4CCC
*
* *
*
   Site Map   |   FAQ   |   Members Area   |   Contact us    *
*
*
* *
* *
* * *
*
 
 
 
* *   Resources *    * *
* * * * *
* *arrow  Books  
*
*
*arrow  Periodicals  
*
*
*arrow  Audio-visual  
*
*
*arrow  Web & Others  
*
*

Target Sectors
*
 
Online Applications
*
*

Resources

Details
Title: Clusters and the new economics of competition- [Perpendicular File]
Publisher: Boulder:Harvard Business Review,1998

Notes: In this article, Michael Porter, the C. Christensen Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School, explains how clusters foster high levels of productivity and innovation and lays out the implications for competitive strategy and economic policy. Economic geography in an era of global competition poses a paradox. In theory, location should no longer be a source of competitive advantage. Open global markets, rapid transportation, and high-speed communications should allow any company to source any thing from any place at any time. But in practice, location remains central to competition. Today`s economic map of the world is characterized by what Porter calls clusters: critical masses in one place of linked industries and institutions--from suppliers to universities to government agencies--that enjoy unusual competitive success in a particular field. The most famous examples are found in Silicon Valley and Hollywood, but clusters dot the world`s landscape. Porter explains how clusters affect competition in three broad ways: first, by increasing the productivity of companies based in the area; second, by driving the direction and pace of innovation; and third, by stimulating the formation of new businesses within the cluster. Geographic, cultural, and institutional proximity provides companies with special access, closer relationships, better information, powerful incentives, and other advantages that are difficult to tap from a distance. The more complex, knowledge-based, and dynamic the world economy becomes, the more this is true. Competitive advantage lies increasingly in local things--knowledge, relationships, and motivation--that distant rivals cannot replicate.

>> More

*
* *
*
*   *
 
*
*
scroll down
More News at NPCC                     scroll up
Jul 31, 2008
Innovators Mauritius Award - Workshops

Jul 24, 2008
Winners of 7th CATs Convention

Jul 12, 2008
Launching of the 3 rd edition of Innovators Mauritius Award under an environmentally friendly theme

May 29, 2008
Winners of InnovEd2 2008

Apr 21, 2008
Train-the-Trainer

Apr 21, 2008
Leadership: Attitudes and Skills of Successful Leaders

Apr 14, 2008
Mediation and Negotiation Techniques for Conflict Management

Apr 14, 2008
Change Management

Aug 30, 2007
Sixth CATs Convention

Aug 23, 2007
7th Pan-African Productivity Association (PAPA) Annual General Assembly

Aug 20, 2007
Consultants from JPC (Japan Productivity Center)are conducting consultancy services to model companies

Jul 27, 2007
Green Productivity

May 23, 2007
High level Japanese Delegation on study mission to Mauritius

Apr 05, 2007
ELIT (English Literacy using IT)

Mar 06, 2007
"Survival of the Fittest- Strategies of a lion"

Feb 05, 2007
Research Week 2007

Jan 23, 2007
We are now at Level 4, Alexander House, Ebene

Jan 12, 2007
Public Conference on Establishing an Innovative and Creative Culture to open the door for Innovation

Jan 08, 2007
Connecticut Invention Convention

Dec 14, 2006
Ceremony of handing over of rewards to school-based CATs

Dec 09, 2006
Launching of Pilot Network Projects

Dec 07, 2006
Innovation for quality education Thursday 07 December 2006 Cyber Tower, Eb?ne

Oct 13, 2006
Talk on ICT Enabled Development

Sep 08, 2006
"How can the Productivity Movement contribute to economic growth and better quality of life? - Learnings from Japan's Productivity Movement"

Sep 07, 2006
Conference: Is Productivity a zero-sum game or a win-win situation? Learning from Japan's Productivity Movement

May 29, 2006
How can cleaner production give you a competitive edge?Boosting competitiveness of the Manufacturing sector through Cleaner Production

May 29, 2006
Ennovations: Moving towards Eco-Lifestyles and sustainability and quality of life

May 26, 2006
Award Nite

Apr 25, 2006
Fifth CATs' Convention targeted at the education sector

Apr 07, 2006
Launching of EconProbe, national SME Economic Productivity benchmarking tool by honorable Rama Sithanen, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance and Economic Development

Apr 07, 2006
Mauritius: Opening up? Why? How? When?

Apr 06, 2006
Talks on Innovation, open to prospective participants of Innovators Mauritius Award, and to the public and students

Oct 27, 2005
?Catch up with the experience of Small Island States in Productivity and Networking to enhance enterprise Competitive Capability?

May 02, 2005
Gemba Kaizen workshop in the Public Sector

Nov 16, 2004
Competitiveness Foresight

Sep 08, 2004
National Innovation Summit

Apr 12, 2004
TEST Level II: Productivity Improvement at Enterprise Level

Oct 27, 2003
The Report of Textile Emergency Support Team is now available online, 27 October 2003

Jul 01, 2003
We are now at Level 4, Alexander House, Ebene

*
*
*
*
*
"Most extant knowledge management systems are constrained by their overly rational, static and acontextual view of knowledge. Effectiveness of such systems is constrained by the rapid and discontinuous change that characterizes new organizational environments." - Yogesh Malhotra
*
*
*
* * *
* * *
*
*
* *
* * *
 
 
*
* * *
*   © 2008 National Productivity and Competitiveness Council  |  Privacy | Disclaimer   *
*