The developed "Discovery Effort Worthiness Index" provides a tool for companies and their product owners to determine how much effort they should spend on Design Thinking methods to discover and validate requirements. Integrating product discovery with product development and delivery should ensure that the results of product discovery are incorporated into product development. This aims to systematically analyze product risks to increase the chance of product success.