The Impact of Horizontal Revolution on Small and Medium size Enterprises (SMEs) Owned by Women: The Context of the UAE

Author(s):  
Samia Kargwell
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 1329-1346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Huang ◽  
Julie Fitzpatrick

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the impact of donation amount and framing on financial products, this research investigates consumers’ attitudes and behaviors toward cause-related credit cards with different donation sizes and framing types. Design/methodology/approach This research investigates consumers’ perceptions of green credit cards using two experiments with a between-subject design (n =297) and a mixed design (n =238), respectively. All the participants, recruited from a major state university in the USA, are undergraduate students who use credit cards. Findings A medium-size donation optimizes the outcome of a cause-related credit card offer. Moreover, a donation framed as cash rewards has stronger effects on a consumer’s perception and consequent reactions to the “green” credit cards than an annual percentage rate framing. Finally, consumers with high levels of environmental concern and propensity to volunteer have stronger intention to adopt and are more likely to recommend the proposed credit card. Originality/value Building upon the theories of social exchange and symbolic interaction, this research is the first to provide empirical evidence regarding the application of volunteerism and perceived consumer effectiveness for financial institutions and their cause-related marketing campaign partners in selecting suitable environmental causes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Monge González ◽  
Juan Antonio Rodríguez Álvarez

<p>Este trabajo estima el impacto de los servicios financieros (diferentes del crédito) y los cursos de capacitación de corto plazo sobre las ventas reales, número de empleados, grado de formalización y acceso al crédito en el sistema financiero formal, de un conjunto de micro, pequeñas y medianas empresas clientes de una entidad de microfinanzas que opera en Costa Rica. Para ello, se emplea un panel de datos de cinco años (2006 a 2010) y modelos econométricos que tratan de controlar por atributos de las empresas, tanto observables como no observables, que afectan el desempeño de las variables sobre las cuales se mide el impacto. Los resultados señalan que aquellas empresas que recibieron servicios financieros diferentes del crédito lograron aumentar más el valor de sus ventas y el empleo, y también mejoraron su grado de formalización (aunque este resultado es débil estadísticamente), cuando se las compara con aquellas que no obtuvieron acceso a este tipo de financiamiento. Además, parecería ser que las garantías de participación y cumplimiento son el instrumento financiero que más impacta en forma positiva el desempeño de estas empresas. Por otra parte, no se obtuvo evidencia de que los servicios de capacitación de corta duración tuvieran algún impacto sobre el desempeño de estas empresas. Con base en todo lo anterior se plantean varias recomendaciones de política.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Abstract </strong></p><p>This paper considers the impact that financial services other than credit, and short term training courses have on total sales, employee number, level of formalization and access to credit in the regular financial system for a group of micro, small and medium size enterprises that are clients of a micro financing entity operating in Costa Rica. With this aim, data collected over five years (2006 to 2010), and econometric models that monitor a company`s performance by visible and non-visible attributes affecting measuring variables were used. Results show that the companies that received financial services other than the credit itself increased sales and employment more , and also improved their level of formalization (although the latter is statistically weak), when compared to others that did not had access to this type of financing. Also, it seems that participation and compliance guarantees are the most impacting financial instrument on company performance. On the other hand, no evidence was obtained about short training courses had any impact on company performance. Finally, some policy changes are recommended.<strong><br /></strong></p>


Entropy ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. 713
Author(s):  
Dor Cohen ◽  
Ofer Strichman

We present a new characterization of propositional formulas called entropy, which approximates the freedom we have in assigning the variables. Like several other such measures (e.g., back-door and back-door-key variables), it is computationally expensive to compute. Nevertheless, for small and medium-size satisfiable formulas, it enables us to study the effect of this freedom on the impact of various SAT heuristics, following up on a recent study by C. Oh (Oh, SAT’15, LNCS 9340, 307–323). Oh’s findings were that the expected success of various heuristics depends on whether the input formula is satisfiable or not. With entropy, and also with the measure of solution density, we are able to refine these findings for the case of satisfiable formulas. Specifically, we found empirically that satisfiable formulas with small entropy “behave” similarly to unsatisfiable formulas.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahmoud Saleh Malkawi ◽  
As'ad H. Abu Rumman

