04823nam 2200577 450 991046075160332120200520144314.01-78560-706-5(CKB)3710000000498508(EBL)4339912(MiAaPQ)EBC4339912(MiAaPQ)EBC5018176(Au-PeEL)EBL5018176(OCoLC)930040956(EXLCZ)99371000000049850820180918d2015 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierSustaining competitive advantage via business intelligence, knowledge management, and system dynamics /Mohammed Quaddus, School of Marketing, Curtin Business School, Curtin University, Perth, Australia, Arch G. Woodside, Department of Marketing, Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Boston, MA, USA, editorsFirst edition.Bingley :Emerald,2015.1 online resource (407 p.)Advances in business marketing & purchasing ;volume 22BDescription based upon print version of record.1-78560-707-3 Includes bibliographical references.Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Contributors; Introduction; Managing Information and Knowledge in Service Industries; Abstract; 1. Introduction and Justification of the Research; 1.1. Introduction; 1.2. Background to the Research; 1.3. Purpose of the Research; 1.4. Overview of the Methods; 1.4.1. The Survey Instrument; 1.4.2. Sample; 1.4.3. Data Analysis; 1.5. Justification for the Research; 1.6. Overview of the Research Structure; 2. Literature Review and Hypothesis Development; 2.1. Introduction; 2.2. Knowledge; 2.2.1. Definition of Knowledge; 2.2.2. Tacit Knowledge2.2.3. Explicit Knowledge2.2.4. Summary; 2.3. Knowledge Management; 2.3.1. Definition of Knowledge Management; 2.3.2. Managing Knowledge Management; 2.3.3. Approaches to Knowledge Management; 2.3.4. Role of Technology; 2.3.5. Summary; 2.4. Previous Research on Knowledge Management; 2.5. Effective Knowledge Management; 2.6. Absorptive Capacity; 2.7. Hypothesis Development; 2.7.1. Absorptive Capacity; 2.7.2. Acquisition; 2.7.3. Assimilation; 2.7.4. Transformation; 2.7.5. Exploitation; 2.8. The Industry Context; 2.8.1. Service Industry; 2.8.2. Residential Aged Care Industry2.8.3. Industry Context2.8.4. Accreditation; 2.8.5. The Role of Managers in the Knowledge Management Process; 2.9. Conceptual Framework; 2.10. Summary; 3. Research Method; 3.1. Introduction; 3.2. Justification for the Method; 3.3. Research Procedure; 3.4. Description of Research Setting; 3.4.1. Residential Aged Care Industry; 3.5. Description of Sample Characteristics; 3.6. Data Collection; 3.7. Pilot Study; 3.8. Method of Analysis; 3.9. Constructs; 3.10. Relationship between Absorptive Capacity and Effective Knowledge Management3.10.1. Relationship between Acquisition and Effective Knowledge Management3.10.2. Relationship between Assimilation and Effective Knowledge Management; 3.10.3. Relationship between Transformation and Effective Knowledge Management; 3.10.4. Relationship between Exploitation and Effective Knowledge Management; 3.11. Structural Equation Modeling; 3.11.1. The Structural Equation Model; 3.11.2. Reflective and Formative Variables; 3.12. Measurement Instrument; 3.12.1. Demographic Information and Measures of Construct; 3.12.2. Section One: Industry Context and Knowledge Management Outcomes3.12.3. Section Two: Demographic Data3.12.4. Section Three: Absorptive Capacity and Effective Knowledge Management; 3.12.5. Scales of Measurement; 3.12.6. Accreditation in Residential Aged Care; 3.12.7. Goodness of Fit; 3.13. Summary; 4. Results - Data Analysis; 4.1. Introduction; 4.2. Pilot Test; 4.3. Descriptive Statistics; 4.3.1. Demographic Distribution; 4.3.2. Non-Response Bias; 4.3.3. Assessment of Normality; 4.3.4. Distribution of Responses; 4.3.5. Profiles of the Highest and Lowest Scoring Organizations; 4.4. Additional Analysis; 4.4.1. Accreditation4.4.2. Effective Knowledge Management Outcomes and ActionsAdvances in business marketing & purchasing ;v. 22B.Business planningCompetitionElectronic books.Business planning.Competition.658.4038Quaddus M. A.Woodside Arch G.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910460751603321Sustaining competitive advantage via business intelligence, knowledge management, and system dynamics1979489UNINA