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Business Under Crisis, Volume II: Organisational Adaptations

Business Under Crisis, Volume II: Organisational Adaptations

Publisher Springer, Berlin
Year
Pages 271
Version hardback
Language English
ISBN 9783030765743
Categories Business strategy
Delivery to United States

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Book description

Crises present significant challenges for organizations. But, while critical events are inevitable, not every business is sufficiently equipped for when things don't go according to plan. This book focuses on business under crisis conditions, along with organizational responses and adaptation. Adaptation can be seen as a learning process. It encompasses meaningful ways that help companies sustain their viability over the long term. Companies that respond quickly, often achieve more than just surviving. Some organizations will learn from a crisis, develop reactive resilience, and emerge stronger from the period of turbulence. They will be able to explore possibilities and create new patterns of relationships. 
Bringing together descriptive and prescriptive research studies, chapters explore adaptation in different sectors, including public health, tourism, garment, Information Technology, high-tech companies, global trade networks, hospitality, security and the social sector. Ultimately, the book covers wide range of topics, linking strategy, entrepreneurship, and leadership to reciprocal organizational adaptations that help us delineate crisis, as well as its interconnections in differing settings.

Business Under Crisis, Volume II: Organisational Adaptations

Table of contents

 

Vol. 4ii            - Business Under Crisis: Organisational Adaptations

 

Chapter Title & Authors

Chapter Description

Chapter 1

Editorial Introduction: Crisis & Adaptation - components of the same continuum

Demetris Vrontis (Ed.)

Alkis Thrassou (Ed.)

Yaakov Weber (Ed.)

Riad Shams (Ed.)

Evangelos Tsoukatos (Ed.)

Leonidas Efthymiou (Ed.)

In the first chapter of this volume, authors encourage us to consider crisis and adaptation as different positions on the same continuum. Rather than picturing a polar opposite, crisis and adaptation is rather a learning process where people operate within situations. It is a set of systems that are forced to experiment; organisations that explore their space of possibilities; and businesses that create new patterns of relationships. The chapters put forward the idea that change should be part of organizational culture rather than a reaction to events.

Chapter 2

 

Innovation Tendencies at times of Crisis

 

Katerina Kampouri, Hajidimitriou, Yannis, Innovation, Eva Mouratidou

(University of Macedonia, Greece)

This chapter reviews and discusses key papers in the field of Internationalised family businesses (IFBs) to provide insights into IFBs' strategic responses to crises through innovation. The analysis identifies triggers of innovation in IFBs and presents a conceptual model that integrates the relevant findings. By doing this, a mapping and organization of the relevant literature is enables, resulting to alternative explanations of the behaviour of IFBs concerning innovation during crises.

 

Chapter 3

 

Business Under Crisis Talent Management and Responsible Leadership in Luxembourg

 

Schinzel Ursula

(Unicaf University, Cyprus)

Within the framework of Human Resource Management (HRM), this chapter explores the link between talent management and responsible leadership in Luxembourg. In addition, the study relies on the findings of 41 semi-structured interviews, which were conducted before and after the Coronavirus outbreak, to explain the impact on talent management before and after the crisis. The discussion presents implications concerning the link between talent management, responsible leadership, and the need for change and innovation, with the Luxembourgish language as identifier.

 

Chapter 4

 

Strategic organizational sustainability

 

José G. Vargas-Hernández

(University of Guadalajara, Mexico)

This chapter explores sustainability through strategic lenses. The analysis approaches crisis as an embedded feature in contemporary global economy, where contradictory patterns, globalization and des-globalization processes exist. A new model is put forward, which is based on designing and implementing strategic organizational sustainability, abandoning the narrow focus on economic growth and profits to embrace the social inclusion and equity as well as the environmental sustainability issues.

 

Chapter 5

 

Entrepreneurship and adaptiveness in conditions of crisis - The case of COVID-19 and the Greek firms

 

Charis Vlados

(Democritus University of Thrace, Greece)

 

Dimos Chatzinikolaou

(University of Nicosia, Cyprus)

This research examines adaptability as the most required competitive advantage for business survival and development in today turbulent environment. While is focuses on Greek entrepreneurship, the study distinguishes between the structural and coincidental perception of the crisis. Then, it examines how the "physiology" of the Greek firms evolves by utilising the Stra.Tech.Man approach (strategy-technology-management synthesis). Eventually, the analysis suggests the  Stra.Tech.Man physiology as they way for a flexible type of entrepreneurship that can adapt and innovate effectively - capable of strengthening the competitiveness of local firms, regardless of the industry in which they operate.

 

Chapter 6

 

Approaches to the digital transformation of high-tech companies in Russia under the crisis

 

Kokuytseva Tatiana, Ovchinnikova Oksana, Kharlamov Maxim

 

(Peoples' Friendship University, Russia)

Digital transformation is not just about automation. This chapter explains how digitization involves a holistic change in a company's approach to managing business processes, building relationships with suppliers and consumers, managing human resource management and more. Failing to implement a holistic digital transformation results to increased disturbance, especially in the light of crisis, such as the coronavirus outbreak. However, a crisis always offers opportunities for innovation. The current chapter analyses approaches to digital transformation in high-tech industries in Russia in comparison with foreign practices. It identifies the main problems and prospects that digital transformation opens up during crisis; and presents a model that allows companies to build their own effective strategies of digital transformation, during and after the crisis.

 

Chapter 7

 

Reverse adaptation: when Tourism and Hospitality had to abandon sustainability to survive a pandemic

 

Leonidas Efthymiou, Yianna Orphanidou

(University of Nicosia, Cyprus)

 

Alex Zarifis

(University of Loughborough)

 

 

Within the framework of Contemporary Organisational complexity, organisations are ought to prepare for non-linear dynamics, adaptation and evolution. But what happens when companies are forced to abandon adaptive sustainability to survive a seismic event? This chapter suggests the term 'Reverse Adaptation' to describe how decades of environmental sustainability efforts had to be sacrificed and abandoned to deal with a health pandemic - at all costs.

Chapter 8

 

Macro-economic adaptation - the operation was successful, but the patient died

 

Alkis Thrassou

(University of Nicosia, Cyprus)

 

The chapter explains how strategic adaptation is often myopic. More specifically, it compares the examples of three different countries, which requested financial assistance through a European omnibus bill. However, this type of "financial aid" concerns austerity packages that return to creditors by ninety percent. The analysis presents a rather pessimistic model, where the economy improves at the expense of the people, the over-taxation of businesses, the low-paid workers, and abolishment of labour conditions.

 

Chapter 9

 

Transformations in the Social Sector during the Covid-19 crisis in India - A perspective

 

Ambika Kulshrestha and Sandeep Kulshrestha

(Rectangle Consulting)

This chapter offers an overview of the humungous disruptions caused by Covid-19 in India. This chapter delves into the social sector, and more specifically, the changes and coping mechanisms of social organisations. Emphasis is paid on the interruption of social value while the chapter proposes a paradigm shift, characterised by strategic manoeuvring towards innovation.

Additional Chapters

The book may include additional chapters that satisfy its scope and standard, as some submissions are still pending

 

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