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Aquil, Syed Saleem
- Indian Rural Entrepreneurship and Industrial Development in Tribal Belt with Special Reference to Bastar District of Chhattisgarh
Abstract Views :307 |
PDF Views:2
Authors
Affiliations
1 Kalyan P. G. College, Bhilai (C. G.), IN
2 Mahatma Basweshwar College Latur, Maharashtra, IN
1 Kalyan P. G. College, Bhilai (C. G.), IN
2 Mahatma Basweshwar College Latur, Maharashtra, IN
Source
Asian Journal of Management, Vol 5, No 2 (2014), Pagination: 159-161Abstract
Villages in India have spending power, but they also have some unique problems. What this combination has done is to stoke entrepreneurship among professionals aiming to offer solutions and tap into the rural opportunity. Tweaking technology is also making it possible for startups to offer new applications that suit rural consumers. It is the scale of the opportunity that is drawing scores of entrepreneurs to rural India. Bastar, the tribal district, before splitting into three districts, was one of the largest district in India, with an area of 39114 sq k.m, which was even greater than the Kerala state and some other countries like Belgium, Israel etc. In the year 1999, the district Bastar has been divided into 3 districts namely Bastar, Kanker and Dantewada. All these 3 districts come under Bastar Division with the divisional head quarter at Jagdalpur, which is the district head quarter of Bastar district. The beauty of Bastar district lies in its natural forest area and various types of tribals. The total forest area is 7112 sq k.m which is more than 75% of the total area of the district of the total population more than 70% are tribals like Gonds, Abhuj Maria, Darda Maria, Bison Horn Maria, Munia Doria, Dhruva, Bhatra, Halba etc.References
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- A Study on Relevance of E-Business in India
Abstract Views :342 |
PDF Views:2
Authors
Affiliations
1 Kalyan P. G. College, Bhilai, IN
1 Kalyan P. G. College, Bhilai, IN
Source
Asian Journal of Management, Vol 5, No 2 (2014), Pagination: 268-271Abstract
The objective of study is to find out the latest trend of e-commerce in business. Electronic has changed the concept of business all over the world specifically after 1995. Even a small company or business undertaking has turned into a multinational company since internet has broken all barriers of communication and boundaries of the countries. So attempt is being made to find out how the internet has changed to global business. Based on those data, a concept and analysis have been developed to get information on the challenges and opportunities faced by the business. The research study covers e-commerce activities, benefits, barriers and key success factors. It covers essentially the Global business and especially Indian interest and Indian Growth rate as compare to world level. Since the study is being completed within a very short span of time the primary data from the different sources like Railways, tourism and Banks could be collected. Although we understand that the business of these entities is heavily depending upon internet infrastructure. All the working of these undertakings id stalled if the internet is not functioning. Even then we tried to collect data from the various secondary sources including various web sites.References
- Andrew D. Mitchell (2001);Towards compability: The future of ecommerce within the global trading system; Journal of International Economic law; 2001; pp.683-723.
- Diana Oblinger (2001); Will E-business Shape the Future of Open and Distance Learning?; Open Learning; Vol. 16, No. 1, 2001; pp.9-25.
- Elizabeth Goldsmith and Sue L.T. McGregor (2000); E-commerce: consumer protection issues and implications for research and education; J Consumer Studies & Home Economics; Vol.24, No.2, June 2000, pp.124–127.
- Farooq Ahmed (2001); Electronic Commerce : An Indian perspective; International Journal of Law and Information Technology; Vol.9, No.2, 2001;pp.133-170.
- Jackie Gilbert Bette Ann Stead (2001); Ethical Issues in Electronic Commerce; Journal of Business Ethics; Vol.34, 2001; pp.75-85.
- Mauricio S. Featherman, Joseph S. Valacich & John D. Wells (2006); Is that authentic or artificial? Understanding consumer perceptions of risk in e-service encounters; Inforamtion System Journal; Vol.16, 2006; pp. 107-134.
- Nir B. Kshetri (2001); Determinants of the Locus of Global Ecommerce; Electronic Markets; Vol.11, No.4, 2001; pp.250-257.
- Patric Barwise (2001); TV, PC or Mobile? Future media for consumer e-commerce; Business strategy review; Vol.12, issue 1; 2001; pp.35-42.
- Prithviraj Dasgupta and Kasturi Sengupta (2002); E-Commerce in the Indian Insurance Industry; Electronic Commerce Research; Vol.2, 2002; pp.43-60.
- Richard T. Watson and George M. Zinkhan (1997); Electronic commerce strategy: addressing the key questions; Journal Of Strategic Marketing; Vol.5, pp.189-209.