8 resultados para New city
em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland
Resumo:
Tämän tutkimuksen tarkoituksena oli selvittää imagon merkitystä kohde-ryhmälähtöisessä paikan markkinoinnissa. Tavoitteena oli mitata kaupun-gin ulkoisen imagon nykytilaa ja tunnistaa paikan markkinoinnin keskeisiä kohderyhmiä. Tutkimuksessa arvioitiin miten kaupunki-imagot vaihtelivat kohderyhmittäin ja mitä viestintäkanavia kohderyhmät käyttivät tiedon-hakuun. Tutkimuksen kohteena oli vuoden 2009 alussa monikuntaliitoksen myötä syntynyt uusi Kouvola, Suomen 10. suurin kaupunki. Empiirinen osa toteutettiin kvantitatiivisena, kuvailevana ja kartoittavana, kyselytutkimuk-sena Helsingissä Oma Koti -09 messutapahtumassa. Pääkohderyhmänä olivat pääkaupunkiseudun asukkaat. Pääosalla kyselyyn vastanneista (n=725) oli omakohtainen kokemus Kouvolasta ja tietoa vastaajat hakivat eniten internetistä. Johtopäätöksenä voidaan todeta että kokonaismielikuva Kouvolan imagosta oli yli 80 %:sesti positiivinen. Kaupunki-imago ei vaihdellut suuresti tunnis-tettujen kohderyhmien välillä. Imagoattribuuttien perusteella imago perustui kodikkuuteen ja hyvään arkeen. Kaupunkia pidetään asumisen ja vapaa-ajanvieton kannalta vetovoimaisena. Muuttohalukkuuteen vaikuttivat eniten elämäntilanne, kesämökin tai työpaikan löytyminen.
Resumo:
Kartta kuuluu A. E. Nordenskiöldin kokoelmaan
Resumo:
Innovations diffuse at different speed among the members of a social system through various communication channels. The group of early adopters can be seen as the most influential reference group for majority of people to base their innovation adoption decisions on. Thus, the early adopters can often accelerate the diffusion of innovations. The purpose of this research is to discover means of diffusion for an innovative product in Finnish market through the influential early adopters in respect to the characteristics of the case product. The purpose of the research can be achieved through the following sub objectives: Who are the potential early adopters for the case product and why? How the potential early adopters of the case product should be communicated with? What would be the expectations, preferences, and experiences of the early adopters of the case product? The case product examined in this research is a new board game called Rock Science which is considered to be incremental innovation bringing board gaming and hard rock music together in a new way. The research was conducted in two different parts using both qualitative and quantitative research methods. This mixed method research began with expert interviews of six music industry experts. The information gathered from the interviews enabled researcher to compose the questionnaire for the quantitative part of the study. Internet survey that was sent out resulted with a sample of 97 responses from the targeted population. The key findings of the study suggest that (1) the potential early adopters for the case product are more likely to be young adults from the capital city area with great interest in rock music, (2) the early adopters can be reached effectively through credible online sources of information, and (3) the respondents overall product feedback is highly positive, except in the case of quality-price ratio of the product. This research indicates that more effective diffusion of Rock Science board game in Finland can be reached through (1) strategic alliances with music industry and media partnerships, (2) pricing adjustments, (3) use of supporting game formats, and (4) innovative use of various social media channels.
Resumo:
Kartta leikattu karttakuvaa reunastavan kehyksen ulkorajaa pitkin.
Resumo:
The thesis begins with the classical cooperation and transfers it to the digital world. This work gives a detailed overview of the young fields of research smart city, shareconomy and crowdsourcing and links these fields with entrepreneurship. The core research aim is the finding of connections between the research fields smart city, shareconomy and crowdsourcing and entrepreneurial activities and the specific fields of application, success factors and conditions for entrepreneurs. The thesis consists of seven peer-reviewed publications. Based on primary and secondary data, the existence of entrepreneurial opportunities in the fields of smart city, shareconomy and crowdsourcing could be confirmed. The first part (publications 1-3) of the thesis are literature reviews to secure the fundamental base for further research. This part consists of newly created definitions and an extreme sharpening of the research fields for the near future. In the second part of the thesis (publications 4-7), empirical field work (in-depth interviews with entrepreneurs) and quantitative analyses (fuzzy set/qualitative comparative analysis and binary logistic regression analysis) contribute to the field of research with additional new insights. Summarizing, the insights are multi-layered: theoretical (e.g. new definitions, sharpening of the research field), methodical (e.g. first time application of the fuzzy set/qualitative comparative analysis in the field of crowdfunding) and qualitative (first time application of in-depth interviews with entrepreneurs in the fields of smart city and shareconomy). The global research question could be answered: the link between entrepreneurship and smart city, shareconomy and crowdfunding could be confirmed, concrete fields of application could be identified and further developments could be touched upon. This work strongly contributes to the young fields of research through much-needed basic work, new qualitative approaches, innovative methods and new insights and offers opportunities for discussion, criticism and support for further research.
Resumo:
The city of London was, during the years of 1940–1941, a city under fire. The metropolis seemed to have two faces, like the Roman deity Janus: the face of the daylight hours, so normal, and yet so deceiving in its false quietness – and at nightfall, the city turned, and the face of it was the face of the devil himself, transforming London into a living inferno. This thesis examines the sensescapes of the Blitz, through the diaries and memoirs written of that time. The primary sources consist of seven different diaries, two autobiographies, and four research volumes that contain multiple diary- and memoire entries, mostly from the Mass Observation Archives and from the Imperial War Museum. The sensory approach is a new orientation in the field of history – it studies the five senses in their cultural contexts, interpreting the often subtle ways in which the senses affect into society, politics, culture, and class hierarchies, to name only but few. The subject of the sensory history of war is a theme widely unexamined: this thesis contributes to this frontier field by unveiling the sensorium of the London bombings, comparing the differences between the halves of nychtemeron, and examining how the Blitz was communicated by the writers as a lived, bodily experience. This study reveals the very different sensory worlds in which the Londoners lived, during a time that is often described with the mythical solidarity that was thought to exist between the people. The reality of the homeless, working class, and poor were in the foul smelling tubes, poor law -dated rations, and in the smoking ruins of East End – the contrast was massive reflecting it to the luxury hotels and restaurants of the upper classes, opportunities for evacuation, sheltering possibilities, and overall comforts of life.