This study explores the relationship between managers’ attitudes toward sustainability, implementation of environmental practices, and firm performance in wineries, building on upper echelons theory. Then, consistent with dynamic capability theory, we propose that wineries, typically small and/or family owned, develop innovative dynamic capabilities in the form of formal intellectual property (IP) and branding development to strengthen the relationship between their environmental practices and firm market and financial performance. We test our hypotheses using survey data from wineries in Italy, France, Denmark, and the US. We then explore how wineries in the “Old World” (Italy and France) differ from wineries in the “New World” (Denmark and the US) in their use of formal IP and branding capabilities to bolster market and financial performance.

Tyler, B., Cerrato, D., Beukel, K., Minciullo, M., Lahneman, B., Spielmann, N., Cruse, A. D., Attitudes toward Sustainability, Environmental Practices, and Firm Performance in the Wine Industry: A Multi-Country Study, Paper, in Making Knowledge Work. Proceedings of the EURAM 2017 Conference, (Glasgow (Scotland, UK), 21-24 June 2017), European Academy of Management, Bruxelles 2017: 1-27 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/122667]

Attitudes toward Sustainability, Environmental Practices, and Firm Performance in the Wine Industry: A Multi-Country Study

Cerrato, Daniele;Minciullo, Marco;
2017

Abstract

This study explores the relationship between managers’ attitudes toward sustainability, implementation of environmental practices, and firm performance in wineries, building on upper echelons theory. Then, consistent with dynamic capability theory, we propose that wineries, typically small and/or family owned, develop innovative dynamic capabilities in the form of formal intellectual property (IP) and branding development to strengthen the relationship between their environmental practices and firm market and financial performance. We test our hypotheses using survey data from wineries in Italy, France, Denmark, and the US. We then explore how wineries in the “Old World” (Italy and France) differ from wineries in the “New World” (Denmark and the US) in their use of formal IP and branding capabilities to bolster market and financial performance.
2017
Inglese
Making Knowledge Work. Proceedings of the EURAM 2017 Conference
European Academy of Management Conference
Glasgow (Scotland, UK)
Paper
21-giu-2017
24-giu-2017
European Academy of Management
Tyler, B., Cerrato, D., Beukel, K., Minciullo, M., Lahneman, B., Spielmann, N., Cruse, A. D., Attitudes toward Sustainability, Environmental Practices, and Firm Performance in the Wine Industry: A Multi-Country Study, Paper, in Making Knowledge Work. Proceedings of the EURAM 2017 Conference, (Glasgow (Scotland, UK), 21-24 June 2017), European Academy of Management, Bruxelles 2017: 1-27 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/122667]
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/122667
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact