Sustainability in Small and Medium Enterprises, Sustainable Development in the Slovak Republic, and Sustainability and Quality Management in Small and Medium Enterprises
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. What Is Sustainability?
2.2. Sustainable Economy
- EU companies:
- ⚬
- Group 1: all EU limited liability companies of substantial size and economic power (with 500+ employees and EUR 150 million+ in net turnover worldwide).
- ⚬
- Group 2: other limited liability companies operating in defined high-impact sectors, which do not meet both Group 1 thresholds but have more than 250 employees and a net turnover of EUR 40 million worldwide and more. For these companies, rules will start to apply two years later than for Group 1.
- Non-EU companies active in the EU with a turnover threshold aligned with Groups 1 and 2, generated in the EU.
- Integrate due diligence into policies;
- Identify actual or potential adverse human rights and environmental impacts;
- Prevent or mitigate potential impacts;
- End or minimize actual impacts;
- Establish and maintain a complaints procedure;
- Monitor the effectiveness of the due diligence policy and measures;
2.3. Sustainability in Practice
2.4. Business Sustainability Profile
- Of companies that use the Sustainability Profile, 80% have identified the most positive impact in the areas of communication, sustainability, and corporate social responsibility.
- A total of 68% of companies confirmed a significant increase in the positive perception of their employees due to easy access to all sustainability initiatives.
- A total of 63% of companies confirmed a 75% improvement in data management with the Sustainability Profile.
- Continuously improve procedures and approach an increase in sustainability performance. Seek inspiration from local, national, and international companies in this area. A suitable method is, for example, the use of the Benchmarking method. With this method, we can determine how your company is doing in sustainability because you can compare your business with other companies that carry out sustainability activities.
- Optimization is needed: the centralization of sustainability activities in one place in the company, which will gain direct access to these activities.
- Provide and constantly build trust in your sustainable business with your customers, employees, suppliers, investors, the public, and public authorities. This trust needs to be secured and communicated with all the necessary and easily accessible sustainability information.
- In conclusion: maintain your business while implementing changes you and the public want to see. Join the companies and institutions that set an example in sustainability.
- EU companies:
- ⚬
- Group 1: all EU limited liability companies of substantial size and economic power (with 500+ employees and EUR 150 million+ in net turnover worldwide).
- ⚬
- Group 2: other limited liability companies operating in defined high-impact sectors, which do not meet both Group 1 thresholds but have more than 250 employees and a net turnover of EUR 40 million worldwide and more. For these companies, rules will start to apply two years later than for Group 1.
- Non-EU companies active in the EU with a turnover threshold aligned with Groups 1 and 2, generated in the EU.
- Integrate due diligence into policies;
- Identify actual or potential adverse human rights and environmental impacts;
- Prevent or mitigate potential impacts;
- End or minimize actual impacts;
- Establish and maintain a complaints procedure;
- Monitor the effectiveness of the due diligence policy and measures;
- Publicly communicate on due diligence [6].
3. Quality Management
Quality, Total Quality Management
- Transcendent: quality is identified when experienced.
- Product-based: the extent to which a product possesses defined characteristics.
- User-based: the extent to which degree a product fulfills needs and expectations.
- Manufacturing-based: the fulfillment of tolerances and requirements.
- Value-based: the relation between cost and price.
- A constant endeavor to fulfill, and preferably exceed, customer needs and expectations at the lowest costs by continuous improvement of work, to which all involved are committed, focusing on the processes in the organization.
- Quality control is a part of TQM that is focused on fulfilling the quality requirements of the organization with inspection and using techniques like statistical sampling and statistical process control [8,11,12]. It aims to correct unwanted or unexpected changes and bring stability and consistency to a product [13].
- Quality assurance is also part of TQM and is focused on providing confidence and ensuring that quality requirements for manufacturing products are fulfilled [8,11,12]. It includes designing processes to build quality in the product and developing monitoring systems to measure performance contributions to prevent adverse events that can negatively affect quality.
- Committed leadership.
- Focus on customers.
- Decisions based on facts.
- Focus on processes.
