The use of intellectual capital as a competitive tool: a Danish case study

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

The use of intellectual capital as a competitive tool: a Danish case study. / Lueg, Rainer; Nedergaard, Line; Svendgaard, Søren.
In: International Journal of Management, Vol. 30, No. 1 Part 2, 2013, p. 217-231.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{8c4a84e84b214d5a9a106f9c8b1b0e8e,
title = "The use of intellectual capital as a competitive tool: a Danish case study",
abstract = "Increasing pressure from low-cost competition has forced many Western companies to respond by offshoring, i.e. by relocating labor and production facilities to emerging economies (Jensen, Kirkegaard and Laugesen, 2009). This study presents an alternative strategic response, involving investments in Intellectual Capital (IC) to maintain competitiveness. In particular, we analyze a mid-size, listed, multinational Danish manufacturer of retail equipment and shop solutions with a revenue above 50 million Euro and more than 300 full-time equivalent employees (as of 2010). The company had satisfactory financial performance until the joint effect of low-cost competition andthe financial crises caused losses in 2009 and 2010. To re-gain profitability, the top management actively attempts to increase the customer value added through substantial investments in IC. Despite financial pressure and the top management{\textquoteright}s impetus, our study illustrates that resentment to this strategic change is caused both by a culture that upholds tradition, seniority and collectivism as well as by fear among the most expert employees that their experience and current skills will be devaluated. We employ an explanatory case study with multiple data sources, principally a semi-structured interview with the CEO. To elucidate our observations, we rely on theories on IC, business models (BMs) and resistance. We point out possible reactions to mastering a contended transformation in order to make the majority of employees feel legitimate. Our findings are relevant to academics and practitioners who wish to understand the challenges of strategic andstructural changes in Western companies at the micro-level.",
keywords = "Management studies, business model, Denmark, intellectual capital, offshoring, outsourcing, structural change",
author = "Rainer Lueg and Line Nedergaard and S{\o}ren Svendgaard",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "217--231",
journal = "International Journal of Management",
issn = "2278-5353",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1 Part 2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The use of intellectual capital as a competitive tool

T2 - a Danish case study

AU - Lueg, Rainer

AU - Nedergaard, Line

AU - Svendgaard, Søren

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Increasing pressure from low-cost competition has forced many Western companies to respond by offshoring, i.e. by relocating labor and production facilities to emerging economies (Jensen, Kirkegaard and Laugesen, 2009). This study presents an alternative strategic response, involving investments in Intellectual Capital (IC) to maintain competitiveness. In particular, we analyze a mid-size, listed, multinational Danish manufacturer of retail equipment and shop solutions with a revenue above 50 million Euro and more than 300 full-time equivalent employees (as of 2010). The company had satisfactory financial performance until the joint effect of low-cost competition andthe financial crises caused losses in 2009 and 2010. To re-gain profitability, the top management actively attempts to increase the customer value added through substantial investments in IC. Despite financial pressure and the top management’s impetus, our study illustrates that resentment to this strategic change is caused both by a culture that upholds tradition, seniority and collectivism as well as by fear among the most expert employees that their experience and current skills will be devaluated. We employ an explanatory case study with multiple data sources, principally a semi-structured interview with the CEO. To elucidate our observations, we rely on theories on IC, business models (BMs) and resistance. We point out possible reactions to mastering a contended transformation in order to make the majority of employees feel legitimate. Our findings are relevant to academics and practitioners who wish to understand the challenges of strategic andstructural changes in Western companies at the micro-level.

AB - Increasing pressure from low-cost competition has forced many Western companies to respond by offshoring, i.e. by relocating labor and production facilities to emerging economies (Jensen, Kirkegaard and Laugesen, 2009). This study presents an alternative strategic response, involving investments in Intellectual Capital (IC) to maintain competitiveness. In particular, we analyze a mid-size, listed, multinational Danish manufacturer of retail equipment and shop solutions with a revenue above 50 million Euro and more than 300 full-time equivalent employees (as of 2010). The company had satisfactory financial performance until the joint effect of low-cost competition andthe financial crises caused losses in 2009 and 2010. To re-gain profitability, the top management actively attempts to increase the customer value added through substantial investments in IC. Despite financial pressure and the top management’s impetus, our study illustrates that resentment to this strategic change is caused both by a culture that upholds tradition, seniority and collectivism as well as by fear among the most expert employees that their experience and current skills will be devaluated. We employ an explanatory case study with multiple data sources, principally a semi-structured interview with the CEO. To elucidate our observations, we rely on theories on IC, business models (BMs) and resistance. We point out possible reactions to mastering a contended transformation in order to make the majority of employees feel legitimate. Our findings are relevant to academics and practitioners who wish to understand the challenges of strategic andstructural changes in Western companies at the micro-level.

KW - Management studies

KW - business model

KW - Denmark, intellectual capital

KW - offshoring

KW - outsourcing

KW - structural change

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 30

SP - 217

EP - 231

JO - International Journal of Management

JF - International Journal of Management

SN - 2278-5353

IS - 1 Part 2

ER -

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Tilman Spangenberg

Publications

  1. Facing the heat
  2. Crowdsourcing Hypothesis Tests
  3. Salivary cues
  4. Control of Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motors for Track Applications
  5. Interactivity, Interpassivity and Possibilities Beyond Dichotomy
  6. CoLab
  7. Dynamische Bestandsdimensionierung
  8. Leverage points for sustainability transformation
  9. Antidepressants
  10. A klímavédelem alapvető feladatai
  11. Editorial
  12. Rechtschreiben unterrichten
  13. So macht man Karriere
  14. Integrating highly diverse invertebrates into broad-scale analyses of cross-taxon congruence across the Palaearctic
  15. The depositional environments of Schöningen 13 II-4 and their archaeological implications
  16. Kooperation mit Migranteneltern
  17. I will probably fail
  18. 'YouTubers unite': collective action by YouTube content creators
  19. The impact of soft-skills training for entrepreneurs in Jamaica
  20. How do workers gain voice on digital work platforms? Hotspots and blind spots in research on platform worker voice
  21. Anaerobic Inhibition and Biodegradation of Antibiotics in ISO Test Schemes
  22. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
  23. The submissive chameleon
  24. Length measurement and estimation in primary school
  25. Compensation-related institutional investor activism.
  26. Tourismus
  27. Qu’est-ce que la « marge d’indétermination »?
  28. Training participation of an aging workforce in an internal labor market
  29. Legitimation strategies of corporate elites in the field of labor regulation
  30. When death is compelling
  31. Effect of Alloying with Rare-Earth Metals on the Degradation of Magnesium Alloys Studied Using a Combination of Isothermal Calorimetry and Pressure Measurements
  32. Lekcja 27-28
  33. Niklas Luhmann (1927-1998)
  34. Sag mir, warum du studierst, und ich sag dir, was du studierst
  35. A Note on Dual Internal Labor Markets and Wages of Temporary Workers
  36. Zur Einleitung
  37. Incidence of late-life depression