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Article

Differences in Readability, Keywords, and Orientation of Mission Statements of the Top 100 Korean and Top 100 US Traditional and Innovative Companies

1
Graduate School of Management of Technology, Sungkyunkwan University, Seoburo 2066, Suwon 16419, Korea
2
Department of Systems Management Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Seoburo 2066, Suwon 16419, Korea
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2021, 13(18), 10220; https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810220
Submission received: 19 August 2021 / Revised: 7 September 2021 / Accepted: 8 September 2021 / Published: 13 September 2021
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)

Abstract

:
The mission statements of companies reflect the characteristics of their country. There are differences in the content of mission statements between traditional and innovative companies. The sustainable growth of companies has recently become a major focus, and it has been found that mission statements are somewhat related to company innovation. This study analyzed the differences in the readability, keywords, and orientation of mission statements between the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies by market capitalization and their traditionality and innovativeness. Differences in readability were assessed with the Gunning fog index. Differences in the main keywords were assessed with a keyword network analysis. Differences in orientation were assessed with the nine components of a mission statement. As Korean companies were aiming for global business, there was not much difference in the readability of mission statements between Korean and US companies, but there was a difference between traditional and innovative companies in both countries. There was a difference in the keywords and orientation of the mission statements of Korean and US innovative companies. Both Korean and US innovative companies focused highly on “philosophy.” However, Korean innovative companies focused more on “self-concept,” and US innovative companies focused more on a “concern for survival.”

1. Introduction

Mission statements are widely considered necessary in helping a company form its identity, purpose, and direction [1]. Developing a mission statement is an important first step in the strategic planning process, expressing the reason for the company’s existence and differentiating it from its competitors [2,3]. Drucker [4] stated that the existence of a company is determined by customers, and its purpose is to create customers, underscoring the need for a mission. Traditionally, mission statements are accepted as effective strategic management tools [5]. Therefore, a mission statement is the most fundamental tool for implementing a company’s strategies and the achievement of its goals.
The sustainable growth of companies has recently become a major focus, and it has been found that mission statements are somewhat related to company innovation [6]. Innovation is a key element of performance, and an innovation-based perspective for competitive advantage leads to differentiated performance among companies [7]. Innovation DNA is integral in all aspects of a company’s operations, including functional organization, which involves leadership, processes supporting innovative activities, and knowledge management and performance [8]. The scope of innovation is wide, from new product development to the creation of value in a new industry [8]. Lichtenthaler [9] found that companies such as Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Netflix, Tesla, and Microsoft were ranked as the most innovative companies, according to various assessments. Their emphasis on artificial intelligence and digital platforms in the digital economy is becoming increasingly important in innovation [9]. According to The Wall Street Journal [10], the term “innovation” was used 33,000 times in the quarterly and annual reports of companies in 2011, and one-third of business schools in the United States used the term in their mission statements.
Mission statements have been examined in studies on various topics over the past few decades. According to Alegre et al. [11], mission statements were first studied in the 1980s, and it was found that a well-crafted mission statement can affect employees, organizational performance, and stakeholders. Various studies have been conducted on how mission statements vary among nations [12,13]. Bartkus et al. [12] analyzed the components of mission statements of European, Japanese, and US companies and studied their differences. Zhang et al. [6] comparatively analyzed the mission statements of Chinese and US companies included in the Fortune 500. Yadav and Sehgal [14] analyzed the mission statements of Indian companies based on the Forbes India 50. However, few studies have analyzed the mission statements of Korean companies and compared them with those of other countries. Therefore, this study comparatively analyzed the mission statements of the top 100 Korean and US companies by market capitalization.
There is a great difference in the market capitalization of Korean and US companies. The largest company in Korea by market capitalization is Samsung Electronics, with a market capitalization of USD 484 billion, which is only the 11th largest in the US market [15]. Conversely, Apple, the largest company in the United States by market capitalization, has a market capitalization of USD 2260 billion, which is greater than the total market capitalization of all the companies listed in the Korean market [15]. Due to this gap in market size, there may be some limitations in simply comparing Korean and US companies. However, according to the Bloomberg 2021 Innovation Index, Korea took first place with an innovation index of 90.49, while the United States ranked 11th with an innovation index of 83.59 [16]. The Bloomberg 2021 Innovation Index rates the innovation capacity of 60 countries using seven metrics [16]. These include research and development intensity, manufacturing value added, productivity, high-tech density, tertiary efficiency, researcher concentration, and patent activity [16].
Despite the considerable difference in company market capitalization between Korean and US companies, Korea’s innovation index is not lower than that of the United States. Therefore, the significance of this study is its analysis of the orientation of innovative companies among the top Korean and US companies by market capitalization. To select the subjects, the lists of the top 100 companies by market capitalization in Korea and the US were searched on investing.com, a website specializing in stock information [15]. Each company’s mission statement was searched and summarized by accessing each website. For companies that did not specify mission statements, the vision statement or other similar statements were included with reference to expressions such as “purpose” or “what we do.” Korean companies often use the term “management philosophy” instead of “mission,” and thus this term was included in the analysis. Moreover, this study set the criteria for innovative companies, analyzed readability and keywords by company type, and comparatively analyzed mission statement orientation by classification and country.
Section 2 reviews and summarizes previous studies on mission statements, such as studies on the components of a mission statement, mission statements and corporate performance, different mission statements by nation, the readability of mission statements, and the correlation of high-tech firms and innovation with mission statements. Section 3 describes the study’s data collection process, the analysis of readability, the extraction of the keywords through data processing, the analysis of keyword networks, and the examination of mission statement orientation based on the nine components of a mission statement. Section 4 summarizes the research methods and results for the research questions. Section 5 summarizes the results of this study and provides implications, discussions, and suggestions, and Section 6 presents the conclusions of this study.