- Continuous improvement.
- Let everybody be committed.
- Customer focus.
- Leadership.
- Engagement of people.
- Process approach.
- Improvement.
- Evidence-based decision-making.
- Relationship management [12].
- “Quality is, through the technical—stable economic performance of organizations of an organization with a modern quality management system, indeed currently significantly better results than an organization with a traditional focus on proving the quality of control.” The lower the share of discrepancies in overall performance, the higher the level of customer satisfaction and loyalty and the greater the ability to meet customer requirements.
- “Quality management is the most important protective factor against market losses”. In recent years, research conducted in EU countries shows that about 66% of all market causes are due to the low quality of products and services.
- “Quality is a very important source of material and energy savings”. An example is the use of lower-reliability products. The use of such products results in a higher failure rate and a lower share of the total available time occupied. Although such an approach may confer a short-term advantage to the manufacturer, it is unacceptable from a societal point of view.
- “Quality also affects macroeconomic indicators”. The real wealth of the organization is directly dependent on the development and improvement of quality management systems, both in industrial organizations and in the field of services, the public sector, education, etc.
- “Quality is a limiting factor of the so-called sustainable development.”
- “Quality and consumer protection are continuous vessels”. By the end of the twentieth century, the issue of consumer protection became a very important factor influencing the legislation of almost all developed countries. Long-term experience has suggested that the most effective incentive for producers to produce products that do not harm users is to seek high refunds [17].
- Quality is fitness for use: quality means the product or service can perform its intended function.
- Poor quality of a product or service costs users if it does not perform its intended function.
- Quality is meeting customer expectations:
- Quality is satisfying the customer.
- The customer defines quality.
- The customer perceives the quality of a product or service.
- Quality is exceeding the customer’s expectations.
- Quality is the extent to which the customers or users believe the product or service surpasses their needs and expectations.
- Quality is delighting the customer.
- Quality is superiority to competitors:
- Quality is how a company’s products and services compare to those of competitors or how they compare to those offered by the company in the past [18].
- (a)
- A degree of excellence.
- (b)
- Conformance to requirements.
- (c)
- A totality of characteristics that act to satisfy a need.
- (d)
- Fitness for use.
- (e)
- Fitness for purpose.
- (f)
- Freedom from defects.
- (g)
- Delighting customers [19].
- (a)
- Quality is specification driven—does it meet the set requirements?
- (b)
- Quality is measured at the start of life—what percent passes customer acceptance?
- (c)
- Quality is observable by the number of rejects from customers.
- 100% Quality.
- A Company of Quality.
- Committed To Quality. Committed To You
- Create. Enhance and Sustain.
- Delivering excellence.
- Delivering results, reliability, and rock solid dependability.
- Focus On Quality.
- High Performance. High Quality.
- Premium Quality. Guaranteed.
- Quality Is Key.
- Quality is the Best Business Plan.
- Quality Leads!
- Quality Protects Jobs.
- Remember—The Next Inspector Is The Customer.
- Safety, Quality & Quantity. In That Order.
- Safety. Quality. Excellence.
- Committed To Customer Satisfaction.
- We Never Forget Who We Are Working For.
- We Stand Ahead In Quality [20].
4. Small and Medium Enterprises, Characteristics, and Impact on the Economy
4.1. General Characteristics of SMEs
4.2. Small and Medium Enterprises and Their Importance in the Economy
4.3. The Position and Roles of Small and Medium Enterprises in the Economy
- Social function (every citizen is free to do business in a market economy).
- Economic function (small- and medium-sized enterprises play a significant role in maintaining, maintaining market competitiveness, market competition, etc.).
- Structural function.
- Delivery function.
- Employer function.
