scholarly journals Influence of Business Models on PV-Battery Dispatch Decisions and Market Value: A Pilot Study of Operating Plants

2021 ◽  
pp. 100076
Author(s):  
Joachim Seel ◽  
Cody Warner ◽  
Andrew Mills
2009 ◽  
pp. 701-705
Author(s):  
P. Sasi Kumar ◽  
P. Senthil ◽  
G. Kannan ◽  
A. Noorul Haq

E-collaboration technologies are broadly defined as electronic technologies that enable collaboration among individuals engaged in a common task (Kock, Davison, Ocker, & Wazlawick, 2001; Kock & Davison, 2003; Kock 2004, 2005). The reasons to enter inside the Internet are huge market value and effective data transactions (Perkins, 2000). The developments of electronic collaborations turn out the hard task into a soft one. This technology development allows the whole sectors to leverage the powers of the Internet and communication network to coordinate their efforts and the e-business models have provided the workable infrastructure for group communication and information processing (Jian Cai, 2004). Many published studies have also shown that, besides technologies the social aspects are essential for the success of collaboration (Briggs, 2003; Easley, 2003). The social aspects that lie behind this article are the speedy and effective services provided by the collaboration technologies for the patients. This article mainly speaks on how the deficiency of the blood can be solved by the blood banks. For this purpose a standard model has been created, in which the blood donors can be connected electronically with patients under the network assistance provided by the blood banks and the hospitals.


Author(s):  
P. Sasi Kumar ◽  
P. Senthil ◽  
G. Kannan ◽  
A. Noorul Haq

E-collaboration technologies are broadly defined as electronic technologies that enable collaboration among individuals engaged in a common task (Kock, Davison, Ocker, & Wazlawick, 2001; Kock & Davison, 2003; Kock 2004, 2005). The reasons to enter inside the Internet are huge market value and effective data transactions (Perkins, 2000). The developments of electronic collaborations turn out the hard task into a soft one. This technology development allows the whole sectors to leverage the powers of the Internet and communication network to coordinate their efforts and the e-business models have provided the workable infrastructure for group communication and information processing (Jian Cai, 2004). Many published studies have also shown that, besides technologies the social aspects are essential for the success of collaboration (Briggs, 2003; Easley, 2003). The social aspects that lie behind this article are the speedy and effective services provided by the collaboration technologies for the patients. This article mainly speaks on how the deficiency of the blood can be solved by the blood banks. For this purpose a standard model has been created, in which the blood donors can be connected electronically with patients under the network assistance provided by the blood banks and the hospitals.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-49
Author(s):  
Zsuzsanna Tóth ◽  
Marietta Balázsné Lendvai ◽  
Judit Beke

A key measure of higher education’s success is the extent to which it can provide the labour market with graduates that excel not only in terms of their professional training but also in terms of their soft skills. To that end, the competences of students entering university must first be diagnosed. This paper presents a pilot study of such a measurement system, together with first-year results obtained by a rural university faculty. Equipped with better information about its freshman students, such a university can begin to address the revealed competence deficiencies actively, and, over the course of an entire training cycle, further improve the labour market value of the young people when they come to graduate. Provisional recommendations are made at the end of this paper; however, further data analysis, once undertaken, may lend further support to the practical approach outlined here.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 99
Author(s):  
Shawn L. Robey ◽  
Mark A McKnight ◽  
Misty R. Price ◽  
Rachel N. Coleman

This paper advocates a more scientific approach to residential real estate valuation as opposed to more traditional approaches, which are flawed for two main reasons: (1) appraiser judgements are almost exclusively used and (2) appraisers’ sample sizes are too small to provide adequate estimated values. By using a regression model, this paper explores the impacts of different characteristics on market value. Three hundred and fifteen properties in Evansville, Indiana, were analyzed testing twelve different variables. This model suggests that 91.8% of the total market value variation is explained by four independent variables. These findings provide evidence that multiple linear regression could be used to better predict a property’s value.