<p><strong>Purpose</strong>–This study aims to explore the impact of Knowledge Management Capabilities (KMC), captured by six dimensions, on product innovation in Information Technology (IT) Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).</p><p><strong>Design/methodology/approach</strong>– Survey data were collected from 300 managers in (45) IT SMEs located in Jordan. SPSS was employed to analyze the data.</p><p><strong>Findings</strong>–Two key findings emerged: first, among the six dimensions of KMC, only acquisition, sharing, application, and protection were found to be positively associated with products innovation, whereas knowledge creation and storing were not. Second, no significant differences were identified in employees' answers due to company size.</p><p><strong>Research limitations/implications</strong> – This study was restricted to small and medium size enterprises, and therefore, the findings of this study may not be generalized to large enterprises. Additionally, this study was confined to the Jordanian IT sector only, thus, the findings need to be interpreted with cautious as they may not be generalized to other sectors.</p><p><strong>Originality/value</strong> – this study advances our understanding of the nature of the relationship between knowledge and innovation.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 305 ◽  
pp. 00054
Author(s):  
Marco Ragazzi ◽  
Elena Cristina Rada ◽  
Alessandro Abbà ◽  
Marco Schiavon

Educational institutions and, specifically, university campuses are large energy consumers and waste producers. The impact of university campuses on the local waste management increases with decreasing the size of the city/town where universities are located. Following the growing interest of the scientific community on the research for strategies to improve the environmental sustainability of educational institutions, this paper aims at proposing specific parameters to 1) measure the performance of university buildings in waste management, 2) detect anomalous situations that require improvements and 3) implement ameliorative actions. Specifically, parameters like the per-capita or surface-specific waste generation could help identifying the structures that may require primary interventions. With reference to the case of a medium-size university, the paper points out the advantages of the punctual tariff system for waste management adopted by the local utility company and critically analyses its weak points. Overall, this system offers great opportunities for improving waste management and for cost savings, but requires careful management policies by public institutions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 73 (12) ◽  
pp. 1885-1897 ◽  
Author(s):  
Audrey Maheu ◽  
André St-Hilaire ◽  
Daniel Caissie ◽  
Nassir El-Jabi ◽  
Guillaume Bourque ◽  
...  

