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1 – 5 of 5Peter J. Romeo, Richard J. Parrino, Kevin K. Greenslade and C. Alex Bahn
The purpose of this paper is to explain the guidance on interpretive issues under Exchange Act Rule 14a‐8 published in SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14F (SLB 14F).
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to explain the guidance on interpretive issues under Exchange Act Rule 14a‐8 published in SEC Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14F (SLB 14F).
Design/methodology/approach
The paper summarizes the guidance to companies provided by SLB 14F on how to verify a proponent's eligibility to submit a proposal, how to address submissions of revised proposals, and how to withdraw no‐action requests for proposals with multiple proponents.
Findings
SLB 14F is the staff's seventh legal bulletin on Rule 14a‐8, which highlights the procedural and substantive complexities associated with shareholder proposals.
Originality/value
The paper provides expert guidance from experienced financial services lawyers.
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Keywords
Richard J. Parrino and Kevin K. Greenslade
To review guidance issued in April 2014 by the staff of the USA Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that clarifies how participants in regulated securities offerings…
Abstract
Purpose
To review guidance issued in April 2014 by the staff of the USA Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that clarifies how participants in regulated securities offerings, business combinations, proxy contests, and tender offers may transmit required cautionary statements and legends to the securities marketplace via social media technology platforms whose space limitations preclude display of the full text of the required statements.
Design/methodology/approach
Examines the new SEC staff interpretative guidance in light of the tension between the disclosure requirements of the SEC’s communications rules and the characteristics of some social media platforms that do not permit compliance with the SEC rules in the same manner as traditional paper-based disclosure vehicles.
Findings
The staff’s new guidance permits issuers and other parties to comply with the communications rules by using in their social media transmissions an active hyperlink that connects to the text of the required statements, thereby dispelling the legal uncertainty about the hyperlinking approach that has discouraged parties from using some social media outlets to disseminate information about their transactions. The article notes that the staff’s conditions place important limitations on the use of hyperlinks, especially in connection with the use of popular social media platforms such as LinkedIn, Facebook, and others that do not impose a cap on the number of characters or amount of text that may be included in a communication, and fails to address the permissibility of other approaches to overcoming the space limitations of some platforms.
Originality/value
Provides expert guidance from experienced securities lawyers.
Details
Keywords
Mohd Arwab, Mohd Adil, Mohd Nasir and Mohd Ashraf Ali
The purpose of this study is to analyse the perception of employees towards training and also examine the mediation effect of employee engagement between training and task…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to analyse the perception of employees towards training and also examine the mediation effect of employee engagement between training and task performance.
Design/methodology/approach
An integrated model has been developed highlighting the relationship of the motivation for training and support for training and their implications on task performance through the mediating role of employee engagement. Using the sample of 397, structural equation modelling has been used with the help of SPSS and AMOS to validate the hypothesized relationship and evaluate the responses of employees working in travel agencies operating in Delhi (capital), India.
Findings
The findings of this study demonstrated a positively significant relationship between training and task performance of employees in the tourism and hospitality industry. Simultaneously, employee engagement positively mediates the relationship between training and task performance directly and indirectly. This study goes over the ramifications of the findings and offers some suggestions for practical implementations.
Practical implications
The findings of this study can be used by managers and HR professionals to organize exclusive training programs for improving employees’ performance based on the dimensions used in this study. This study also suggests that training program enhances employee engagement in organizational activities which leads to build up team work and overall organizational as well as individual performance.
Originality/value
This study also introduces a conceptual model and theoretical framework that provide a significant contribution to the training and task performance of employees. This study provides a strong theoretical foundation by incorporating the social exchange theory to confirm the role of employee engagement in performance. Further, this novel piece of research explores the relationship between training and task performance with employee engagement as a mediator, especially in the Indian tourism and hospitality industry.
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Tim Harries, Ruth Rettie, Matthew Studley, Kevin Burchell and Simon Chambers
The purpose of this paper is to present details of a large-scale experiment that evaluated the impact of communicating two types of feedback to householders regarding their…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to present details of a large-scale experiment that evaluated the impact of communicating two types of feedback to householders regarding their domestic electricity consumption: feedback on their own consumption and feedback of both their own consumption and that of others in their locality.
Design/methodology/approach
Digital technologies were used to automatically measure and communicate the electricity consumption of 316 UK residents for a period of 16 weeks. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three experimental conditions: one involving no feedback; one involving feedback about a household's own usage, and one involving a household's own usage plus social norms feedback (the average consumption of others in the locality). At the end of the study, a selection of participants took part in interviews or focus groups.
Findings
Both types of feedback (individual and individual-plus-social-norms) led to reductions in consumption of about 3 per cent. Those receiving social norms feedback were significantly more likely to engage with the information provided. However, the social norms information had no additional impact on consumption. Survey and interview data confirmed that participants from both conditions had been encouraged to adopt new energy-saving practices. The study concludes that near real-time individual feedback can be sufficient for usage reduction if it is provided in a historical format. It also suggests that the impact of social norms information may previously have been confounded with that of individual feedback.
Originality/value
This is the first time that a controlled experiment in the field of domestic electricity consumption has compared the impact of real-time social norm information with that of information that only contains individual household usage.
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