4.4. SMEs in the European Union (EU27) from 2008 to 2021
- There were estimated to be approximately 22.6 million small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the European Union in 2021, with the vast majority of these enterprises being micro-sized firms that only employed fewer than nine people. A further 1.3 million enterprises were small firms with between 10 and 49 employees, and approximately 201 thousand were medium-sized firms that had 50 to 249 employers; value varies by country. SMEs are an important part of the European economy, but their value to each country varies quite significantly. In Malta, for example, 93.1 percent of the value added to the economy comes from SMEs, while in Germany, 82 percent of the county’s added value comes from SMEs. For the European Union, the average value that SMEs contribute to the economy is around 56 percent. Almost 84 million are employed by SMEs. In 2021, SMEs in the European Union employed almost 84 million people. In Europe’s biggest economy, Germany, SMEs employed 18.5 million people, with over 6.8 million people employed by small-sized enterprises. Micro-sized enterprises employed approximately 38.4 million of the 83.8 million people employed by SMEs in the EU. There were approximately 18.5 million people employed in small- and medium-sized enterprises (SME) in Germany in 2021, by far the most of any other country in the European Union. On the other hand, Malta had the lowest number of people employed in small- and medium-sized enterprises in the European Union, reaching just 145.6 thousand people.
- Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) contributed approximately EUR 3.5 trillion to the European economy in 2020, with micro-sized enterprises accounting for just over EUR 1.25 trillion of this amount. The value added from SMEs in Germany was estimated to be over EUR 931 billion in 2021, by far the most of any other country in the European Union. On the other hand, Malta had the lowest amount of value added in small- and medium-sized enterprises in the European Union, at EUR 5.2 billion. Large businesses that employed 250 or more people contributed almost half of the value added to the non-financial business economy of the European Union in 2020, compared with 17.3 percent for medium-sized businesses that had between 50 and 249 workers.
- There were estimated to be approximately 5.76 million small- and medium-sized businesses (SMEs) operating in the distributive trades sector in the European Union in 2020, the most of any industry sector in that year.
- There were estimated to be approximately 58.9 thousand medium-sized enterprises operating in the manufacturing sector in the European Union in 2021, the most of any industry sector for this size band in that year.
- There were estimated to be approximately 305 thousand small-sized enterprises operating in the wholesale and retail trade repair of motor vehicles and motorcycle sector in the European Union in 2021, the most of any industry sector in this size band in that year.
- There were estimated to be approximately 20 million persons employed in small- and medium-sized businesses (SMEs) operating in the distributive trades sector in the European Union in 2020, the most of any industry sector in that year [28]. In the Figure 1 are displayed a number of enterprises (SME) in the European Union in 2021.
4.5. Small and Medium Enterprises in the Slovak Republic
4.6. Recovery and Resilience Plan of the Slovak Republic
- Green economy;
- Education;
- Science, research, and innovation;
- Health;
- Efficient public administration and digitization.
5. Materials and Methods
- In this paper, we address, among other topics, the current and important topic of sustainability and sustainable activities in companies. In this context, we can say that the future of the global economy and society is full of risk and uncertainty. This is not only true for the economic field; these risks, changes, and uncertainties apply to all areas of society because there are cumulative major problems and challenges in our civilization. It is, therefore, essential that companies increase their performance, competitiveness, and sustainability. In the area of sustainability, there is a need to support the sustainable activities and behavior of businesses, including small- and medium-sized enterprises, as businesses have a key role to play in building sustainability. Sustainability consists of three basic pillars: economic, social, and environmental. In this paper, we also deal with the profile of the company’s sustainability and research in this area in Slovakia. Based on the study, analysis, and evaluation of professional materials and our experience, we also propose recommendations for improving and optimizing the company’s performance in the field of sustainability. In this paper, we deal with sustainability and sustainable development in Slovakia, both theoretically and practically. In the practical area, we focused on the production of Slovak SMEs and on sustainable development in Slovakia; we established two hypotheses related to sustainability.
- This paper also briefly deals with current management and describes its starting points, its characteristics, trends, and changes in the 21st century. We also focus on selected changes in the market and management, and in this context, we describe selected requirements for companies today. The external environment for companies changed significantly from the end of the 20th century to the beginning of the 21st century. The conditions for doing business in the market are changing continuously and increasingly, the development of technologies and information and communication technologies is accelerating, and the speed and frequency of changes are increasing. We think that we need to pay attention to this topic because we need to pay close attention to this topic. Businesses need to be well prepared to change the conditions for doing business in the global market; that is, they must first realize that change is a reality, then they need to identify, analyze, and evaluate their impact on the business. Finally, they need to prepare the business and adapt the company to these external changes. Suppose changes in the external environment are faster and greater than the company’s response to these changes. In that case, the company may run into problems, which may increase, and they may be so great that they threaten the company’s very existence. By this, we mean that the company’s internal response to external market changes must be adequate.
