2016
DOI: 10.3390/su8060530
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Implications of Reverse Innovation for Socio-Economic Sustainability: A Case Study of Philips China

Abstract: Abstract:The idea of reverse innovation, local innovation happening in emerging markets for the global market, has gained much academic and managerial attention in recent years. The purpose of this study is to understand how reverse innovation has successfully diffused into the product and market development strategies at Philips Inc., a prominent multinational company (MNC) of the modern era. Furthermore, the study presents the success achieved by these innovations at both the domestic and global levels, alon… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…According to Shan and Khan (2016), the evaluation of sustainability results is not so easy to measure due to the complex inter-relation between the indicators, the lack of consensus about the definition of sustainability in the existing literature, and the choice of indicators which are subject to requirements and the opinions of the participants.…”
Section: Problems and Obstacles To Implementing The "Sustainable Devementioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Shan and Khan (2016), the evaluation of sustainability results is not so easy to measure due to the complex inter-relation between the indicators, the lack of consensus about the definition of sustainability in the existing literature, and the choice of indicators which are subject to requirements and the opinions of the participants.…”
Section: Problems and Obstacles To Implementing The "Sustainable Devementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, cognitive identification and affective identification may also indirectly influence luxury brand resonance through luxury brand salience. Finally, with the given situation in which international companies consider developing markets as future key locations for longterm and sustainable growth (Shan and Khan 2016), this study directs the way firms promote brand resonance for millennial consumers in developing countries.…”
Section: Implications and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The literature on reverse innovation explains the competitiveness of frugal products and services in foreign markets, which offer cheaper solutions to meet people's needs while consuming fewer resources [69]. Emerging countries would be pressured to produce innovations to solve their urgent social problems, leading to solutions that would rarely be conceived of in environments with different circumstances [70].…”
Section: Economic Facilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%