2. Literature Review

2.1. Studies on the Components of a Mission Statement

Radke [17] claimed that a mission statement must be able to answer the following questions: (1) what are the opportunities or needs that we need to address (the purpose of the organization)? (2) what are we doing to address these needs (the business of the organization)? (3) what principles or beliefs guide our work (the values of the organization)? Bart [18] argued that a good mission statement must express the unique reason for the company’s existence and make stakeholders aware that they are pursuing shared goals. In addition, a mission statement must have a convincing structure to answer tough questions such as “what is our business?”; “why do we exist?”; and “what are we trying to accomplish through the allocation of the company’s resources?”
David [19] identified nine key components of a mission statement: (1) customers; (2) products or services; (3) markets; (4) technology; (5) concern for survival, growth, and profitability; (6) philosophy; (7) self-concept; (8) concern for public image; and (9) concern for employees. He also argued that communication about a clear business mission is often overlooked in strategic management and that a mission statement may change, but not often, if it is prepared with care. An organization’s achievement can be increased by developing and communicating clear business missions for the company’s existence. Rey and Bastons [20] suggested a holistic conceptualization of mission statements. According to the authors, a mission statement must consider three dimensions: (1) mission as a formal statement, (2) mission as a dynamic practice, and (3) mission as a source of motivation. Berbergal-Mirbent et al. [21] analyzed the mission statements of 39 social enterprises in Spain and the components of the mission statements that must be considered, especially in social enterprises, and observed a partial correlation between a firm’s mission statement and its performance.
Kemp and Dwyer [22] examined the mission statements of 50 international airlines and mapped their components based on the nine components proposed by David [19]. The results showed that most mission statements of the 50 airlines included their self-concept (88%), followed by their philosophy (80%) and their customers (72%) [22]. Lin et al. [23] analyzed the mission statements of 79 passenger airlines and compared the results with those of Kemp and Dwyer [22]. The study by Lin et al. [23] conducted in 2018 revealed that most of the mission statements included products/services (79.7%), followed by customers (68.8%) and location/markets (58.2%), indicating that mission statements also change over time, in response to internal/external circumstances. Drucker [24] introduced the business management principles and strategies of non-profit organizations in his book Managing the Non-Profit Organization. Arias-Coello et al. [25] analyzed the mission statements of 47 public universities in Spain based on Drucker’s mission statement components in non-profit organizations.

2.2. Studies on the Correlation between Mission Statements and Corporate Performance

Past research on the existence of a correlation between mission statements and corporate performance has shown conflicting results. Ireland and Hirc [26] suggested that mission statements can provide motivation and inspiration. Bart and Mark [27] argued that a mission statement is not automatically correlated with corporate performance; however, a mission statement that satisfies management has a positive correlation with corporate performance. Atrill et al. [28] studied the correlation between mission statement orientation and corporate performance of 143 listed companies in the United Kingdom. When companies in the service industries had shareholder orientation in the mission statements, there was a strong impact on their stock returns for three years, and those in the non-service industries also showed excess earnings in stock returns for six years. However, when the mission statements included customer orientation, there was little correlation with corporate performance.

2.3. Studies on the Differences in Mission Statements among Countries

Various studies have been conducted by different researchers on the differences in mission statements by country. Bartkus et al. [12] analyzed the components of mission statements of European, Japanese, and US companies and studied their differences. Their results showed that companies in these countries all mentioned customers and communicated about the future. The difference was that Japanese companies focused on motivating employees and on how to contribute to society, whereas US and European companies focused more on competitive advantage. This is because Japanese companies have a culture of emphasizing social values, while US companies tend to focus on the massive domestic market and believe that there is no point in expressing the market scope because they are already targeting the global market. Conversely, European companies try to express their geographical scope, mainly because of the many multinational companies based in Europe.
Zhang et al. [6] studied the mission statements of Chinese and US companies. They selected the top 100 companies included in the Fortune 500 and extracted and analyzed words through a corpus analysis. The results showed that the companies in the two countries shared similarities in terms of appraisal resources, but Chinese companies emphasized both innovation and the development of society and companies, whereas US companies stressed the importance of customers, products, and services. Both focused on survival, philosophy, and corporate image, and US companies showed more interest in stakeholders. Yadav and Sehgal [14] analyzed the mission statements of Indian companies. They classified the companies included in the Forbes India 50 as either manufacturing or service companies in an analysis of their mission statements. The results showed that Indian companies focused on customers as their main stakeholders, and the difference between manufacturing and service companies was not significant.

2.4. Studies on the Readability of Mission Statements

The readability of mission statements has also been analyzed in various studies. Rajasekar [5] assessed the readability of mission statements using the Gunning fog index (GFI) [29] to determine whether the nine components of a mission statement were present in the mission statements of 45 companies in Oman. The author found that the mission statements of companies in the financial sector had a readability index of 7.5 to 9, whereas those in other sectors had an index exceeding 10.5, indicating the need for improvement. Yadav and Sehgal [14] also assessed the readability of mission statements of Indian companies. In that study, the index of manufacturing companies was 32.22, and that of service companies was 27.45, showing that the readability of Indian companies’ mission statements was low overall and needed improvement. Khan et al. [30] analyzed the readability of 197 Asian companies included in the Global Fortune 500 in 2014–2015. The results showed that the mission statements of most Asian companies were long and had low readability.
Research has also been conducted on the relationship between readability and the performance of mission statements. Cortes et al. [31] examined the mission statements of the top 248 universities in the world in 2013 and analyzed their readability using the GFI. The results showed that the average index was 20.82 and the distribution was 1.2 to 142.8. The difference was not significant by region or university size. However, analysis of the correlation between the GFI and the university rankings as the independent variable showed that lower GFI values indicated higher rankings. Cortes-Sanchez and Rivera [32] conducted a study on the readability of mission statements and the financial performance of Latin American companies. The results showed that there was a positive correlation between the readability of mission statements and return on assets. Li [33] studied the relationship between the readability of annual reports and corporate performance and found that more readable annual reports showed more positive earnings.

2.5. Mission Statements, High-Tech Firms, and Innovation

Studies have also been conducted on mission statements of high-tech firms, which are the key source of innovation in companies. According to Bart [34], high-tech firms explained the “definition of success” relatively more often than others. In contrast, low-tech firms provided a broad definition of “core business.” Another study by Bart [35] revealed that employee values and understanding of innovation were not attained automatically. The results of that study indicated that the key success factor of innovation is to effectively deliver the components of mission statements to members and to demonstrate commitment. Covin and Prescott [36] discovered that high-tech companies showed a stronger desire for market share growth and product innovation than low-tech companies in terms of mission strategies.

2.6. Studies on the Keywords in Mission Statements

Research on the keywords in mission statements has been conducted in various industrial sectors. Most of the recent studies have been on mission statements of universities. Bayrak [37] analyzed the keywords in the mission statements of the top 227 universities in Europe, Asia, South America, Africa, and North America and examined the similarities and differences of universities among the geographic areas. Guimarães et al. [38] analyzed the keywords in mission statements to determine how internationalization is expressed by federal universities in Brazil.
Case analyses on keywords and networks of mission statements in the tourism and aviation industries have also been conducted. Law and Breznik [39] analyzed the keywords in mission statements of 100 top-tier airlines, according to Skytrax, and conducted a network analysis. Some of the main keywords derived in the study were “service,” “airline,” “customer,” “best,” and “safety,” and there was a focus on Asia-Pacific and European airlines. They also conducted a network analysis, revealing that the contents of mission statements can be classified into six islands [39]. Six islands were “tourism,” “excellence,” “transport and continuity,” “embrace,” “low fare,” and “growth” [39]. Penco et al. [40] analyzed the keywords in the mission statements of 44 cruise lines and assessed their orientation toward stakeholders in the mission statements.

3. Materials and Methods

Figure 1 presents an overview of the research procedures and methods of the study. First, the lists of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies by market capitalization were identified. Next, their mission statements were accessed through their websites. Then innovative companies were classified separately. After classifying the innovative companies, the readability of mission statements was analyzed. We conducted a t-test to determine the differences regarding readability, and the top 30 keywords were extracted through text preprocessing. Then, the nine components of a mission statement and keywords were mapped and converted to one-mode matrices. Finally, eigenvector centrality was analyzed to summarize the differences in the orientations of Korean and US companies by utilizing a social network analysis method.
This study’s research topics are presented in Table 1.
  • To analyze the differences in readability of the mission statements of Korean and US companies, this study compared the readability of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies by market capitalization and the innovative and traditional companies of the two.
  • To compare the differences in keywords in the mission statements of Korean and US companies, 1st keyword network analysis was performed on the three groups.
  • To analyze the differences in the orientation of the mission statements of Korean and US companies, this study mapped the top 30 keywords of each group and the nine components of a mission statement proposed by David [19] and conducted a network analysis to determine the differences in orientation among groups.

3.1. Data Collection

The subjects of this study were the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies by market capitalization. The list of companies was found on Investing.com, an online financial market platform. Investing.com [15] provides real-time data, market prices, charts, and the latest news on 250 stock exchanges, with 46 million monthly net visitors. This study accessed the list of the top 100 companies by market capitalization based on ordinary shares among companies listed in the Korean and US stock markets as of 20 April 2021, on Investing.com. Korean-listed companies were based in Korea, and US-listed companies were based in the United States.
The largest Korean company by market capitalization was Samsung Electronics (129, Samsung-ro, Yeongtong-gu, Suwon-si, Gyeonggi-do, Republic of Korea), with a market capitalization of USD 484 billion. SK Hynix (2091, Gyeongchung-daero, Bubal-eup, Icheon-si, Gyeonggi-do, Republic of Korea), Naver (6, Buljeong-ro 65beon-gil, Bundang-gu, Seongnam-si, Gyeonggi-do, Republic of Korea), LG Chem (66, Yeoui-daero, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Hyundai Motor Company (12, Heolleung-ro, Seocho-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea), Samsung Biologics (300, Songdo bio-daero, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon, Republic of Korea), Kakao (242, Cheomdan-ro, Jeju-si, Jeju-do, 63309, Republic of Korea), Samsung SDI (150-20, Gongse-ro Giheung-gu, Yongin-si, Gyeonggi-do, Republic of Korea), and Celltrion (23, Academy-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon, Republic of Korea) were also included in the top 10 companies [15]. In terms of industry, 10% were in the biotech industry (10 companies), followed by 7% in the chemical industry, 6% in computer services, 5% in electronic equipment, and 5% in investment services, showing that biotech companies account for the largest share [15]. The largest US company by market capitalization was Apple (1 infinite Loop City. Cupertino, CA, USA), with a market capitalization of USD 2260 billion. Microsoft (One Microsoft Way. Redmond, WA, USA), Amazon (440 Terry Avenue North Seattle, WA, USA), Alphabet (1600 Amphitheater Parkway. Mountain View, CA, USA), Facebook (1 Hacker Way. Menlo Park, CA, USA), Tesla (3500 Deer Creek Road. Palo Alto, CA, USA), Berkshire Hathaway (3555 Farnam Street. Omaha, NE, USA), JPMorgan Chase (270 Park Avenue. New York, NY, USA), Visa (One Market Plaza. San Francisco, CA, USA), and Johnson & Johnson (One Johnson & Johnson Plaza. New Brunswick, NJ, USA) were also included in the top 10 companies [15]. In terms of industry, 9% were in the software industry (9 companies), followed by 9% in retail, 8% in the biotech industry, 7% in computer services, and 6% in the semiconductor business. Many US companies were technology-based service companies, whereas Korean companies showed a high share of traditional industries, aside from the biotech industry [15].
To analyze the characteristics of the innovative company group, this study classified 21 Korean companies (see Table 2) and 34 US companies (see Table 3) as innovative companies based on the list of innovative companies announced by various institutions. The Boston Consulting Group [41] selects and announces innovative companies every year by surveying companies that are best preparing for five key elements: (1) setting a clear ambition, (2) establishing the right playing fields, (3) prioritizing performance management, (4) pushing project management, and (5) developing talent and culture. Forbes [42] assessed the present and future innovation skills of companies and selected the world’s most innovative companies in 2018 and posted them on their websites. Forbes excludes sectors in which investment in research and development cannot be measured, such as financial services and traditional companies related to raw material prices, rather than innovation such as energy and mining.
There were only seven Korean companies among the innovative companies selected by the Boston Consulting Group and Forbes; thus, the scope was expanded to other institutions. Clarivate [43] has announced the top 100 global innovative companies every year since 2011 by analyzing the patents of global institutions; Korean companies on this list were included in the innovative companies of this study. In addition, those belonging to the K-innovation index announced by Fnguide [44], founded in 2000 and providing financial information on Korean companies, were also included. The representative items in the K-New Deal Index [45] by the Korea Exchange were also included.
After organizing the list of the top 100 Korean and 100 US companies by market capitalization and classifying the innovative companies, the mission statements of those companies were obtained. Those that did not belong to innovative companies among the top 100 companies of both countries were classified as belonging to traditional companies. The mission statements were accessed online by visiting the companies’ websites. The English websites of the Korean companies were used to examine the English version of the mission statement. Some Korean companies did not have clear mission statements, in which case their management philosophy was applied. If the management philosophy was unclear, their vision or goals were used. More US companies had mission statements than Korean companies; however, in cases where there was no clear mission statement, similar text that could serve as a mission statement was used, such as text with terms and phrases such as “purpose” and “what we are doing.”

3.2. Readability Analysis

The GFI tool was used to test the readability of the mission statements of Korean and US companies (http://gunning-fog-index.com, accessed on 22 April 2021). The index value is an Arabic numeral. Sentences scoring 6 points are sentences that can be understood by sixth-grade students, and those scoring 13 points can be understood by college freshmen. There are various readability tools, such as the Flesch Reading Ease Score, the SMOG Index, and the Coleman–Liau index, but the GFI [29] is the most widely used to test readability. The subjects of the readability analysis are shown in Table 4, and a comparative analysis was conducted between the top 100 Korean and 100 US companies, Korean and US traditional companies, and Korean and US innovative companies.

3.3. Data Preprocessing

Text mining was used to analyze the data in text form, and R version 4.0.5 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria) was used as a data-mining tool. The “tm” package included in R was used to process the unstructured strings [46]. The mission statements of sample companies in Korea and the United States saved on the Microsoft Excel sheet (Redmond, WA, USA) were converted to a comma-separated values file and turned into a corpus on R. This required text preprocessing, the elimination of all gaps, and the conversion of all letters to lower case because the capital and lower-case letters are considered the same words. Moreover, meaningless articles, prepositions, or words that would have no impact on the analysis (e.g., our, but, will, and, all, for, purpose) were excluded, and, afterward, the keywords and frequency were extracted. The keywords were extracted by classifying the subjects into the top 100 companies, traditional companies, and innovative companies, for both countries, as done in the readability analysis.

3.4. First Mission Statement Keyword Network Analysis

A social network analysis was conducted based on the keywords extracted using Gephi 0.9.2 [47]. Network analysis has the advantage of clearly defining and structuring the relationships among keywords in a network [48]. It is also referred to as language network analysis because the text in words is the subject of analysis [49]. By finding various concepts with high network centrality through network analysis, it is possible to understand the intention of the overall text [49]. Keywords become nodes of the language network, and the relationships among keywords become links [49]. The basic centrality indices in a network are degree centrality, betweenness centrality, closeness centrality, and eigenvector centrality [50,51].
Degree centrality focuses on the connection with other nodes, measured by the number of other points connected to one point. More connections indicate greater influence. Betweenness centrality measures how well a node performs a mediating role in forming a network with other nodes. Closeness centrality refers to how close one point is to another point, and the distance between two points is key [50]. Eigenvector centrality reflects the centrality of other nodes connected to specific nodes on the weighted value, and nodes with high eigenvector centrality indicate that the other nodes are connected to many important nodes in the network. In other words, a higher eigenvector centrality indicates a higher influence of the node [51]. This study extracted keywords from each group based on eigenvector centrality, which can determine the nodes that have a high influence.

3.5. Mapping of the Nine Components of a Mission Statement

Through the first network analysis, 30 keywords were extracted for each of the top 100 Korean companies, top 100 US companies, Korean traditional companies, US traditional companies, Korean innovative companies, and US innovative companies based on eigenvector centrality. A second mapping was done based on the extracted keywords with the nine components of a mission statement proposed by David as shown in Table 5 [19]: (1) customers; (2) products or services; (3) markets; (4) technology; (5) concern for survival, growth, and profitability; (6) philosophy; (7) self-concept; (8) concern for public image; and (9) concern for employees. The three elements that were most correlated per keyword were matched.

3.6. Second Network Analysis

The purpose of this study was to identify which of the nine components of the mission statements of Korean and US companies are related and which element has the highest influence and to examine the differences through network analysis. Therefore, the second network analysis was conducted by converting the nine components and the two-mode matrix of the mapped keywords into a one-mode matrix. For conversion, the MMULT and TRANSEPOSE functions provided by Microsoft Excel were used [52]. Then to analyze influential nodes, the orientation of each group’s mission statement was analyzed based on eigenvector centrality, as done in the first network analysis.

4. Results

4.1. Readability Analysis

This study obtained the mission statements of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies and analyzed the differences in the readability of the mission statements of the two groups and their traditional and innovative subgroups using the GFI. The results are shown in Table 6. There were no significant differences among the samples in terms of mission statement readability. The average GFI for the top 100 Korean companies was 15.7, and there was a distribution of 33.33 at 2. The average index value for the top 100 US companies was 15.3, and there was a distribution of 31.3 at 2, showing no significant difference in the readability of mission statements between the two groups. The GFI for Korean traditional companies was 16.2, and there was a distribution of 33.3 at 2. The GFI for US traditional companies was 16.5, and there was a distribution of 31.27 at 3.2, showing similar values between the two groups. There was also no significant difference in the readability of mission statements between Korean and US innovative companies. The GFI for Korean innovative companies was 13.5, and there was a distribution of 21.27 at 3.2. The GFI for US innovative companies was 12.9, and there was a distribution of 24.1 at 2, showing no significant difference between the two groups.
There were no significant differences in the GFI between Korean and US companies, but the GFI differences among groups within the country are as shown in Figure 2 and Table 7. The GFI of Korean traditional companies was 16.2 and that of innovative companies was 15.5. The GFI of US traditional companies was 16.5 and that of innovative companies GFI was 12.9.
The fact that the average GFI for the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies exceeds 15 indicates that the readability of mission statements is low, and the sample groups must use words and sentences that are easier to understand. There was no difference in the readability of mission statements between Korean and US companies, but a difference in readability between traditional companies and innovative companies was found in both Korea and the United States. The GFI for Korean traditional companies and US traditional companies was 16, but for Korean innovative companies the GFI was 13.5 and for US innovative companies the GFI was 12.9, showing that the GFI for innovative companies was low in both countries. This indicates that the mission statements of innovative companies are relatively more concise and readable than those of traditional companies. The difference was also found in the comparison of the median and maximum of the traditional company subgroups and the innovative company subgroups. The median for Korean and US traditional companies was 16.2 and 15.7, respectively, but the median for Korean and US innovative companies was 13.9 and 13.6, respectively. The maximum GFI for Korean and US traditional companies was 33.3 and 31.3, respectively. The maximum GFI for Korean and US innovative companies was 21.3 and 24.1, respectively.

4.2. First Mission Statement Keyword Network Analysis

This study extracted keywords from the mission statements of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies through text preprocessing by group and classified the top 30 keywords based on eigenvector centrality on Gephi. The top 30 keywords of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies, Korean traditional companies, US traditional companies, Korean innovative companies, and US innovative companies are shown in Table 8 and Table 9. The keywords in a red font color are those that were duplicated among the 30 keywords between groups. There were 12 redundant keywords from the mission statements of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies and 10 redundant keywords from the mission statements of Korean and US traditional companies. There were six redundant keywords in the mission statements of Korean and US innovative companies, showing the lowest redundancy.
The top keywords of the top 100 Korean companies were “value,” “company,” “global,” “customer,” “lead,” and “technology,” indicating that they sought to become global leaders who provide value to customers. The top keywords of the top 100 US companies were “world,” “customer,” “people,” “life,” “innovation,” and “improve,” indicating that they intended to support innovative living among customers throughout the world. In addition, the top 100 Korean companies used the word “global” to reflect their will to expand overseas, in their mission statements, but the top 100 US companies used the word “world,” indicating that they already viewed themselves as main operators in the global market.
The top keywords of Korean traditional companies were “value,” “company,” “global,” “customer,” “lead,” and “growth,” which were not very different from those of the top 100 Korean companies. The top keywords of US traditional companies were “world,” “customer,” “life,” “innovation,” “people,” and “service,” which also did not show much difference from those of the top 100 US companies. However, “growth” was higher in the ranks of Korean traditional companies than the top 100 Korean companies, while “innovation” was higher in the ranks of US traditional companies than the top 100 US companies. This implies that Korean traditional companies are expressing their pursuit of becoming a global leader that provides value to customers as well as growth in their mission statements. Traditional companies in the US reflected the goal of providing innovative life and service for customers and people of the world.
The top keywords of Korean innovative companies were “create,” “future,” “dream,” “technology,” “human,” and “life,” which were different from those of the top 100 Korean companies and Korean traditional companies. The top keywords of US innovative companies were “world,” “people,” “life,” “company,” “improve,” and “innovation,” which were similar to those of the top 100 US companies and US traditional companies. Therefore, there was a difference in keywords between the Korean and US innovative companies. Korean innovative companies aimed to fulfill dreams about the future using creativity based on technology and focusing on humans. US innovative companies aimed to improve people’s lives and to provide innovation, which was similar to the top 100 US companies and US traditional companies. This indicates that Korean innovative companies focused more on the future and creativity based on “technology.” US innovative companies had top keywords that were similar to those of US traditional companies because the top 100 companies by market capitalization in the US are already carrying out new developments in the market and focusing constantly on innovation.

4.3. Mapping of the Nine Components of a Mission Statement

The nine components of the mission statements were mapped using the keywords in Table 8 and Table 9. Because the keywords could be included in multiple components, redundancy was allowed, and up to three items were mapped in the order of the highest correlation. The components related to the keywords were marked as 1, and the others were marked as 0. The results of mapping the keywords and nine components of each group are shown in Table A1, Table A2, Table A3, Table A4, Table A5 and Table A6 in the Appendix A. The two-mode matrix was converted to a one-mode matrix using the MMULT and TRANSEPOSE functions in Microsoft Excel, after which a second network analysis was conducted [52].
The main keywords of the top 100 Korean companies were “value,” “company,” “global,” “customer,” “lead,” and “technology,” and 30 keywords selected in the order of highest eigenvector centrality were mapped with the nine components as shown in Table A1 in the Appendix A. The main keywords of the top 100 US companies were “world,” “customer,” “people,” “life,” “innovation,” and “improve,” and 30 keywords selected in the order of highest eigenvector centrality were mapped with the nine components as shown in Table A2 in the Appendix A.
Among the top 100 Korean companies, the main keywords of the 79 Korean traditional companies were “value,” “company,” “global,” “customer,” “lead,” and “growth,” and 30 keywords selected in the order of highest eigenvector centrality were mapped with the nine components as shown in Table A3 in the Appendix A.
Among the top 100 US companies, the main keywords of the 66 US traditional companies were “world,” “customer,” “life,” “innovation,” “people,” and “service,” and 30 keywords selected in the order of highest eigenvector centrality were mapped with the nine components as shown in Table A4 in the Appendix A.
Among the top 100 Korean companies, the main keywords of the 21 innovative companies were “create,” “future,” “dream,” “technology,” “human,” and “life,” and 30 keywords selected in the order of highest eigenvector centrality were mapped with the nine components as shown in Table A5 in the Appendix A.
Among the top 100 US companies, the main keywords of the 34 innovative companies were “world,” “people,” “life,” “company,” “improve,” and “innovation,” and 30 keywords selected in the order of highest eigenvector centrality were mapped with the nine components as shown in Table A6 in the Appendix A.

4.4. Second Network Analysis

After mapping the keywords with the nine components of a mission statement, this study conducted a network analysis of the inclusion of the nine components in the mission statements of the top 100 Korean companies, top 100 US companies, Korean traditional companies, US traditional companies, Korean innovative companies, and US innovative companies, based on the matrix converted to a one-mode matrix. The size of the circles in the network analysis represents the order of eigenvector centrality. This study also separately analyzed the differences in component eigenvector centrality between the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies, between Korean and US traditional companies, and between Korean and US innovative companies. A higher eigenvector centrality indicates a greater influence of network nodes, and thus components with high eigenvector centrality indicated the mission statement orientation aimed at by the group.
The top 100 Korean companies had the highest orientation in product or service and concern for survival, and the lowest in concern for employees. In contrast, the top 100 US companies attached the greatest importance to philosophy. The differences are shown in Figure 3. The component with the second-highest eigenvector centrality of the top 100 US companies was products or services, which was similar to the result of the top 100 Korean companies. The top 100 US companies also showed relatively low eigenvector centrality in concern for employees, indicating that more direct elements such as philosophy, product, service, and survival were expressed with relatively higher importance than employees in the mission statements. Recently, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) has emerged as a key issue of corporate management in terms of sustainability, and an increasing number of companies are presenting separate ESG mission statements [53].
There was little difference in mission statement orientation between Korean traditional companies and the top 100 Korean companies. The mission statement orientation of US traditional companies was also similar to that of the top 100 US companies. Thus, the difference in orientation of the mission statement between Korean traditional companies and US traditional companies was similar to that between the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies. However, the eigenvector centrality of self-concept of the mission statements of US traditional companies was higher than that of the mission statements of the top 100 US companies, as shown in Figure 4.
The mission statements of innovative Korean companies were strongly oriented toward the philosophy component. US innovative companies also showed the highest eigenvector centrality for the philosophy component, similar to that of the top 100 US companies, indicating that the common orientation for mission statements in both Korean innovative companies and US innovative companies is toward the company philosophy. The differences are shown in Figure 5. Korean innovative companies showed equally high eigenvector centrality of self-concept as philosophy, which indicates that Korean innovative companies present their identities more clearly than Korean traditional companies for survival. Moreover, Korean innovative companies showed eigenvector centrality similar to that of traditional US companies. Figure 6 shows the results of the comparison of mission statement orientation, in terms of the nine components of a mission statement, among the groups of Korean and US companies.