Various studies have helped gain a better understanding of the thermal impacts of dams on a site-specific basis, but very few studies have compared the thermal impacts of varying types of dams within the same region. In this study, we conducted a regional-scale assessment of the impacts of dams on the thermal regime of 13 medium-size rivers in eastern Canada. The objectives of this study were to identify features of the thermal regime of rivers that are predominantly impacted by dams and to compare the impacts associated with different types of regulation (run-of-river, storage, peaking). The thermal regime of regulated and unregulated rivers was characterized using 15 metrics that described the magnitude, frequency, duration, timing, and rate of change of water temperature. Results indicate that storage and peaking dams impounding at least 10% of the median annual runoff generally (i) reduced the magnitude of water temperature variation at seasonal, daily, and subdaily timescales and (ii) increased the monthly mean water temperature in September. This regional assessment offers important insight regarding a generalized pattern of thermal alteration by dams, and this information could be used to guide biological monitoring efforts in regulated rivers.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1805-1805
Author(s):  
Masood Shammas ◽  
Jagannath Pal ◽  
Ankit V Vahia ◽  
Puru Nanjappa ◽  
Manit N Munshi ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1805 Exposure to DNA-damaging agents of both endogenous and exogenous origin, including ultraviolet (UV) radiation, give rise to apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) or abasic sites in genome, probably the most common mutagenic DNA lesions. APEX1, the key protein involved in the repair of AP sites through base excision repair, plays an important role in the maintenance of genomic integrity. We have observed that APEX1 is overexpressed in multiple myeloma (MM) cell lines and primary cells. To evaluate its functional role MM cells were transduced with control (CS) or APEX1-specific lentivirus based shRNAs, targeting two different regions of the gene. Both shRNAs mediated >70% suppression of APEX1 expression. Control and APEX1-Knock out (KO) cells were treated with UV (20 J/m2), cultured for 24 hrs and evaluated for both the cell viability and phosphorylated-H2AX (p-H2AX), a marker for DNA breaks. Although cell viability did not change, the amount of p-H2AX was reduced in APEX1-KO cells, indicating that elevated APEX1 is associated with induction of DNA breaks in MM cells. To directly evaluate DNA breaks, transduced myeloma cells were exposed to UV (20 J/m2), cultured for a short period, and evaluated by comet assay, a sensitive gel-based technique for detection and assessment of DNA breaks in individual cells. The fraction of cells with DNA breaks and the intensity and size distribution of comets indicating the number of DNA breaks, were evaluated. In cells transduced with control shRNA, very large, large, medium and small comets were observed in 24%, 18%, 23% and 23% of cells, respectively. However in APEX1-KO MM cells, very large and large comets were not observed at all, comets of medium size were observed in 13% and small comets observed in 40% of the cells. A large fraction (47%) of APEX1-KO cells did not have any comets, indicating minimal or no DNA breaks even after UV exposure, under the experimental conditions used. These data show that the suppression of APEX1 significantly reduces the acquisition DNA breaks in MM cells following exposure to UV. We also evaluated the impact of reduced APEX1 levels on DNA integrity in MM cells. Control (non targeting shRNA transduced) and APEX1-KO cells were transfected with a plasmid, encoding secretory Gaussia luciferase (GLuc). Cells were plated at equal density in triplicate dishes, and beginning at 8 hrs, GLuc activity was measured in the supernatants at 12-hr intervals. In preliminary experiments we have found that plasmid DNA is more stable in APE-KO, compared to control cells, indicating that suppression of APEX1 in myeloma cells may stabilize DNA. We have also observed that chemical inhibition of endonuclease suppresses acquistionof new genomic change sin MM. We are currently evaluating the impact of APEX1 KO on acquisition of genomewide changes in myeloma cells over time. In summary, our data shows that elevated APEX1 endonuclease makes myeloma cells vulnerable to acquire DNA breaks following exposure to intrinsic or extrinsic DNA damaging agents. APEX-1 thus may be an important target to further understandgenomic instability in MM. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 63 (No. 1) ◽  
pp. 43-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toth Jozsef ◽  
Ferto Imre

The paper investigates the innovation process in the Hungarian agri-food sector using the concept of open innovation. The empirical analysis is based on the data from a 2011 survey of more than 200 small and medium size agricultural producers, food processors and retailers. There is determined the impact of open innovation and a company’s absorptive capacity on the innovation performance employing two stage approaches. First, a cluster analysis is applied to categorise companies based on their open innovation absorptive capacity, firm and managerial characteristics. Second, using semi-non parametric probit models, there is found that open innovation positively influences the innovation performance for the product and market innovation. Estimations indicate that the absorptive capacity has positive impacts on the technological- and organisational innovation and on innovation propensity. The results suggest that there exists a considerable heterogeneity both within and between the supply chain segments regarding to the innovation performance.  


2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 4265-4275
Author(s):  
Mohamed Ahmed A. Said ◽  
Prof. Madya. Dr. Noor Azlinna Binti Aziz

The hospitality industry is major service sector in most of developed and developing countries in the world economy, and nowadays many hotels implemented e-commerce for their business models and gained great advantages and increase profitability. This study aims to examine the impact of firm size and e-commerce usage on business performance of hospitality industry in general and hotels in Libya in particular. A quantitative approach was applied on hotel industry in Libya, mainly those hotels that have previous practices and experience with e-commerce. The results shows that small and medium size firms in hospitality industry in Libya are facing similar challenges and obstacles to other small businesses when establishing e-commerce website, and also shows a strong relationship between e-commerce usage and business performance, and high increase in profitability when hotels implement e-commerce and start to conduct online booking


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