- We also deal with the description of selected important characteristics of a small business. In this section, this description of small businesses is a part of an important topic in our paper. Based on our theoretical and practical knowledge and experience, we focused on describing a small business’s selected characteristics.
6. Results and Discussion
- Despite large investments in sustainability, many businesses in central Europe focus exclusively on the production of the products themselves and do not offer any added value to take them further. This is exactly what the Slovak Business Agency focuses on in Slovakia, which supports business at the national, regional, and local levels.
- Business sustainability is becoming increasingly important for all businesses in all industries. Up to 62% of European business leaders consider a sustainable development strategy essential for competitiveness today, and another 22% think it will become essential in the future. Some large global companies, such as the BMW car company, LG Electronics, and Nestlé, practice long-term sustainability in their concept. In terms of the sustainability of companies in Slovakia, the most active sectors are technology, telecommunications, and retail companies. Above all, these are branches of foreign companies. Such companies include, for example, Lindström. It has a long-term focus on sustainable innovation, material recycling, creating win–win strategies to support the sustainability of partner companies, cooperation with local communities, and the social responsibility of its employees [31].
6.1. Development of Selected Indicators of Sustainable Development of EU Countries
- Growth of real GDP per capita (GdpPc);
- Productivity of resources and domestic material consumption (resPro);
- People at risk of poverty or social exclusions (Risk);
- Life expectancy at birth by gender (lifeExp);
- Greenhouse gas emissions (Emis);
- Share of renewable energy in gross final energy consumption (RenEn);
- Primary energy consumption (enerCons);
- Common index of birds by species (Birdx);
- Official development assistance as a share of gross national income (Devel);
- Population with confidence in EU institutions by institutions (Confid);
6.2. Aggregate Index Creation Methodology
6.3. Evaluation of the Aggregated SD Index in the Pre-Crisis, Crisis, and Post-Crisis Period
- Growth of real GDP per capita (GdpPc);
- Productivity of resources and domestic material consumption (resPro);
- People at risk of poverty or social exclusions (Risk);
- Life expectancy at birth by gender (lifeExp);
- Greenhouse gas emissions (Emis);
- Share of renewable energy in gross final energy consumption (RenEn);
- Primary energy consumption (enerCons);
- Common index of birds by species (Birdx);
- Official development assistance as a share of gross national income (Devel);
- Population with confidence in EU institutions by institutions (Confid);
Conclusions
- Within the scope of the short questionnaire, Awareness of managers in production enterprises of the Slovak Republic, basic data on the perception of sustainable development and socially responsible business (as a sub-field of sustainable development) in production enterprises in the territory of Slovakia was collected. With regard to manufacturing companies, 301 managers took part in the survey and answered questions regarding the management’s relationship to self-development and socially responsible business. This survey aimed to determine whether the managers of manufacturing companies know about corporate social responsibility and sustainable development and whether they use indicators to assess the degree of the company’s sustainable development. Small businesses had the highest number based on the size of the company, exactly 40.53%. Large enterprises represented only 11.96%.
- The first supporting question in the questionnaire was to find out whether the managers of manufacturing companies were familiar with the term socially responsible business. Managers who knew corporate social responsibility represented 71% of the total, and 29% of managers had not encountered this concept.
- The questionnaire focused on the holistic mapping of Slovak manufacturing enterprises’ existing states of sustainable development. The collection was conducted from June 2020 to November 2021. The collection of responses took place during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was the reason for the extension of the return period.
