5 resultados para outsourcing (make or buy)
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
Nos últimos anos verificou-se uma alteração das condições e modo de funcionamento de empresas e instituições, privadas e públicas, muitas delas através da introdução de novas ferramentas de gestão. De entre elas, podemos destacar o outsourcing, que apesar de não ser um fenómeno actual, é ainda em Portugal uma ferramenta recente e pouco explorada, que pode contribuir de forma decisiva para a modernização, flexibilidade e competitividade das empresas. O presente estudo pretende abordar a contratação de serviços externos nos serviços de saúde públicos, também conhecido como outsourcing, mediante uma análise prática da realidade de uma instituição hospitalar com sete serviços em regime de outsourcing, com recolha dos dados durante o triénio 2008-2010. No Serviço de Urgência durante 2010 o principal prestador recebeu mais 104,28% acima do valor referência/hora, no Serviço de Oftalmologia no ano de 2010 o prestador recebeu um valor superior em 24,91%, no Serviço de Limpeza, Higiene e Conforto é pago ao prestador durante o ano de 2010 um valor superior em 13,85%, no Serviço de Vigilância e Segurança o prestador recebeu durante o ano de 2010 um valor superior em 27,5%, caso a instituição hospitalar optasse por contratar, para os serviços atrás referidos, profissionais para o quadro de pessoal. Ainda em relação ao Serviço de Urgência foi pago mais 21,38% acima do valor de referência publicado por Despacho governamental. Em relação aos Serviços de Lavandaria e de Tratamento de Resíduos Sólidos, não foi possível recolher os dados necessários que pudessem levar a uma conclusão válida sobre os custos pagos pela instituição hospitalar. Pode-se concluir que a contratação de prestadores externos, para os serviços de saúde, essenciais e não essenciais, em regime de outsourcing, revela-se na maioria dos casos analisados a opção menos económica, com custos bastantes elevados.
Resumo:
Mestrado em Engenharia Informática. Sistemas Gráficos e Multimédia
Resumo:
The knowledge-based society we live in has stressed the importance of human capital and brought talent to the top of most wanted skills, especially to companies who want to succeed in turbulent environments worldwide. In fact, streams, sequences of decisions and resource commitments characterize the day-to-day of multinational companies (MNCs). Such decision-making activities encompass major strategic moves like internationalization and new market entries or diversification and acquisitions. In most companies, these strategic decisions are extensively discussed and debated and are generally framed, formulated, and articulated in specialized language often developed by the best minds in the company. Yet the language used in such deliberations, in detailing and enacting the implementation strategy is usually taken for granted and receives little if any explicit attention (Brannen & Doz, 2012) an can still be a “forgotten factor” (Marschan et al. 1997). Literature on language management and international business refers to lack of awareness of business managers of the impact that language can have not only in communication effectiveness but especially in knowledge transfer and knowledge management in business environments. In the context of MNCs, management is, for many different reasons, more complex and demanding than that of a national company, mainly because of diversity factors inherent to internationalization, namely geographical and cultural spaces, i.e, varied mindsets. Moreover, the way of functioning, and managing language, of the MNC depends on its vision, its values and its internationalization model, i.e on in the way the MNE adapts to and controls the new markets, which can vary essentially from a more ethnocentric to a more pluricentric focus. Regardless of the internationalization model followed by the MNC, communication between different business units is essential to achieve unity in diversity and business sustainability. For the business flow and prosperity, inter-subsidiary, intra-company and company-client (customers, suppliers, governments, municipalities, etc..) communication must work in various directions and levels of the organization. If not well managed, this diversity can be a barrier to global coordination and create turbulent environments, even if a good technological support is available (Feely et al., 2002: 4). According to Marchan-Piekkari (1999) the tongue can be both (i) a barrier, (ii) a facilitator and (iii) a source of power. Moreover, the lack of preparation for the barriers of linguistic diversity can lead to various costs, including negotiations’ failure and failure on internationalization.. On the other hand, communication and language fluency is not just a message transfer procedure, but above all a knowledge transfer process, which requires extra-linguistic skills (persuasion, assertiveness …) in order to promote credibility of both parties. For this reason, MNCs need a common code to communicate and trade information inside and outside the company, which will require one or more strategies, in order to overcome possible barriers and organization distortions.
Resumo:
The application of information technologies (specially the Internet, Web 2.0 and social tools) make informal learning more visible. This kind of learning is not linked to an institution or a period of time, but it is important enough to be taken into account. On the one hand, learners should be able to communicate to the institutions they are related to, what skills they possess, whether they were achieved in a formal or informal way. On the other hand the companies and educational institutions need to have a deeper knowledge about the competencies of their staff. The TRAILER project provides a methodology supported by a technological framework to facilitate communication about informal learning between businesses, employees and learners. The paper presents the project and some of the work carried out, an exploratory analysis about how informal learning is considered and the technological framework proposed. Whilst challenges remain in terms of establishing the meaningfulness of technological engagement for employees and businesses, the continuing transformation of the social, technological and educational environment is likely to lead to greater emphasis for the effective exploitation of informal learning.
Resumo:
In this paper, we study an international market with demand uncertainty. The model has two stages. In the first stage, the home government chooses an import tariff to maximize the revenue. Then, the firms engage in a Cournot or in a Stackelberg competition. The uncertainty is resolved between the decisions made by the home government and by the firms. We compare the results obtained in the three different ways of moving on the decision make of the firms.