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1 – 4 of 4Melvin R. Mattson and Esmail Salehi‐Sangari
Compares the processes for decision making during the acquisitionof equipment and materials among firms in the USA, Sweden, France andSoutheast Asia. Reports the findings from a…
Abstract
Compares the processes for decision making during the acquisition of equipment and materials among firms in the USA, Sweden, France and Southeast Asia. Reports the findings from a detailed questionnaire in which 236 firms in the four‐country area participated. The companies provided data on buying centre influences and supplier search criteria with half reporting for capital production equipment acquisition and the other half for key production materials. It was found that buying decisions in Sweden have the highest team effort while the USA has the least, even though the American and Swedish firms had very similar demographics. Sweden depended on technical staff, both their own and suppliers′, much more than the other countries. There was no consistent pattern for purchasing department involvement. Except for the USA capital equipment buying centres were much more inclusive than materials buying centres.
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Melvin R. Mattson, Hooshang M. Beheshti and Esmail Salehi‐Sangari
Many factors in today's competitive and global business environment contribute to an organization's financial success. A business enterprise's management must adopt a strategy…
Abstract
Many factors in today's competitive and global business environment contribute to an organization's financial success. A business enterprise's management must adopt a strategy that fully exploits information technology's power as a key element in order to optimize the organization's competitiveness. Recent spectacular technological advances and breakthroughs have made the effective use of modern information technology a critical, competitive business weapon.
David M. Andrus, Edward Silver and Dallas E. Johnson
The study identifies major factors that contrast gift decisions for different status signature clothes. Gift buying represents a significant proportion of purchases in many…
Abstract
The study identifies major factors that contrast gift decisions for different status signature clothes. Gift buying represents a significant proportion of purchases in many product classes and is a pervasive retail consumption pattern. Specialty clothing retail sales surpassed the $9 billion figure in 1983. Factors that discriminate status brands for gift purchases can be used to develop market strategies to increase purchases. Strategies are provided for brand managers, fashion marketers, and store buyers to better meet consumer needs and wants in the gift‐buying process.
H.M. Saidur Rahaman, Mayowa T. Babalola, Abdul Karim Khan and Wayne A. Hochwarter
Because of the nature of nurses’ daily jobs, their work passion is critical for their quality performance and well-being. However, more research must examine the antecedents of…
Abstract
Purpose
Because of the nature of nurses’ daily jobs, their work passion is critical for their quality performance and well-being. However, more research must examine the antecedents of nurses' work passion. Against this backdrop, in the present study, we draw on the conservation of resources (COR) theory to hypothesize that the negative relationship between nurses’ depressed mood at work and work passion is moderated by their enactment such that a relatively high level of personal enactment weakens the negative effect of depressed mood at work on their work passion.
Design/methodology/approach
We examine our hypothesis using a three-wave time-lagged design involving 147 nurses (RN or LPN) working at a medium-sized healthcare facility in the rural Southern USA.
Findings
Results support our hypothesis that nurses’ personal enactment moderates the relationship between their depressed mood at work and work passion.
Research limitations/implications
Nurses' depressed mood at work can be less harmful to their work passion, particularly when they demonstrate a relatively higher level of personal enactment.
Originality/value
This study demonstrates that personal enactment attenuates the adverse effects of depressed mood at work when nurses possess elevated work passion levels.
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