Customer Relationship Marketing and Institutional Support Influence on the Women’s Companies Sustainability in Serbia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical and Hypothetical Framework
2.1. Customer Relationship Marketing (CRM)
2.1.1. Critical Success Factors in Customer Relationship Marketing Implementation
Trust
Commitments
Communication
Loyalty
Relationship between CRM Factors
- A1—Trust;
- A2—Commitment;
- A3—Communication;
- A4—Loyalty.
2.2. Institutional Framework (Ecosystem)
- Policy frameworks (WESD as a national policy priority and government focal point for the promotion and coordination);
- Gender-sensitive financial services;
- Business development support services (the participation of women entrepreneurs in generic financing programs and targeted financing programs for women entrepreneurs);
- Access to ICT technologies and markets (public procurement targeting female entrepreneurs, export promotion for women entrepreneurs, inclusive supply chains and linkages);
- Entrepreneurship education, mentoring and promotion.
- B1—A gender-sensitive legal and regulatory system that advances women’s economic empowerment;
- B2—Effective policy leadership and coordination for the promotion of WESD;
- B3—Access to gender-sensitive financial services;
- B4—Access to markets and technology;
- B5—Entrepreneurship training, mentoring and support.
2.3. Women’s Companies Sustainability Development
- C1—Economic–financial sustainability;
- C2—Social–human sustainability;
- C3—Environmental sustainability.
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Materials
3.2. Correlation and Regression Analysis
- C1—Economic–financial sustainability;
- C2—Social–human sustainability;
- C3—Environmental sustainability.
3.2.1. Correlation and Regression Analysis for Variable (AC)
3.2.2. Correlation and Regression Analysis for the Variable (BC)
3.2.3. Multiple Correlation and Regression Analysis for a Variable (ABC)
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Contribution of the Research
4.2. Similar Studies Results
4.3. Limitations of the Study
4.4. Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pillar | Definition | Source |
---|---|---|
Human | Human sustainability aims to take care of and improve the human capital in society. Investments in the health and education organization, access to servicing, nutrition, cognition and skills are all programs under the umbrella of human sustainability. Useful resources are cancelled, and areas accessible are confined, and there is a need to balance chronic growth with enhancements to health and attaining economic health for everyone. With the promotion of enterprise values that respect human capital, a corporation will view itself as a member of society. Communities around the globe may be positively or negatively affected by enterprise activities or impacted via methods used to supply uncooked materials. The development of competencies and human capacity to support the functions and sustainability of the organization and to promote the wellness of communities and society encompasses the human sustainability. | [87,88] |
Economic | Economic sustainability aims to keep up the capital intact. If social sustainability focuses on improving social equality, economic sustainability aims to boost the quality of living. Within the context of business, it refers to the efficient use of assets to keep up company profitability over time. Critics of this model acknowledge that an excellent gap in modern accounting practices is to not incorporate the value of injury to the world in market prices. A more recent approach to economics acknowledges the limited incorporation of the ecological and social parts in this simulation. New economics is inclusive of ecological arrangement and social capital relationships among people and challenges if continual growth of capital risks causing harm to the ecological and human system. | [87,89,90,91] |
Environmental | Environmental sustainability aims to improve human welfare through the protection of natural capital. Initiatives and applications are described as environmentally sustainable after they make certain that the wishes of the populace are met without the danger of compromising the wishes of destiny generations. Environmental sustainability locations emphasize how commercial enterprise can obtain advantageous financial results without doing any harm, within the short- or long-term, to the environment. An environmentally sustainable commercial enterprise seeks to combine all four sustainability pillars, and to attain this intention, everyone wishes to be handled equally, although in a few instances those might also additionally overlap. It is very critical to discover the unique form of inexperienced commercial enterprise to bring awareness to, because the four pillars gift particular characteristics. Businesses need to make a strategic decision about it so as to effectively incorporate the chosen approach into their policies and procedures. | [92] |
Social | Social maintainability points to protect social capital by contributing and making administrations that constitute the system of our society. The concept suits a bigger view of the world in connection to communities, societies and globalization. It implies protection of future eras and recognition that what we do can have an effect on others and on the world. Social maintainability centers on keeping up and progressing social quality with concepts such as cohesion, correspondence and genuineness and the significance of connections among individuals. It can be empowered and upheld by laws, data and shared thoughts of correspondence and rights. Social supportability consolidates the thought of maintainable advancement as characterized by the Joined Together Countries economic improvement objectives. The guideline of feasible advancement addresses social and financial advancement that secures the environment and underpins correspondence, and thus, the economy and society and the biological framework are commonly subordinate. | [93] |
A1 Trust | A2 Commitment | A3 Communication | A4 Loyalty | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mean | 3.6772727 | 3.9681818 | 3.8954545 | 3.8636364 |
Std Dev | 1.0338702 | 0.933343 | 1.0991808 | 1.1663256 |
Std Err Mean | 0.0697035 | 0.062926 | 0.0741068 | 0.0786337 |
N | 220 |
B1 | B2 | B3 | B4 | B5 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender-Sensitive Legal and Regulatory System That Advances Women’s Economic Empowerment | Effective Policy Leadership and Coordination for the Promotion of WESD | Access to Gender-Sensitive Financial Services | Access to Markets and Technology | Entrepreneurship Training, Mentoring and Support | |
Mean | 3.8318182 | 3.7545455 | 3.9363636 | 3.8454545 | 3.7818182 |
Std Dev | 0.9430768 | 0.9763071 | 0.9243265 | 1.0785274 | 1.1338045 |
Std Err Mean | 0.0635822 | 0.0658226 | 0.0623181 | 0.0727143 | 0.0764411 |
N | 220 |
C1 | C2 | C3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Economic–Financial Sustainability | Social–Human Sustainability | Environmental Sustainability | |
Mean | 4.0000000 | 3.8136364 | 3.9000000 |
Std Dev | 0.965146 | 1.0584711 | 1.142376 |
Std Err Mean | 0.0650701 | 0.0713621 | 0.077019 |
N | 220 |
Source | DF | Sum of Squares | Mean Square | F Ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|
Model | 1 | 67.90269 | 67.9027 | 362.1871 |
Error | 218 | 40.87054 | 0.1875 | Prob > F |
C. Total | 219 | 108.77323 | <0.0001 |
Source | DF | Sum of Squares | Mean Square | F Ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|
Model | 1 | 19.41139 | 19.4114 | 47.3545 |
Error | 218 | 89.36185 | 0.4099 | Prob > F |
C. Total | 219 | 108.77323 | <0.0001 |
Source | DF | Sum of Squares | Mean Square | F Ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|
Model | 2 | 88.89571 | 44.4479 | 485.2309 |
Error | 217 | 19.87752 | 0.0916 | Prob > F |
C. Total | 219 | 108.77323 | <0.0001 |
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Ćurčić, N.V.; Grubor, A.; Muhović, A. Customer Relationship Marketing and Institutional Support Influence on the Women’s Companies Sustainability in Serbia. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10824. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910824
Ćurčić NV, Grubor A, Muhović A. Customer Relationship Marketing and Institutional Support Influence on the Women’s Companies Sustainability in Serbia. Sustainability. 2021; 13(19):10824. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910824
Chicago/Turabian StyleĆurčić, Nikola V., Aleksandar Grubor, and Almir Muhović. 2021. "Customer Relationship Marketing and Institutional Support Influence on the Women’s Companies Sustainability in Serbia" Sustainability 13, no. 19: 10824. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910824
APA StyleĆurčić, N. V., Grubor, A., & Muhović, A. (2021). Customer Relationship Marketing and Institutional Support Influence on the Women’s Companies Sustainability in Serbia. Sustainability, 13(19), 10824. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910824