Fani Kerum – University of Applied Sciences Burgenland, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria

Neven Šipić – Zagreb School of Business, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia

Dijana Vuković – University of the North, 42000 Varaždin, Croatia

Keywords:
Hotel industry;
Innovation;
Transaction management;
Transformational
management;
Change management

DOI: https://doi.org/10.31410/EMAN.2024.469

Abstract: Tourism represents an important component of economic devel­opment in Croatia. The competitiveness of Croatia as a tourist destination largely depends on the level of quality of its tourism product in relation to key success factors. The attractiveness and diversity of the offers in tourism stand out as significant factors in the quality of the tourist products of Cro­atia. Hospitality and tourism, of which the hotel industry is an integral part, today represent significant activity in the global framework. It is this activ­ity that provides employment and generates significant income, creating a large part of the gross domestic product (GDP) in the economies of tour­ism-oriented countries and a significant multiplier effect. The quality of the hotel offer is, in part, determined by the hotel’s ability to monitor, adopt, and implement innovative tourist products, services, and solutions for its guests and other important stakeholders. The ability of tourism companies today lies in the implementation and increasing utilization of the advantages of innovation, which thus becomes a decisive factor in the survival of tour­ism companies in today’s turbulent and unstable business environment. To­day, tourism companies are forced to be innovative in order to survive in a changing business environment. Innovativeness can be defined as the de­gree to which an individual, compared to others, adopts novelties. From the point of view of tourism organizations, innovation represents openness to new ideas that are part of their culture. The innovativeness of tourist orga­nizations, and therefore tourism, stems from the ability of tourist organi­zations to continuously transform knowledge and ideas into new tourism products, processes, and systems in order to ensure benefits for stakehold­ers. Understanding the innovation process is possible through the explana­tion of the linear and interactive models. In the linear model, the innovation chain starts with formal research and development activities, which are fol­lowed by applied research and product development. The next step after the development of a new tourist product is its commercialization. However, the innovative process most often does not have such a beginning, which is why an interactive model provides a better explanation, according to which there is no general order for how innovation occurs. Implementing change management strategies and continuously introducing innovations are cru­cial activities in hotel management. These efforts are essential not only for driving the hotel’s growth and development but also for ensuring its long-term survival. According to the above, the goal of the research is to deter­mine the degree of transformational and transactional leadership, dimen­sions of corporate culture, and dimensions of corporate learning that con­tribute to innovations in the hotel, as well as to determine to what extent in­novations affect the creation of value for hotel guests.

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8th International Scientific Conference – EMAN 2024 – Economics and Management: How to Cope With Disrupted Times, Rome, Italy, March 21, 2024, CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, published by: Association of Economists and Managers of the Balkans, Belgrade, Serbia; ISBN 978-86-80194-83-7, ISSN 2683-4510, DOI: https://doi.org/10.31410/EMAN.2024

Creative Commons Non Commercial CC BY-NC: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission. 

Suggested citation
Kerum, F., Šipić, N., & Vuković, D. (2024). Organizational Factors, Factors of Innovation in Croatia’s Tourist Offer. In C. A. Nastase, A. Monda, & R. Dias (Eds.), International Scientific Conference – EMAN 2024: Vol 8. Conference Proceedings (pp. 469-478). Association of Economists and Managers of the Balkans. https://doi.org/10.31410/EMAN.2024.469

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