Mid-sized Manufacturing Companies: The New Driver of Italian Competitiveness [electronic resource] / edited by Fulvio Coltorti, Riccardo Resciniti, Annalisa Tunisini, Riccardo Varaldo.

Por: Coltorti, Fulvio [editor.]Colaborador(es): Resciniti, Riccardo [editor.] | Tunisini, Annalisa [editor.] | Varaldo, Riccardo [editor.]Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Sxi Springer per lInnovazione / Sxi Springer for InnovationEditor: Milano : Springer Milan : Imprint: Springer, 2013Descripción: XIII, 191 p. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9788847025899Trabajos contenidos: SpringerLink (Online service)Tema(s): Economics | Entrepreneurship | Economics/Management Science | Business/Management Science, general | Entrepreneurship | Business Strategy/LeadershipFormatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 650 Clasificación LoC:HF4999.2-6182HD28-70Recursos en línea: de clik aquí para ver el libro electrónico Springer eBooksResumen: The structure of Italian industry is characterized by a predominance of small sized companies and the presence of very few large companies. For a long time a conviction was shared among scholars and practitioners that the strength and safety of Italian industry were based on its industrial districts, that is, the system of interdependent and co-localized small companies which derive their competitive force from an effective and efficient division of labour. This book stresses the idea that a new, vital and promising phenomenon for the competitiveness of Italian industry is focused on mid-sized companies, and the systems of interconnected firms that form a constituent part of their business model. These companies, which originate largely from districts and other local production systems, are a strong entrepreneurial force complementing the districts that have characterized Italy and made Italian industry famous worldwide. A quantitative and qualitative analysis of these firms is provided in this book. Business models and strategies implemented by a number of successful Italian mid-sized manufacturing companies are also explored. Consequences in terms of management and industrial policies are provided. A final look at the German Mittelstand gives a useful comparison.
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The structure of Italian industry is characterized by a predominance of small sized companies and the presence of very few large companies. For a long time a conviction was shared among scholars and practitioners that the strength and safety of Italian industry were based on its industrial districts, that is, the system of interdependent and co-localized small companies which derive their competitive force from an effective and efficient division of labour. This book stresses the idea that a new, vital and promising phenomenon for the competitiveness of Italian industry is focused on mid-sized companies, and the systems of interconnected firms that form a constituent part of their business model. These companies, which originate largely from districts and other local production systems, are a strong entrepreneurial force complementing the districts that have characterized Italy and made Italian industry famous worldwide. A quantitative and qualitative analysis of these firms is provided in this book. Business models and strategies implemented by a number of successful Italian mid-sized manufacturing companies are also explored. Consequences in terms of management and industrial policies are provided. A final look at the German Mittelstand gives a useful comparison.

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