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From different public and private requirements, mechanisms have been set in action that allow for companies to obtain information in order to make decisions with a stronger foundation. This article is focused on the description of an entire information system for the business world, developed in the realm of the Chambers of Commerce of Spain, which has given rise to the creation of an authentic network of inter-chamber information. In Spain, the obligatory membership of businesses to the Chambers of Commerce in their geographic areas, and therefore the compulsory payment of member quotas, has traditionally generated some polemics, above all because many firms have not perceived a material usefulness of the services offered by these Chambers.
Notwithstanding, the 85 Chambers currently existing in Spain, as well as the
organization that coordinates them – the Upper Council or Consejo Superior
de Cámaras de Comercio – and the company created expressly to commercialize
information services online, Camerdata, have developed genuinely informative
tools that cover a good part of the information demands that a business might
claim, and these are described here. View all 37 works published by Business Information Review |
 Business Information Through Spain’s Chambers of Commerce: Meeting Business Needs http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0266382108098866
access restricted (by the publisher) to members/subscribers/customers only
peer-reviewed
Cañavate, Antonio Muñoz and Pedro Hípola Business Information Review 2008
Abstract: From different public and private requirements, mechanisms have been set in action that allow for companies to obtain information in order to make decisions with a stronger foundation. This article is focused on the description of an entire information system for the business world, developed in the realm of the Chambers of Commerce of Spain, which has given rise to the creation of an authentic network of inter-chamber information. In Spain, the obligatory membership of businesses to the Chambers of Commerce in their geographic areas, and therefore the compulsory payment of member quotas, has traditionally generated some polemics, above all because many firms have not perceived a material usefulness of the services offered by these Chambers.
Notwithstanding, the 85 Chambers currently existing in Spain, as well as the
organization that coordinates them – the Upper Council or Consejo Superior
de Cámaras de Comercio – and the company created expressly to commercialize
information services online, Camerdata, have developed genuinely informative
tools that cover a good part of the information demands that a business might
claim, and these are described here.
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