Networking Trends of Small Tourism Businesses in Post-Socialist Slovakia. | Journal of Small Business Management | Professional Journal archives from AllBusiness.com
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Networking Trends of Small Tourism Businesses in Post-Socialist Slovakia.

By Copp, Charles B.,Ivy, Russell L.

Monday, October 1 2001
Published on AllBusiness.com

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It is argued that the development of small economic enterprises is vital for a transitioning economy (Gibb 1993; Gibb and Haas 1996). Small businesses provide an outlet for many specialized workers to start their own firm, thus providing a foundation for a newly transitioning economy (Erutku and Vallee 1997). This philosophy has led to "a very substantial growth of the micro-small business sector over the past half-dozen years" (Charap, quoted in Gibb 1993, p.461), and this growth is the reason for the expansion of many new firms, particularly in the service sector (Gibb 1993). Tourism development is playing a strong role in the service sector boom. Research suggests that the tourism industry can be an area of high growth during economic transition, due to the low requirements of human capital needed to gain entry (Szivas and Riley 1999).

Academics have become interested in studying the interaction among firms, both large and small. Network theory, as applied to the business world, views businesses as spatial nodes and the interactions between them as linkages. Most academic literature on this topic is focused on manufacturing. A very small literature exists on the use of networks in the service sector, and even less on the tourism sector. The greater attention to the manufacturing sector in networking studies is probably due to the historical importance of manufacturing in global economic development (Roehl 1998).

However, with the service sector playing a more prevalent role in the global economy, research pertaining to service sector networks is growing (Afford 1998; Echtner 1995; Roehl 1998; Selin and Meyers 1998; Shaw and Williams 1998). Whereas manufacturing firms network mainly for the purposes of resource and product development, service firms tend to enter partnerships more for marketing and training purposes. Afford (1998), for example, focuses on how regional tourist boards seek to establish a market position, and how they benefit from networking with other sectors of the industry. Selin and Meyers (1998) investigate network usage by examining a regional public/private association between tourism agencies and a public land management bureau.

The goal of this article is to combine the fields of small business behavior, transition economies, and tourism development. Specifically the reorganization of the tourism industry within a transition economy and the usage of networks by small businesses will be analyzed in a case study of the Slovak Republic. Geographic differences between these small businesses and their use of networks will be an underlying theme of this research.

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