2 resultados para MARKET ORIENTATION

em Portal do Conhecimento - Ministerio do Ensino Superior Ciencia e Inovacao, Cape Verde


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Dada a importância do conceito de orientação para o mercado e a inexistência de estudos que estudem o seu grau de implementação nas empresas Cabo-Verdianas, este estudo visa medir o grau de orientação para o mercado dos hotéis em Cabo Verde. O estudo foi aplicado às unidades hoteleiras do sector turístico em Cabo Verde com o objectivo de: (i) determinar o grau de orientação para o mercado dos hotéis em Cabo Verde e (ii) verificar a existência de diferenças significativas no grau de orientação para o mercado dos hotéis em função da existência de departamento de marketing nos hotéis, a área funcional dos respondentes, a localização geográfica dos hotéis e a procedência do capital social maioritário. As conclusões do estudo sugerem que em termos gerais, os hotéis, em Cabo Verde, segundo as percepções dos gestores, tem um nível médio de orientação para o mercado. Os resultados mostraram ainda que apenas existe uma diferença significativa no grau de geração e resposta ao mercado, entre os hotéis nacionais e os estrangeiros. Igualmente, constatou-se que, existe uma diferença significativa, no grau de geração e disseminação de informação de mercado, entre a percepção da área comercial e ou marketing e as restantes áreas das unidades hoteleiras. Entretanto, relativamente à localização dos hotéis e à existência ou não de departamentos de marketing, não foi confirmada a existência de diferenças significativas no grau de geração, disseminação de informação e resposta ao mercado. Due to the importance given to the concept of market orientation and the lack of studies which examine its level of implementation in Cape Verdean companies, this research aims to measure the level of market orientation of hotels in Cape Verde. This study was applied to hotel units in Cape Verde with the aim of: (i) determining the level of market orientation in Cape Verde hotels and (ii) verifying the existence of significant differences in the degree of market orientation of hotels which have or not a marketing department, the professional area of the respondents, the geographic location of the hotels and the origin of the majority funds. According to the managers’ perceptions, the results suggest that in general terms, the hotels, in Cape Verde, , have an intermediate level of market orientation. The results also show that there is a significant difference between national and foreign hotels regarding information generation and responsiveness to market. In the same way, there is as significant difference on the degree of generation and dissemination of information between the functional commercial areas and the others functional hotel areas. However, there was no significant difference on what concerns generation, dissemination and market responsiveness, regarding hotels location and the existence or not of marketing departments.

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The problem of small Island Developing States (SIDS) is quite recent, end of the 80s and 90s, still looking for a theoretical consolidation. SIDS, as small states in development, formed by one or several islands geographically dispersed, present reduced population, market, territory, natural resources, including drinkable water, and, in great number of the cases, low level of economic activity, factors that together, hinder the gathering of scale economies. To these diseconomies they come to join the more elevated costs in transports and communications which, allies to lower productivities, to a smaller quality and diversification of its productions, which difficult its integration in the world economy. In some SIDS these factors are not dissociating of the few investments in infrastructures, in the formation of human resources and in productive investments, just as it happens in most of the developing countries. In ecological terms, many of them with shortage of natural resources, but integrating important ecosystems in national and world terms, but with great fragility relatively to the pollution action, of excessive fishing, of uncontrolled development of tourism, factors that, conjugated and associated to the stove effect, condition the climate and the slope of the medium level of the sea water and therefore could put in cause the own survival of some of them. The drive to the awareness of the international community towards its problems summed up with the accomplishment by the United Nations in the Barbados’s Conference, 1994 where the right to the development was emphasized, through the going up the appropriate strategies and the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of the SIDS. The orientation of the regional and international cooperation in that sense, sharing technology (namely clean technology and control and administration environmental technology), information and creation of capacity-building, supplying means, including financial resources, creating non discriminatory and just trade rules, it would drive to the establishment of a world system economically more equal, in which the production, the consumption, the pollution levels, the demographic politics were guided towards the sustainability. It constituted an important step for the recognition for the international community on the specificities of those states and it allowed the definition of a group of norms and politics to implement at the national, regional and international level and it was important that they continued in the sense of the sustainable development. But this Conference had in its origin previous summits: the Summit of Rio de Janeiro about Environment and Development, accomplished in 1992, which left an important document - the Agenda 21, in the Conference of Stockholm at 1972 and even in the Conference of Ramsar, 1971 about “Wetlands.” CENTRO DE ESTUDOS AFRICANOS Occasional Papers © CEA - Centro de Estudos Africanos 4 Later, the Valletta Declaration, Malta, 1998, the Forum of Small States, 2002, get the international community's attention for the problems of SIDS again, in the sense that they act to increase its resilience. If the definition of “vulnerability” was the inability of the countries to resist economical, ecological and socially to the external shocks and “resilience” as the potential for them to absorb and minimize the impact of those shocks, presenting a structure that allows them to be little affected by them, a part of the available studies, dated of the 90s, indicate that the SIDS are more vulnerable than the other developing countries. The vulnerability of SIDS results from the fact the they present an assemblage of characteristics that turns them less capable of resisting or they advance strategies that allow a larger resilience to the external shocks, either anthropogenic (economical, financial, environmental) or even natural, connected with the vicissitudes of the nature. If these vulnerability factors were grouped with the expansion of the economic capitalist system at world level, the economic and financial globalisation, the incessant search of growing profits on the part of the multinational enterprises, the technological accelerated evolution drives to a situation of disfavour of the more poor. The creation of the resilience to the external shocks, to the process of globalisation, demands from SIDS and of many other developing countries the endogen definition of strategies and solid but flexible programs of integrated development. These must be assumed by the instituted power, but also by the other stakeholders, including companies and organizations of the civil society and for the population in general. But that demands strong investment in the formation of human resources, in infrastructures, in investigation centres; it demands the creation capacity not only to produce, but also to produce differently and do international marketing. It demands institutional capacity. Cape Verde is on its way to this stage.