5. Discussion

A company’s mission statement conveys its aims and visions to the members of the organization, shareholders, and customers [1]. A mission statement reflects the first step of strategizing and expresses the reason for the company’s existence, differentiating the company from its competitors [2,3]. Therefore, a mission statement is the most fundamental tool for implementing a company’s strategies and the accomplishment of its goals. The sustainable growth of companies is becoming a major topic, and it has been found that mission statements are somewhat related to the innovation of companies [6]. Innovation is a key element of corporate performance, and an innovation-based perspective for competitive advantage leads to differentiated performance among companies [7].
This study comparatively analyzed the differences in the mission statement orientation of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies by market capitalization. For the analysis, the websites of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies by market capitalization were checked to summarize their mission statements and to categorize the companies as either traditional or innovative. The readability of mission statements was assessed and compared using the GFI. Keywords were extracted using the text-mining tool R, and a social network analysis was conducted using Gephi software. The nine components of a mission statement were used to analyze the differences in mission statement orientation of Korean and US companies [19]. The extracted keywords were mapped to identify the component to which they belonged, and the orientation was determined based on eigenvector centrality [51,52].
There was no significant difference between Korean and US companies in terms of readability of mission statements. However, there was a significant difference in readability between traditional and innovative companies in both Korea and the United States. The readability of mission statements of innovative companies was better than that of traditional companies, which indicates that the mission statements of innovative companies in both Korea and the United States were relatively more concise and easier to understand than those of traditional companies. Communication between stakeholders and employees is important for companies to produce results. For constant innovation, mission statements must be readable and easily understood by all stakeholders [2].
Results of the keyword analysis revealed significant differences between Korean and US companies. The top 100 Korean companies frequently used the word “global” and aimed to be leading companies that provided value to customers, whereas the top 100 US companies expressed the goal of providing innovation in products and services for customers throughout the world. There was also a difference in keywords between the Korean and US innovative companies. Korean innovative companies showed high eigenvector centrality in keywords such as “create,” “future,” and “dream,” indicating that their mission was to fulfill future dreams using creativity based on technology and focused on people, whereas US innovative companies showed similar keywords and eigenvector centrality as the top 100 US companies and US traditional companies. This suggests that the top 100 US companies by market capitalization mostly have the attributes of innovative companies and are already acknowledged in the market as sustainable companies.
In the orientation analysis by country and group, the mapping of the nine components and keywords showed that the mission statements of the top 100 Korean companies were oriented toward products or services and concern for survival. The top 100 US companies gave top priority to their philosophy. The mission statement orientation of Korean traditional companies was not significantly different from that of the top 100 Korean companies. Korean innovative companies showed the highest eigenvector centrality for the philosophy component. US innovative companies also showed the highest eigenvector centrality for the philosophy component, similar to that of the top 100 US companies, indicating that the common mission statement orientation of Korean and US innovative companies is philosophy. Korean innovative companies showed a high eigenvector centrality of self-concept, similar to philosophy, which indicates that Korean innovative companies are presenting their identities more clearly than Korean traditional companies for survival. Moreover, Korean innovative companies showed similar eigenvector centrality to traditional US companies.

6. Conclusions

This study has significance in that it compares mission statements of Korean and US companies; the mission statements reflect the goals pursued by the companies and the reasons for the existence of the companies. This study also analyzed the differences in the orientation of the mission statements.
Many researchers have analyzed the mission statements of countries [12,13,14]. However, there were no cases in which the differences in mission statements of Korean and US companies were analyzed. There is a great difference in market capitalization between Korean and US companies, but Korea has the world’s highest innovation index [16]. Therefore, the significance of this study is in the fact that it selected the subjects of analysis based on the market capitalization of the countries and analyzed the orientation of Korean and US innovative companies.
Moreover, nine components of a mission statement were examined through a keyword network analysis to determine the difference between Korean and US companies, which is also a novel attempt. However, further analysis is necessary to determine whether there is a correlation between corporate performance and mission statement readability. The subjects were also limited to the top 100 companies by market capitalization in Korea and the United States. Future research should examine the differences in mission statement orientation among unicorn companies with high growth potential.
ESG has recently emerged as a key issue in management, and many studies have been conducted on ESG management and corporate performance. However, there is still controversy over whether there is a clear correlation between ESG management and corporate performance [54]. A mission statement is a tool that expresses the reason for a company’s existence and serves as a channel of communication between the company and stakeholders [1,2,3]. As the business environment changes over time, continuous research is needed on how to reflect and develop issues such as ESG in mission statements.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.J.; methodology, J.J.; software, J.J.; validation, K.T.C.; formal analysis, J.J.; writing—original draft preparation, J.J.; writing—review and editing, J.J. and K.T.C.; supervision, K.T.C. Both authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—top 100 Korean companies.
Table A1. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—top 100 Korean companies.
WordABCDEFGHI
value110001000
company000011100
global001011000
customer101000010
lead001011000
technology010110000
life000001110
growth000011100
create010110000
society101000010
contribute101000010
business000011100
trust100001010
develop010100100
service010000110
product010010100
future010010100
industry011100000
continue000011100
social101000010
responsibility101000010
corporate101000010
ecofriendly000011010
human100001010
management000011100
happy100000011
energy010100100
sustainable101000010
community000010110
local101010000
Table A2. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—top 100 US companies.
Table A2. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—top 100 US companies.
WordABCDEFGHI
world001011000
customer101000010
people100000011
life000001110
innovation010110000
improve000110100
company000011100
service010000110
create010110000
technology010110000
way000011100
finance011010000
advance000111000
value110001000
business000011100
product010010100
community000010110
growth000011100
solution010101000
economy011000010
live100001010
connect000111000
time000001110
invest010011000
challenge001011000
together100000011
human100001010
experience000111000
better010110000
empower100001001
Table A3. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—Korean traditional companies.
Table A3. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—Korean traditional companies.
WordABCDEFGHI
value110001000
company000011100
global001011000
customer101000010
lead001011000
growth000011100
business000011100
life000001110
technology010110000
create010110000
contribute101000010
service010000110
develop010100100
industry011100000
trust100001010
continue000011100
product010010100
society101000010
social101000010
ecofriendly000011010
corporate101000010
management000011100
energy010100100
sustainable101000010
future010010100
community000010110
local101010000
responsibility101000010
competitive011010000
high010110000
Table A4. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—US traditional companies.
Table A4. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—US traditional companies.
WordABCDEFGHI
world001011000
customer101000010
life000001110
innovation010110000
people100000011
service010000110
way000011100
company000011100
business000011100
improve000110100
advance000111000
finance011010000
solution010101000
live100001010
create010110000
technology010110000
growth000011100
human100001010
community000010110
together100000011
lead001011000
communicate100001010
challenge001011000
better010110000
solve010101000
full011001000
range011000100
connect000111000
economy011000010
science010100100
Table A5. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—Korean innovative companies.
Table A5. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—Korean innovative companies.
KeywordABCDEFGHI
create010110000
future010010100
dream000001110
technology010110000
human100001010
life000001110
realize000111000
thinking000101100
challenge001011000
mankind101000010
world001011000
building010011000
possibility000001110
responsibility101000010
sense101000100
tackling001011000
unlimited000001110
global001011000
value110001000
product010010100
connect000111000
society101000010
lead001011000
people100000011
contribute101000010
devote000001110
service010000110
superior010000110
frontier001001010
endeavor000011100
Table A6. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—US innovative companies.
Table A6. Thirty keywords mapped with nine components—US innovative companies.
KeywordABCDEFGHI
world001011000
people100000011
life000001110
company000011100
improve000110100
innovation010110000
brand001000110
thing010101000
create010110000
power001010100
opportunity001011000
customer101000010
entertain011001000
technology010110000
inspire101001000
value110001000
empower100001001
globe001011000
iconic000001110
inform000011100
mind000011100
premier000001110
reflect100011000
storytelling010001100
unparalleled000100110
ambitious001011000
entrepreneur000011010
flourish001011000
great000001110
invest010011000

