INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION - COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE IN THE ADVERTISING INDUSTRY
Thesis by Christina Merl, University of Vienna, Austria
Organisations are under pressure to keep pace with a fast changing, highly competitive, and increasingly global business. To continue to grow and thrive in this environment, global players need to make use of the new technologies; recognise knowledge and knowledge workers as their most important asset; maximise cross-cultural and cross-border knowledge exchange to find innovative solutions for their clients; and encourage their organisational learning process.
The empirical study by Christina Merl takes up the opportunity to explore how a cross-border communications agency, StrawberryFrog (SF), herein defined as a technology-enabled, geographically dispersed organisation overlaid by a community of practice (CoP), maximises its position in the volatile international advertising industry by making use of the new information technologies, recognising intellectual capital as a key asset, treating cultural diversity as a resource, and leveraging the functionality and benefit of CoP to encourage their organisational learning and knowledge sharing processes across geographical borders, cultural boundaries, and time zones.
For the full text contact Christina Merl
