A wide literature exists, according to which small and medium-sized companies perform worse than large ones, due to a lack of human and financial resources, that keep the SMEs from adopting new technological solutions and innovative managerial practices, necessary to improve the overall performances. This paper discusses the results of a research aimed at measuring and assessing the operational performances of SMEs in order to test whether belonging to an industrial district enables firms to take advantage of the experience of the other members of the same cluster and, thus, to develop some organizational and managerial skills, which only large companies, endowed with a greater amount of human, technical and financial resources, can generally acquire. After a review of the main literature concerning manufacturing and logistics performances in large enterprises and in small and medium-sized ones, the paper presents the results of a two steps quantitative analysis. In the first step, the research question that the authors try to answer is whether the logistics and manufacturing performances of large plants are better than those of small and medium-sized production units. In the second step, the research question is whether the small and medium-sized enterprises, that belong to an industrial district, perform better than the SMEs, which are not involved in such a kind of network. The data employed in this analysis concern a sample of plants of the mechanical industry and were collected through the Italian Best Factory Award and through an ad hoc survey in an Italian industrial district.

Logistics and manufacturing performances: a comparison between large and small-to-medium sized enterprises

GRANDO, ALBERTO;BELVEDERE, VALERIA
2004

Abstract

A wide literature exists, according to which small and medium-sized companies perform worse than large ones, due to a lack of human and financial resources, that keep the SMEs from adopting new technological solutions and innovative managerial practices, necessary to improve the overall performances. This paper discusses the results of a research aimed at measuring and assessing the operational performances of SMEs in order to test whether belonging to an industrial district enables firms to take advantage of the experience of the other members of the same cluster and, thus, to develop some organizational and managerial skills, which only large companies, endowed with a greater amount of human, technical and financial resources, can generally acquire. After a review of the main literature concerning manufacturing and logistics performances in large enterprises and in small and medium-sized ones, the paper presents the results of a two steps quantitative analysis. In the first step, the research question that the authors try to answer is whether the logistics and manufacturing performances of large plants are better than those of small and medium-sized production units. In the second step, the research question is whether the small and medium-sized enterprises, that belong to an industrial district, perform better than the SMEs, which are not involved in such a kind of network. The data employed in this analysis concern a sample of plants of the mechanical industry and were collected through the Italian Best Factory Award and through an ad hoc survey in an Italian industrial district.
2004
13th International Working Seminar on Production Economics
Grando, Alberto; Belvedere, Valeria
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11565/530591
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