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Figure 1. Research procedure and methods.
Figure 1. Research procedure and methods.
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Figure 2. Differences in Gunning fog index (GFI) between traditional and innovative companies of each country. (a) Comparison of GFI of Korean innovative and traditional companies; (b) Comparison of GFI of US innovative and traditional companies.
Figure 2. Differences in Gunning fog index (GFI) between traditional and innovative companies of each country. (a) Comparison of GFI of Korean innovative and traditional companies; (b) Comparison of GFI of US innovative and traditional companies.
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Figure 3. Network visualization of mission statement orientation by group (top 100 Korean companies vs. the top 100 US companies). (a) Top 100 Korean companies; (b) Top 100 US companies.
Figure 3. Network visualization of mission statement orientation by group (top 100 Korean companies vs. the top 100 US companies). (a) Top 100 Korean companies; (b) Top 100 US companies.
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Figure 4. Network visualization of mission statement orientation by group (Korean traditional companies vs. US traditional companies). (a) Korean traditional companies; (b) US traditional companies.
Figure 4. Network visualization of mission statement orientation by group (Korean traditional companies vs. US traditional companies). (a) Korean traditional companies; (b) US traditional companies.
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Figure 5. Network visualization of mission statement orientation by group (Korean innovative companies vs. US innovative companies). (a) Korean innovative companies; (b) US innovative companies.
Figure 5. Network visualization of mission statement orientation by group (Korean innovative companies vs. US innovative companies). (a) Korean innovative companies; (b) US innovative companies.
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Figure 6. Comparison of mission statement orientation in terms of the nine components of a mission statement. (a) Top 100 Korean companies vs. top 100 US companies; (b) Korean innovative companies vs. US innovative companies.
Figure 6. Comparison of mission statement orientation in terms of the nine components of a mission statement. (a) Top 100 Korean companies vs. top 100 US companies; (b) Korean innovative companies vs. US innovative companies.
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Table 1. Research topics of the study.
Table 1. Research topics of the study.
CategorySubcategoryTopicContent Analysis
11-aComparison of readability Comparison of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies
11-bComparison of readabilityComparison of Korean traditional companies and US traditional companies
11-cComparison of readabilityComparison of Korean innovative companies and US innovative companies
22-aKeyword analysisComparison of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies
22-bKeyword analysisComparison of Korean traditional companies and US traditional companies
22-cKeyword analysisComparison of Korean innovative companies and US innovative companies
33-aNine components of a mission statementComparison of the top 100 Korean and top 100 US companies
33-bNine components of a mission statementComparison of Korean traditional companies and US traditional companies
33-cNine components of a mission statementComparison of Korean innovative companies and US innovative companies
Table 2. Innovative companies among the top 100 Korean companies.
Table 2. Innovative companies among the top 100 Korean companies.
No.Company NameSelected byNo.Company NameSelected by
1Samsung ElectronicsBCG12Hyundai MobisFnguide
2SK hynixFnguide13LG Household & Health CareForbes
3NaverForbes14SK InnovationKRX
4LG ChemFnguide15SK telecomClarivate
5Hyundai Motor CompanyBCG16LGBCG
6Samsung BiologicsKRX17NCSOFTKRX
7KakaoFnguide18AmorepacificForbes
8Samsung SDIFnguide19NetmarbleKRX
9CelltrionForbes20SK BiopharmaceuticalsKRX
10KiaFnguide21Kakao GamesKRX
11LG ElectronicsClarivate
BCG = Boston Consulting Group; KRX = Korea Exchange.
Table 3. Innovative companies among the top 100 US companies.
Table 3. Innovative companies among the top 100 US companies.
No.Company NameSelected byNo.Company NameSelected by
1AppleBCG18Abbott LaboratoriesBCG
2MicrosoftBCG19PfizerBCG
3AmazonBCG20Salesforce.comBCG
4AlphabetBCG21NikeBCG
5FacebookBCG22PepsicoBCG
6TeslaBCG23Merck & Co.BCG
7VisaForbes24SAPBCG
8Johnson & JohnsonBCG25United Parcel ServiceForbes
9WalmartBCG26StarbucksForbes
10Walt DisneyBCG27International Business MachinesBCG
11Procter & GambleBCG28General ElectricBCG
12ComcastBCG29Estée LauderForbes
13Adobe SystemsForbes30IntuitForbes
14NetflixForbes31ServiceNowForbes
15Coca-ColaBCG32TargetBCG
16OracleBCG33Booking HoldingsForbes
17CiscoBCG34Intuitive SurgicalForbes
BCG = Boston Consulting Group.
Table 4. Number of Korean and US companies included in the study.
Table 4. Number of Korean and US companies included in the study.
ClassificationKorea (n)United States (n)
Top 100 companies100100
Traditional companies7966
Innovative companies2134
Table 5. Nine components of a mission statement.
Table 5. Nine components of a mission statement.
No.ComponentRemark
ACustomersWho are the enterprise’s customers?
BProducts or servicesWhat are the firm’s major products or services?
CMarketsWhere does the firm compete?
DTechnologyWhat is the firm’s basic technology?
EConcern for survival, growth, and profitabilityWhat is the firm’s commitment to economic objectives?
FPhilosophyWhat are the basic beliefs, core values, aspirations, and philosophical priorities of the firm?
GSelf-conceptWhat are the firm’s major strengths and competitive advantages?
HConcern for public imageWhat is the firm’s public image?
IConcern for employeesWhat is the firm’s attitude/orientation toward employees?