- The questionnaire primarily contained questions directed to specific activities and facts as well as evidence confirming whether or not the company acts within limits set forth by sustainable development. The descriptive statistics of the main questionnaire, Sustainable development in manufacturing enterprises in the Slovak Republic, included the necessary statistical sample of 383 returned questionnaires for the evaluation of relevant results using the Raosoft software with a 95% confidence interval and a 5% limit of the permissible error. The largest representation of enterprises based on the nature of the production was the production of metals and metal structures, excluding machines and equipment, up to 54, which represents 16.98% of the total sample. The clear reason for the highest representation in the sample of this industry is precisely the high number of enterprises in Slovakia belonging to this industry. Specifically, out of a total of 79,096 manufacturing enterprises, up to 32,095 (i.e., 40.58%) belong to the manufacturing of metals and metal structures, excluding machines and equipment, and it is the largest industry in Slovakia. In the second place, there is a large representation of the industrial production of wood and paper products and printing, from which 47 questionnaires were obtained, with a percentage representation in the sample of 14.78%. Likewise, this industry is the second most numerous industry in Slovakia, and it consists of a total of 15,035 enterprises (i.e., 19% of the total industrial production) (Table 6).
- The other part of the questionnaire focused on specific facts and evidence in the given production enterprise’s field of sustainable development. The first question was aimed at finding out the level of managers’ identification with the need for sustainable development in their company. An important finding from the answers to this question is that 35.22% of managers do not have sufficient knowledge about sustainable development and sustainable business direction. This information represents a significant problem because low knowledge dampens the motivation of managers to implement elements of sustainable development in corporate activities. In doing so, it is essential that managers at the strategic level know of and are identified with the necessity to ensure the sustainable development of the company. The implementation process also includes the continuous addition and consolidation of the knowledge of all managers, as well as the company’s employees, about sustainability and sustainable development.
- Answers in which managers stated 100% knowledge about sustainable development and the sustainable direction of the company were represented 31 times. Most companies were of Slovak origin (52%). In second place, companies of German origin presented managers’ answers that showed 100% knowledge (Figure 5) [40].
6.4. Perception and Feeling of the Need for Orientation toward the Sustainable Development of Managers’ Perspectives
Conclusions
6.5. Limitations of the Results and Future Research in Sustainability
7. Current Management and Its Characteristics
7.1. Business Transformation
7.2. The Current Market Economy and Current Management Changes
8. Internalization of SMEs
- International active SMEs have:
- -
- A higher turnover;
- -
- Far higher employment;
- -
- Higher innovation capacity.
- A solid source of economic growth in the current economic crisis.
- Provide SMEs with easily accessible and appropriate information on how to expand their business outside the EU.
- Improve coherence between support activities.
- Increase the cost-effectiveness of support activities.
- Eliminate existing shortcomings in support services.
- Create a level playing field and ensure equal access for SMEs from all EU Member States.
- Mapping the environment of support services at home and abroad.
- Providing information close to SMEs.
- Provide a European dimension to the provision of services to SMEs in priority markets.
- Support for SMEs through the internationalization of clusters and networks.
- Applying the internationalization of SMEs in other EU policies and creating a favorable environment for the internationalization of SMEs.
- Support for SMEs through the internationalization of clusters and networks:
- Partnership events between clusters, SME clusters, export consortia, and countries outside Europe.
- Project “Support for international cluster activities in Europe”.
- Use of contacts, business contacts, and formal and informal knowledge circulating within clusters and business networks.
- Development of partnerships and business activities abroad (e.g., public procurement).
- Easier access to global value chains.
- Tailor-made professional advice, acquiring the necessary skills.
