1,812,335 research outputs found
Incontri con gli attori: Roberto Herlitzka, 6 febbraio 2013, h.17 Coordina Sara Pesce, Interviene Caludio Bisoni. CIMES, progetti di cultura attiva 12/13
Intervista-dimostrazione con Roberto Herlitzka sull'attorialità cinematografica nel contesto italiano, sulla performance dal vivo, al cinema e alla televisione, con esemplificazioni a cura di Sara Pesce
Digital Transformation and Vertical (Dis-)Integration: The Role of Technological Change and the Importance of the Institutional Context
The evolution of industries through vertical disintegration has long been the focus of attention and concern of management scholars and managers. However, most existing studies are based on transaction cost economics and address vertical disintegration choices as firm-level decisions. By integrating transaction costs economics with the resource-based view of the firm and moving from static analysis of individual transactions to dynamic analysis of the causes of change within an industry, the article develops an integrative framework that explains where and how vertical disintegration occurs. Drawing on the cultural heritage industry, the results show that vertical disintegration choices reflect differences in the way the institutional context favors (or prevents) the creation and capture of value enabled by technological change. On the one hand, firms with low strategic autonomy and limited flexibility in acquiring resources and competencies tend to evolve toward vertical disintegration decisions when digital platforms enter the industry-Google in our case. On the other hand, organizations with a high degree of strategic autonomy and high flexibility in acquiring resources and competencies opt for vertical integration strategies. In practical terms, the framework provides a tool for managers to understand whether their industry is prone to vertical disintegration
Unveiling the Determinants of IT Business Value: An Industry-Level Analysis on the Role of the Information-Based Nature of the Product
Despite predictions that information technology (IT) investments would have a transformative effect on industry structures, little empirical research has compared the value generated by IT investments across sectors. This study theorizes and tests which component of value-output growth or input reduction-prevails at the industry level by analyzing the effects of IT investments on labor productivity. Results for 231 industries between 2008 and 2019 show that IT investments affect labor productivity growth. However, this effect has different drivers, depending on the industry. IT investments in industries specialized in information goods lead to output growth but to a reduction in labor input and output in other sectors. Taken together, the results confirm that industry is a relevant variable in IT business value research and raise policy implications about the structural divergence that IT investments are creating between sectors
Un documento del primo Novecento: "Le due Rose" di Piero Delfino Pesce
Prefazione alla traduzione della commedia di Piero Delfino Pesce "Le due Rose
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