dc.description.abstract |
War is an overwhelming experience, leaving its mark on society, physical structures,
legal systems, and almost every aspect of a country’s social, political, economic, and
business activities. For redevelopment to be effective, it requires a careful and concerted
approach that draws on domestic resources, international donor assistance, and private sector
participation, and marketing strategies for improving business success. Countries emerging
from conflict typically face multiple challenges in rebuilding homes, schools, factories,
banks, communications networks, and other key business infrastructures in the post war
/conflict business environment. The currency is weak, human resources diminished, and key
institutions seriously impaired, all factors leading to thoughtful, extensive poverty.
Therefore, at the post war marketing environment challenge is to develop an integrated
approach that will help countries mend their post-conflict wounds and move towards a path
of long-term sustainable development in marketing and trade. The conflict between the
armed forces of the Government of Sri Lanka and the Liberalized Tiger of Tamil Eelam
began in 1983. It is characterized in part by its relative isolation from the rest of the country.
Most of the fighting and war-related obliteration has occurred in the eight contested districts
of the North and East, while other parts of the country have remained largely free of such
direct destruction. In the high conflict areas, the conflict has taken on the character of a civil
war, in that non-combatants, or civilians, are drawn in and suffer as a result. The conflict
takes place within a highly contested tract of land that is still inhabited in parts. The thirty
years of civil war in Sri Lanka, has effected, on Sri Lankan economy, business growth,
internal business relationships, market infrastructures, supply chain, market access, local
industries, marketing ethics, as well as the international marketing opportunities. The
internal war has been ended in May 2009. This end has given many opportunities to Sri
Lankan economy, as well as to the conflict effected provinces. New policy frameworks,
business strategies, educational reformulation, and social harmony enrichment, business
expansion, and infrastructure developments are focused by the government with the help of
foreign direct and indirect investment.
Marketing environment in the war situation and the post war marketing environment
is completely different, local marketers are now struggling to compete with the marketers,
who newly entered into the war effected places. Good marketing practices, business ethics
had not been followed by the marketers in the war scenario, traditional marketing
approaches were only adopted by the marketers. Consumers also weren’t conscious on the
business perspectives. They were only concern about their sustainability of alive. But in the
post war marketing environment consumers concern with all aspect in marketing. They have
experienced and have knowledge on everything in business. The marketers, who adopt the
traditional approaches, also struggle to survive in the market. Marketing has been identified
as a strategic role rather than, supporting sales, so marketing strategies should be specially
concerned in the postwar marketing environment, to support local marketers to survive in the
market. |
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