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Phase | Quality Control (QC) | Quality Assurance (QA) | Total Quality Management (TQM) | Quality 4.0 (Q4.0) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scope | Product | QC, processes | QA, organization, people | TQM, systems, stakeholders | |
Meaning of quality | Inspection | Design | Empowerment | Innovation | |
Features | Product specifications, statistical process control, and variation. Correction | Built-in process quality. Process performance and metrics. Prevention | Organizational goals linked to metrics. Quality as a strategic imperative. Continuous improvement | Suppliers, customers, and society are integrated. Focus on data and how digital tools provide new and timely insights |
Enterprise Category | Headcount: Staff | Annual Turnover | Annual Balance Sheet Total |
---|---|---|---|
Medium -Sized | <250 | ≤€50 million | ≤€43 million |
Small | <50 | ≤€10 million | ≤€10 million |
Micro | <10 | ≤€2 million | ≤€2 million |
Characteristics | SMEs | Large Organizations |
---|---|---|
Structure | Few or no layers of management Top Management close to the point of delivery Low degree of specialization High incidence of innovativeness | Several layers of management Top Management far from point of delivery The high degree of specialization Low incidence of innovativeness |
Procedure | Low degree of standardization Low degree of formalization People dominated Idealist decision making | The high degree of standardization The high degree of formalization System dominated Fact-based decision making |
Processes | Simple Planning & Control system Informal evaluations &reporting Result orientated | Complex planning &control system Formal evaluation &reporting Control orientated |
People | High degree of resistance to change Corporate mindset Modest capital & financial resources | Low degree of resistance to change Departmental mindset Abundant capital & financial resources |
Country | Development of Indicators | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
resPro + | Risk - | lifeExp + | Emis - | RenEn + | enerCons - | GdpPc + | Devel + | Confid + | Birdx + | |
EU 28 | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Belgium | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline |
Bulgaria | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Czechia | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | decline |
Denmark | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline |
Germany | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | decline |
Estonia | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | decline |
Ireland | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | - |
Greece | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline | decline | - |
Spain | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | stagnation | growth | decline | - |
France | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline |
Croatia | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | growth | growth |
Italy | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline | decline | - |
Cyprus | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | stagnation | decline | - |
Latvia | growth | decline | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Lithuania | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Luxembourg | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Hungary | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Malta | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Netherlands | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline |
Austria | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | - |
Poland | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Portugal | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | - |
Romania | decline | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Slovenia | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | - |
Slovakia | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | stagnation | decline | - |
Finland | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | decline | decline |
Sweden | growth | growth | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | stagnation | growth | decline |
United Kingdom | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | decline | growth | growth | decline | decline |
Country | Pre-Crisis Period | Crisis Period | Country | Change in Value Index | Country | Post-Crisis Period | Country | Change in Value Index |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LU | 1 | 1 | BG | 2.21 | LU | 1 | LT | 0.34 |
SE | 2 | 4 | RO | 1.63 | SE | 3 | IT | 0.33 |
NL | 3 | 2 | SK | 1.46 | NL | 2 | RO | 0.28 |
DK | 4 | 3 | LT | 1.34 | DK | 4 | LV | 0.27 |
AT | 5 | 12 | PL | 1 | AT | 12 | HR | 0.19 |
FR | 6 | 5 | HU | 0.62 | FR | 5 | GB | 0.18 |
GB | 7 | 7 | CZ | 0.58 | GB | 6 | IE | 0.18 |
BE | 8 | 6 | LV | 0.50 | BE | 7 | PL | 0.17 |
DE | 9 | 11 | CY | 0.32 | DE | 11 | SK | 0.11 |
IE | 10 | 10 | GR | 0.09 | IE | 9 | BE | 0.10 |
FI | 11 | 14 | EE | 0.04 | FI | 14 | BG | 0.06 |
IT | 12 | 8 | SI | −0.08 | IT | 8 | SE | 0.03 |
EU28 | 13 | 9 | EU28 | −0.13 | EU28 | 10 | SI | 0.02 |
ES | 14 | 16 | PT | −0.18 | ES | 16 | FI | 0.01 |
