Globalisation imposes transition in the spatial competition relationships, specifically the abandonment of a competition domain coinciding with specific physical or administrative contexts (a product category, a country, a region, a geographical area, etc.). Competition in global markets shapes a multi-dimensional space so that a given geographical context can imply the simultaneous presence of very different competitors. Competition practices are further revolutionized, as they must take into account: saturated markets, and time-based competition. Global markets with over-supply determine a new approach to competition, with a complete overturning of the hierarchy between customer satisfaction and manufacturing: goods are manufactured only when the level and amount of satisfaction required by customers is known.
Brondoni, S. (2002). Global Markets and Market-Space Competition. SYMPHONYA, 1, 28-42 [10.4468/2002.1.03brondoni].
Global Markets and Market-Space Competition
BRONDONI, SILVIO
2002
Abstract
Globalisation imposes transition in the spatial competition relationships, specifically the abandonment of a competition domain coinciding with specific physical or administrative contexts (a product category, a country, a region, a geographical area, etc.). Competition in global markets shapes a multi-dimensional space so that a given geographical context can imply the simultaneous presence of very different competitors. Competition practices are further revolutionized, as they must take into account: saturated markets, and time-based competition. Global markets with over-supply determine a new approach to competition, with a complete overturning of the hierarchy between customer satisfaction and manufacturing: goods are manufactured only when the level and amount of satisfaction required by customers is known.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.