Adapted from David [19].
Table 6. Results of the analysis of Gunning fog indexes of mission statements of Korean and US companies.
Table 6. Results of the analysis of Gunning fog indexes of mission statements of Korean and US companies.
ItemTop 100
Korean
Top 100 USItemKorean
Traditional
US
Traditional
ItemKorean
Innovative
US Innovative
Mean15.6507415.3049Mean16.21877216.531091Mean13.51385712.924647
Median15.5214.8Median16.2115.655Median13.913.55
Minimum22Minimum23.2Minimum3.22
Maximum33.3331.27Maximum33.3331.27Maximum21.2724.05
Parameter(n)100100Parameter(n)7966Parameter(n)2134
t *0.397t *−0.291t *0.455
p0.691p0.772p0.651
* p < 0.05.
Table 7. Differences in Gunning fog index between traditional and innovative companies of each country.
Table 7. Differences in Gunning fog index between traditional and innovative companies of each country.
ItemKorean
Traditional
Korean
Innovative
ItemUS TraditionalUS Innovative
Mean16.21877213.513857Mean16.53109112.924647
Median16.2113.9Median15.65513.55
Minimum23.2Minimum3.22
Maximum33.3321.27Maximum31.2724.05
Parameter(n)7921Parameter(n)6634
t *2.275t *3.062
p0.027p0.003
* p < 0.05.
Table 8. Top 30 keywords of top 100 Korean companies and Korean traditional companies and their eigenvector centrality.
Table 8. Top 30 keywords of top 100 Korean companies and Korean traditional companies and their eigenvector centrality.
No.Top 100
Korean
Eigenvector CentralityTop 100 USEigenvector CentralityKorean
Traditional
Eigenvector CentralityKorean
Traditional
Eigenvector Centrality
1valueworld1value1world1world
2companycustomer0.774151company0.931142customer0.850277customer
3globalpeople0.719219global0.878196life0.69572people
4customerlife0.710223customer0.86798innovation0.682377life
5leadinnovation0.661259lead0.786831people0.673454innovation
6technologyimprove0.576977growth0.643617service0.571936improve
7lifecompany0.575527business0.584263way0.569086company
8growthservice0.524781life0.581995company0.53176service
9createcreate0.496163technology0.573876business0.504897create
10societytechnology0.484071create0.571965improve0.478547technology
11contributeway0.453874contribute0.54685advance0.468613way
12businessfinance0.428869service0.543184finance0.463728finance
13trustadvance0.412822develop0.515115solution0.455339advance
14developvalue0.400019industry0.51298live0.448551value
15servicebusiness0.399659trust0.510865create0.443241business
16productproduct0.388831continue0.507545technology0.438427product
17futurecommunity0.386283product0.488863growth0.43143community
18industrygrowth0.368142society0.488675human0.420601growth
19continuesolution0.364818social0.468126community0.42003solution
20socialeconomy0.360561ecofriendly0.463571together0.41102economy
21responsibilitylive0.350113corporate0.456112lead0.408106live
22corporateconnect0.347027management0.448593communicate0.408017connect
23ecofriendlytime0.339474energy0.415462challenge0.399657time
24humaninvest0.334142sustainable0.411197better0.391779invest
25managementchallenge0.33237future0.401524solve0.367838challenge
26happytogether0.330624community0.389077full0.359005together
27energyhuman0.329794local0.384946range0.359005human
28sustainableexperience0.326942responsibility0.383701connect0.355574experience
29communitybetter0.324973competitive0.366742economy0.353618better
30localempower0.422212high0.365925science0.349951empower
The keywords in red are those that were duplicated among the 30 keywords between groups.
Table 9. Top 30 keywords of Korean and US innovative companies and their eigenvector centrality.
Table 9. Top 30 keywords of Korean and US innovative companies and their eigenvector centrality.
No.Korean InnovativeEigenvector CentralityUS InnovativeEigenvector Centrality
1create1world1
2future0.851098people0.91147
3dream0.747483life0.865913
4technology0.660424company0.806375
5human0.643811improve0.744491
6life0.607498innovation0.640568
7realize0.550081brand0.619302
8thinking0.550081thing0.586024
9challenge0.514471create0.585071
10mankind0.514471power0.573913
11world0.50193opportunity0.539683
12building0.496529customer0.49097
13possibility0.496529entertain0.487792
14responsibility0.496529technology0.487792
15sense0.496529inspire0.481389
16tackling0.496529value0.43574
17unlimited0.496529empower0.432385
18global0.462316globe0.428513
19value0.458485iconic0.428513
20product0.427985inform0.428513
21connect0.424779mind0.428513
22society0.419977premier0.428513
23lead0.391517reflect0.428513
24people0.359082storytelling0.428513
25contribute0.320346unparalleled0.428513
26devote0.320346ambitious0.422212
27service0.320346entrepreneur0.422212
28superior0.320346flourish0.422212
29frontier0.300195great0.422212
30endeavor0.322167invest0.422212
The keywords in red are those that were duplicated among the 30 keywords between groups.
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Jeon, J.; Cho, K.T. Differences in Readability, Keywords, and Orientation of Mission Statements of the Top 100 Korean and Top 100 US Traditional and Innovative Companies. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810220

AMA Style

Jeon J, Cho KT. Differences in Readability, Keywords, and Orientation of Mission Statements of the Top 100 Korean and Top 100 US Traditional and Innovative Companies. Sustainability. 2021; 13(18):10220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810220

Chicago/Turabian Style

Jeon, Jongdo, and Keun Tae Cho. 2021. "Differences in Readability, Keywords, and Orientation of Mission Statements of the Top 100 Korean and Top 100 US Traditional and Innovative Companies" Sustainability 13, no. 18: 10220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810220

APA Style

Jeon, J., & Cho, K. T. (2021). Differences in Readability, Keywords, and Orientation of Mission Statements of the Top 100 Korean and Top 100 US Traditional and Innovative Companies. Sustainability, 13(18), 10220. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810220

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