PT | 15 | 17 | DK | −0.29 | PT | 17 | CY | −0.01 |
MT | 16 | 24 | NL | −0.30 | MT | 26 | EU28 | −0.02 |
GR | 17 | 15 | BE | −0.31 | GR | 19 | DE | −0.03 |
CY | 18 | 13 | IT | −0.36 | CY | 13 | AT | −0.03 |
SI | 19 | 19 | FR | −0.36 | SI | 18 | FR | −0.04 |
CZ | 20 | 21 | IE | −0.52 | CZ | 22 | MT | −0.04 |
HU | 21 | 23 | GB | −0.54 | HU | 23 | AU | −0.05 |
SK | 22 | 18 | ES | −0.57 | SK | 15 | PT | −0.10 |
LV | 23 | 25 | DE | −0.59 | LV | 24 | CZ | −0.14 |
LT | 24 | 22 | LU | −0.65 | LT | 20 | ES | −0.18 |
EE | 25 | 28 | FI | −0.91 | EE | 28 | LU | −0.19 |
PL | 26 | 27 | MT | −1.07 | PL | 27 | NL | −0.22 |
RO | 27 | 26 | SE | −1.12 | RO | 25 | GR | −0.35 |
BG | 28 | 29 | AT | −1.15 | BG | 29 | EE | −0.38 |
HR | 29 | 20 | HR | - | HR | 21 | DK | −0.51 |
Companies’ Countries of Origin | Numbers of Companies | Percentage Representation |
---|---|---|
Slovakia | 196 | 61.64% |
Germany | 59 | 18.55% |
Austria | 25 | 7.86% |
Czech Republic | 19 | 5.97% |
South Korea | 7 | 2.20% |
USA | 4 | 1.26% |
Japan | 3 | 0.94% |
Ukraine | 2 | 0.63% |
Denmark | 1 | 0.31% |
France | 1 | 0.31% |
Sweden | 1 | 0.31% |
Total | 318 | 100% |
SELECTED CHANGES, MARKET TRENDS, CURRENT MANAGEMENT |
Globalization |
Technologies in general, as well as Information and Communication Technologies—their unprecedented rapid development and expansion |
Digitization, Automation, Robotics |
Hyper competition (strong competition in the global market) |
Innovations (product innovations, innovations of principles, procedures used in business management, innovations of management systems, etc.) |
Modern management systems (for example, knowledge management), their need for application in the company |
CURRENT REQUIREMENTS FOR CURRENT COMPANIES |
Necessary internal adaptation of the company to changes in the market, changes in the external environment |
Constantly continuing reduction of product development time |
The need to initiate and implement innovations, product innovations, procedures, methods, and systems in the company |
The quality of products and services is a matter of course |
Increasing the amount of information needed for business managementThis fact is related to the complex, complicated turbulent environment of the global market economy, as well as to the growing complexity of technical systems and equipment |
Pressure on prices of products and services, pressure to reduce costs in the company |
With the rise of information systems in the company, the growing importance for the company is constantly growing |
The need to monitor the external environment |
Increasing quality requirements for employees |
Increase the efficiency and effectiveness of business processes to maintain and strengthen competitiveness—A quality product or service is the output of business processes |
Training and staff development |
Change of corporate culture, corporate culture oriented to changes and adaptation to changes, corporate culture oriented to quality |
Change of organizational structures, their transformation into area organizational structures |
SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF A SMALL INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISE |
In a small company, the professional level of management is lower compared to, for example, large companies. Managers in small businesses often lack professional knowledge, skills, and management information. Managers in small businesses, compared to managers in large businesses, lack a broader professional background and a systemic view of management |
In small enterprises, long-term strategic planning is often absent, as well as monitoring of the external environment and monitoring of market developments; in small enterprises, short-term, operational planning prevails |
Organizational structures in small enterprises are simple, with fewer requirements for all types of resources (financial, human, material, information), organizational structures are simpler and smaller compared to larger enterprises; that fact is also related to the minimum number of management levels in a small enterprise |
Employee management is challenging because one of the important characteristics of small businesses is the accumulation of functions. The cumulative functions are significantly greater in a small company than in larger types of companies |
Small businesses are in many cases family businesses, which is reflected, for example, in greater mutual trust, there are legally better communication options |
The overall documentation requirements in a small business (scope, structure, quantity, complexity) are lower than in larger types of businesses |
The character of a small business also determines the requirements for the size and structure of processes and activities (simpler processes and activities compared to larger companies) |
Decisive responsibilities and powers are centralized in the hands of the owner, the manager, or managers authorized by the owner. This procedure is acceptable and suitable only for a specific size of the company |
A small business has less money at its disposal than larger businesses |
