Post by saiful200 on Aug 20, 2024 4:07:55 GMT
Every company must have its part, or a large part, digital if it wants to be on the "wave" of social demand. Scientific advances will initially be accessible to a few. Novelty and research must be profitable; over time, they will be more available to everyone. Corporate responsibility is bottomless rhetoric to improve the image in front of the consumer or are we really talking about companies that seek to contribute to a better society? I want to think that there are companies, and many companies, that seek to contribute to a better society, to help consumers with their needs.
Although what is most prevalent and most observed, and I https://www.latestdatabase.com/ would dare say, increasingly, is greed, without taking into account the consumer himself, solely for the greater benefit of oneself. I'll stick with the first ones. Log in to respond Eva THE topic of social enterprises and digital transformation seems very interesting to me and has a powerful potential that, for that reason, makes me a little uneasy. While it is true that through data science a large number of events that affect us can be analyzed and predicted, at the same time it implies control of information on the behavior of populations that can be used as a method of control or manipulation.
How to know or how to regulate how social some companies really are? The concept of social enterprises does not seem like bottomless rhetoric to me, but there is some way to contrast social impact vs. a simple marketing strategy that appropriates social concepts to highlight a brand? How to mark the line between a market strategy and a true social approach? Log in to respond Exequiel Very good note! I loved it, great information.
Although what is most prevalent and most observed, and I https://www.latestdatabase.com/ would dare say, increasingly, is greed, without taking into account the consumer himself, solely for the greater benefit of oneself. I'll stick with the first ones. Log in to respond Eva THE topic of social enterprises and digital transformation seems very interesting to me and has a powerful potential that, for that reason, makes me a little uneasy. While it is true that through data science a large number of events that affect us can be analyzed and predicted, at the same time it implies control of information on the behavior of populations that can be used as a method of control or manipulation.
How to know or how to regulate how social some companies really are? The concept of social enterprises does not seem like bottomless rhetoric to me, but there is some way to contrast social impact vs. a simple marketing strategy that appropriates social concepts to highlight a brand? How to mark the line between a market strategy and a true social approach? Log in to respond Exequiel Very good note! I loved it, great information.