Building Leadership for e-Busines Development

Electronic business is becoming an essential component of private sector development in a growing range of nations to achieve and maintain international competitiveness. This is due basically to its multiple benefits as a strong driver of innovation, productivity improvements, lower transaction costs with governments, and poverty reduction. Experience shows that accelerating ebusiness adoption, particularly among smaller firms, requires deliberate leadership on the part of governments in conjunction with the private sector to establish a conducive policy framework and overcome market failures.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hanna, James, Carrasco, Ana Isabel, Watt, Charles
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2004-11
Subjects:BEST PRACTICE, BEST PRACTICES, BIDDING, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT, BUSINESS PROCESSES, CLIMATE, COLLABORATION, COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY, COUNCILS, DIGITAL ACCESS, DIGITAL ECONOMY, E-BUSINESS, E-COMMERCE, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS, EMPLOYMENT, ENTREPRENEURS, EXTERNALITIES, INFORMATION ECONOMY, INFORMATION MANAGEMENT, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES, INNOVATION, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, INTERNET ACCESS, INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE, INTERVENTION, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, LEADERSHIP, LEARNING, NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE, PARTNERSHIP, POLICY IMPLEMENTATION, PRIVATE SECTOR, PROCUREMENT, PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS, PROGRAMS, PROPERTY RIGHTS, REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, SMALL ENTERPRISES, SPAM, SUPPLIERS, SUPPLY CHAINS, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, TELECOMS, TRANSPARENCY, TRANSPORTATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/11/5534675/building-leadership-e-busines-development
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10345
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098610345
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986103452024-08-08T17:28:10Z Building Leadership for e-Busines Development Hanna, James Carrasco, Ana Isabel Watt, Charles BEST PRACTICE BEST PRACTICES BIDDING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT BUSINESS PROCESSES CLIMATE COLLABORATION COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY COUNCILS DIGITAL ACCESS DIGITAL ECONOMY E-BUSINESS E-COMMERCE ECONOMIES OF SCALE ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURS EXTERNALITIES INFORMATION ECONOMY INFORMATION MANAGEMENT INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES INNOVATION INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY INTERNET ACCESS INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE INTERVENTION KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT LEADERSHIP LEARNING NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE PARTNERSHIP POLICY IMPLEMENTATION PRIVATE SECTOR PROCUREMENT PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS PROGRAMS PROPERTY RIGHTS REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK SMALL ENTERPRISES SPAM SUPPLIERS SUPPLY CHAINS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TELECOMMUNICATIONS TELECOMS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORTATION Electronic business is becoming an essential component of private sector development in a growing range of nations to achieve and maintain international competitiveness. This is due basically to its multiple benefits as a strong driver of innovation, productivity improvements, lower transaction costs with governments, and poverty reduction. Experience shows that accelerating ebusiness adoption, particularly among smaller firms, requires deliberate leadership on the part of governments in conjunction with the private sector to establish a conducive policy framework and overcome market failures. 2012-08-13T11:13:20Z 2012-08-13T11:13:20Z 2004-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/11/5534675/building-leadership-e-busines-development https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10345 English en breve; No. 56 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic BEST PRACTICE
BEST PRACTICES
BIDDING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS PROCESSES
CLIMATE
COLLABORATION
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
COUNCILS
DIGITAL ACCESS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
E-BUSINESS
E-COMMERCE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURS
EXTERNALITIES
INFORMATION ECONOMY
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INNOVATION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE
INTERVENTION
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
LEADERSHIP
LEARNING
NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE
PARTNERSHIP
POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCUREMENT
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SPAM
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORTATION
BEST PRACTICE
BEST PRACTICES
BIDDING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS PROCESSES
CLIMATE
COLLABORATION
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
COUNCILS
DIGITAL ACCESS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
E-BUSINESS
E-COMMERCE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURS
EXTERNALITIES
INFORMATION ECONOMY
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INNOVATION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE
INTERVENTION
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
LEADERSHIP
LEARNING
NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE
PARTNERSHIP
POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCUREMENT
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SPAM
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORTATION
spellingShingle BEST PRACTICE
BEST PRACTICES
BIDDING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS PROCESSES
CLIMATE
COLLABORATION
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
COUNCILS
DIGITAL ACCESS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
E-BUSINESS
E-COMMERCE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURS
EXTERNALITIES
INFORMATION ECONOMY
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INNOVATION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE
INTERVENTION
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
LEADERSHIP
LEARNING
NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE
PARTNERSHIP
POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCUREMENT
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SPAM
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORTATION
BEST PRACTICE
BEST PRACTICES
BIDDING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS PROCESSES
CLIMATE
COLLABORATION
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
COUNCILS
DIGITAL ACCESS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
E-BUSINESS
E-COMMERCE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURS
EXTERNALITIES
INFORMATION ECONOMY
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INNOVATION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE
INTERVENTION
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
LEADERSHIP
LEARNING
NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE
PARTNERSHIP
POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCUREMENT
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SPAM
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORTATION
Hanna, James
Carrasco, Ana Isabel
Watt, Charles
Building Leadership for e-Busines Development
description Electronic business is becoming an essential component of private sector development in a growing range of nations to achieve and maintain international competitiveness. This is due basically to its multiple benefits as a strong driver of innovation, productivity improvements, lower transaction costs with governments, and poverty reduction. Experience shows that accelerating ebusiness adoption, particularly among smaller firms, requires deliberate leadership on the part of governments in conjunction with the private sector to establish a conducive policy framework and overcome market failures.
topic_facet BEST PRACTICE
BEST PRACTICES
BIDDING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS PROCESSES
CLIMATE
COLLABORATION
COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
COUNCILS
DIGITAL ACCESS
DIGITAL ECONOMY
E-BUSINESS
E-COMMERCE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEURS
EXTERNALITIES
INFORMATION ECONOMY
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INNOVATION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERNET ACCESS
INTERNET INFRASTRUCTURE
INTERVENTION
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
LEADERSHIP
LEARNING
NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE
PARTNERSHIP
POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROCUREMENT
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PROGRAMS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SPAM
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORTATION
author Hanna, James
Carrasco, Ana Isabel
Watt, Charles
author_facet Hanna, James
Carrasco, Ana Isabel
Watt, Charles
author_sort Hanna, James
title Building Leadership for e-Busines Development
title_short Building Leadership for e-Busines Development
title_full Building Leadership for e-Busines Development
title_fullStr Building Leadership for e-Busines Development
title_full_unstemmed Building Leadership for e-Busines Development
title_sort building leadership for e-busines development
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2004-11
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/11/5534675/building-leadership-e-busines-development
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10345
work_keys_str_mv AT hannajames buildingleadershipforebusinesdevelopment
AT carrascoanaisabel buildingleadershipforebusinesdevelopment
AT wattcharles buildingleadershipforebusinesdevelopment
_version_ 1809105156003856384