In small businesses, an authoritative management style often prevails. Easier information and communication flows, communication between employees is mostly personal. Small businesses do not have to use information and communication technologies to communicate with employees to the same extent as larger companies because communication is mostly direct and personal |
In small businesses, direct, personal contacts between the owner or manager with customers and suppliers predominate |
Small businesses are inherently more flexible. They can respond more flexibly to all new stimuli and changes coming from the market |
Insufficient market research, insufficient information, and marketing knowledge are the hallmarks of many small businesses |
Small businesses have limited resources needed to finance their development |
Small businesses are characterized by the fact that they specialize more in a particular production, so their product range is smaller compared to large companies |
Small businesses often specialize in the core and often the only subject of their business so that they can produce high-quality products in their market segment |
Small businesses have a better understanding of all the important conditions for doing business and selling products in a particular city or region, so they can better adapt to these conditions; this fact can bring small businesses business success and economic profit |
Small businesses often have only a regional reach, which is why they naturally have fewer customers compared to larger types of businesses |
The Comparison of Characteristic Features of the Quality Management Systems in Small- and Large-Sized Businesses | |
---|---|
Small-sized businesses | Large-sized businesses |
The most used model of small-sized business management: the business is run by one manager—the owner. The other managers are hired. All the competence is in the hands of the owner. The managers, as well as the other employees, have no or only limited chance to comment on these issues. The power is in the hands of a limited group of people. | The management of a large-sized business is a process in which processes, employees, and workplaces are arranged into an optimal organizational structure to meet all the needs of both their customers and all the other interested parties. The responsibilities and competencies are the preconditions to meeting the set goals. |
The quality management system in small-sized businesses is specific mainly in accumulated responsibilities and competencies. | Large-sized businesses have detailed processes of quality management system implementation. They take advantage of disposing of a sufficient number of professionals in each management area. Their staff covers all management systems. |
When making decisions about establishing the quality management system, many small-sized businesses have no conception of what is to be ensured (all the necessary sources) to make the system functional. | Large-sized businesses have the necessary sources (financial, personnel, material, information) to ensure a quality management system. |
On the one hand, small-sized businesses show flexibility that enables them to flexibly adapt to rapidly changing entrepreneurial conditions to larger types of businesses. However, on the other hand, they lack the sources necessary to promote their own development and to improve all the processes and activities in a small-sized business. They also lack sources to ensure the QMS. | Large-sized businesses gradually meet the set strategy by meeting partial objectives. Compared to small-sized businesses, they are less flexible, which is caused by their size and more complicated management. They have the necessary sources to fulfill the business strategy. |
Some of the small-sized businesses have become suppliers for larger businesses. However, they must meet their requirements involving the quality management systems, their certification, etc. | Large-sized businesses are progressive in the implementation and continual improvement of their quality management systems. |
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Litvaj, I.; Drbúl, M.; Bůžek, M. Sustainability in Small and Medium Enterprises, Sustainable Development in the Slovak Republic, and Sustainability and Quality Management in Small and Medium Enterprises. Sustainability 2023, 15, 2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032039
Litvaj I, Drbúl M, Bůžek M. Sustainability in Small and Medium Enterprises, Sustainable Development in the Slovak Republic, and Sustainability and Quality Management in Small and Medium Enterprises. Sustainability. 2023; 15(3):2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032039
Chicago/Turabian StyleLitvaj, Ivan, Mário Drbúl, and Miloslav Bůžek. 2023. "Sustainability in Small and Medium Enterprises, Sustainable Development in the Slovak Republic, and Sustainability and Quality Management in Small and Medium Enterprises" Sustainability 15, no. 3: 2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032039
APA StyleLitvaj, I., Drbúl, M., & Bůžek, M. (2023). Sustainability in Small and Medium Enterprises, Sustainable Development in the Slovak Republic, and Sustainability and Quality Management in Small and Medium Enterprises. Sustainability, 15(3), 2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032039