Author(s):  
Carmen Gallucci ◽  
Piera Bellelli ◽  
Giuliana Saccà ◽  
Felice Addeo

The g-local changing process requires new service-based business models which redesign a universe of value crucial to economic success. The chapter aims to verify how this process can be achieved through knowledge-based-cultural activities that enhance people and their capabilities, promoting participation together with knowledge. The Knowledge economy, S-D logic and Experiential Learning represent the theoretical framework for devising a model to assess the impact of cultural experience on learning through the measurement of cross-cutting skills. The model has been applied on a pilot study represented by the Giffoni Experience, a cultural and innovative experiential format known worldwide and tested in two editions (2011, 2012) to assess the impact of the cultural experience in terms of empowerment or self-enhancement through the performance levels achieved in the four cross-cutting skills.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-142
Author(s):  
Jan Monkiewicz

Enterprise Management and Regulation of Economic Activity: The Case of InsuranceModern enterprise is functioning in a market space in which it is subjected to the whole network of intervention tools in the form of economic regulations. These regulations limit the freedom of its economic activities impacting the business models in use, its internal organization, management systems and, last but not least, its market value. Degree and strength of regulatory intervention is highly differentiated in various countries, depending on the cultivated social and economic model. It also varies depending on the area of economic activities in different groups of enterprises, according to the current perception of its systemic significance. Especially strong regulatory interventions are currently applied for financial institutions. It is because they are threatening the existence of the whole system via the systemic risk they are able to generate. The article explores principal challenges and issues facing the insurance operations and relates them to the enterprise management.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joost G. Vogtlander ◽  
Arno E. Scheepens ◽  
Nancy M. P. Bocken ◽  
David Peck

Abstract Eco-efficient Value Creation is a method to analyse innovative product and service design together with circular business strategies. The method is based on combined analyses of the costs, market value (perceived customer value) and eco-costs. This provides a prevention-based single indicator for ‘external environmental costs’ in LCA. The remanufacturing of products is an environmental and sustainable approach, in the circular economy, and can deliver lower eco-costs of materials depletion and pollution. From a business point of view, however, remanufacturing seems to be viable in B2B niche markets only. In consumer markets, remanufacturing is less common. The question is how can remanufacturing become a viable business solution for mainstream consumer markets. Traditional ‘green’ marketing approaches are not enough: green has a positive, but also negative connotations, so marketing approaches are complex. By using the Eco-efficient Value Creation method, marketing strategies for the roll-out of remanufacturing in mainstream consumer markets, can be revealed. This approach has led to the development of five aspects, which are key to innovative circular business models, for remanufacturing: (1) buyers differ from the buyers of the ‘new product’ (2) quality must be emphasised in all communications (3) risk must be taken away from the buyer (4) top level service is required to convince the buyer (5) a ‘green’ brand may support the remanufactured product image.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joachim Seel ◽  
Cody Warner ◽  
Andrew Mills
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-73
Author(s):  
Joost G. Vogtlander ◽  
Arno E. Scheepens ◽  
Nancy M. P. Bocken ◽  
David Peck

2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 403-413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tasawar Nawaz

The purpose of this paper is to empirically examine the effect of intangible and financial resources on accounting- and market-based performance of two bank business models i.e. conventional and Islamic banks operating in fourteen different countries worldwide for two periods referred as pre (2006-2007) and post (2009-2010) financial crisis (568 observations). The required data to calculate different constituents of intangible (i.e. intellectual capital (IC)) and financial resources is derived from Bankscope database. The results reveal that both IC and financial capital resources are necessary for banks being conventional or Islamic to create value at all times i.e. pre- and post-crisis period. The results further indicate a positive relationship between IC, financial capital and accounting performance of both sets of banking; however IC and financial capital are only significantly associated with the market value of Islamic banks.


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