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Contact Name
Eko Susanto
Contact Email
integrasi.sains.media@gmail.com
Phone
+6288218734725
Journal Mail Official
integrasi.sains.media@gmail.com
Editorial Address
Jl Pojok No. 1 - Lembang, Bandung Barat, Indonesia
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Kab. bandung barat,
Jawa barat
INDONESIA
Journal Integration of Management Studies
Published by Integrasi Sains Media
ISSN : 2988389X     EISSN : 2988389X     DOI : 10.58229/jims
Core Subject : Science,
Journal Integration of Management Studies (JIMS) is an academic journal in the field of business published by Integrasi Sains Media, Indonesia. This journal intends to foster and stimulate the exchange of scholarly thought on applied business research issues among professionals and academics worldwide. JIMS welcomes articles in all areas of science management, both applied and theoretical. Theoretical articles must link theory and essential and exciting management applications. This journal is an open-access journal that can be of essential reading for academic researchers and business professionals. Articles may include but are not limited to: 1. marketing management 2. finance management 3. human resources management 4. strategic management 5. tourism management 6. entrepreneurship 7. operational management.
Articles 113 Documents
Understanding Loyalty in a Company-Led Halal Brand Community: The Role of Perceived Benefit, Engagement, and Religiosity Rahayu, Shafa; Lestari, Yuliani
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 3 No. 2 (2025): (Special Issue)
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v3i2.400

Abstract

Several brands nowadays, especially the Indonesian cosmetics industry, form a community managed by the company as a strategy to build customer loyalty. However, the effectiveness of this community in creating loyalty is still questionable. This study analyzes how perceived benefits, brand community engagement, and religiosity affect the repurchase intention of Wardah Youth Ambassador (WYA) members, with brand equity as a mediating variable. A quantitative approach was used through the distribution of an online questionnaire to 100 active members or alums of WYA. The data was analyzed using the Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM) method. Perceived benefits had a significant effect on brand equity and repurchase intent. Community engagement also had a significant effect on brand equity and repurchase intent. Religiosity affected brand equity, but had no direct effect on repurchase intent. Brand equity partially mediated the relationship between community engagement and repurchase intent. Joining a company-managed community does not necessarily create loyalty. Emotional and cognitive engagement, as well as value perceptions and religious alignment, play a key role in shaping the loyalty of Muslim Gen Z consumers. This research emphasizes the importance of meaningful and value-relevant brand experiences in maintaining customer loyalty.
Profitability Impact Of Reducing Coal Lending Exposure: A Scenario Analysis of Bank Permata's Sample Loan Portfolio Nugraha, Aditya; Nainggolan, Yunieta Anny
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 3 No. 2 (2025): (Special Issue)
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v3i2.399

Abstract

The global shift toward a low-carbon economy has intensified regulatory, market, investor, and societal pressures on banks to align lending portfolios with sustainable finance principles. In Indonesia, where coal remains central to the energy mix, banks face a strategic trade-off between sustaining profitability from coal financing and complying with green taxonomy requirements. This study evaluates the profitability implications of the coal sector phase-out for Bank Permata, a leading Indonesian commercial bank, and examines mitigation strategies. The analysis integrates Signaling Theory, Resource Dependence Theory, Stakeholder Theory, and Sustainable Finance to frame the strategic, risk, and stakeholder considerations in portfolio reallocation. A quantitative scenario analysis was applied to four publicly listed coal companies with existing credit facilities at Bank Permata, which were selected as a sample. Using a profit planning approach, financial projections were developed for income statements, balance sheets, and cash flows based on public disclosures and validated assumptions. Results were compared across a baseline (no phase out) and three phase out scenarios, with the most stringent targeting zero exposure by 2030. Findings indicate that phasing out in the short term will affect declines in interest income, driven by reduced loan balances and yields, but highlight long-term benefits through reduced regulatory non-compliance risk and lower reputational exposure to transition risks. Potential losses can also be mitigated by reallocating to green taxonomy-aligned sectors with competitive yields. The research offers a replicable scenario-based modeling framework for quantifying the financial effects of coal phase-out strategies in emerging market banking. It underscores the importance of strategic portfolio realignment, diversification into sustainable sectors, and strengthened ESG risk assessments to maintain profitability while supporting national and global sustainability goals.
Towards Sustainable Accountability And Transparency In Public Sector: Case Study of Pusat Investasi Pemerintah With GRI Standards Salamah, Dini; Famiola, Melia; Yusuf, Muhammad
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 3 No. 3 (2025)
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v3i3.402

Abstract

As a signatory to the United Nations' 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Indonesia mandates active governmental engagement in advancing sustainability. This study investigates the readiness of the Pusat Investasi Pemerintah (PIP)—a Public Service Agency under the Ministry of Finance—to institutionalize Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) principles and align its sustainability reporting with the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Universal Standards 2021. Employing a qualitative approach, the research applies gap analysis to evaluate PIP's existing practices against 30 GRI 2 metrics. Data collection involved semi-structured interviews with 11 key management figures and document analysis of internal reports and regulatory frameworks. Findings reveal that 73.3% of GRI indicators are inherently fulfilled through operational activities; critical gaps persist in governance formalization, including the absence of dedicated sustainability structures, vague impact accountability, limited board-level oversight, and insufficient disclosure of compensation ratios. The study proposes a three-phase strategic roadmap to address these deficiencies. Despite its single-case limitation, the research offers a replicable framework for integrating ESG standards in public financial institutions, contributing to enhanced transparency, institutional accountability, and alignment with global sustainability imperatives.
Digital Adoption in Informal Micro-Property Management: A TAM–Lean–BMC Conceptual Framework and Research Agenda Esri Hestiningtyas; Rahadi, Raden Aswin
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.403

Abstract

This conceptual study tackles the digital-adoption gap in Jakarta's kos-kosan boarding-house rooms, where landlords managing 5–20 units still juggle paper ledgers despite near-universal smartphone and WhatsApp use. Guided by the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), Lean Start-up logic, and the Business Model Canvas (BMC), this research develops an integrated theoretical framework that explains behavioral hesitancy, sequences low-risk Minimum Viable Product (MVP) iterations, and pinpoints the "missing-middle" niche for a boarding house management platform. The proposed framework positions TAM to surface core drivers (perceived usefulness and ease of use) recast for WhatsApp-first workflows. Lean Start-up methodology will then map these insights into quick, feedback-rich MVP cycles tuned to resource-constrained settings. BMC will situate the validated feature set in a defendable market position underserved by premium PropTech and ultra-basic bots. This conceptual foundation establishes the theoretical groundwork for future empirical phases, which will combine stakeholder interviews and platform benchmarking to diagnose pain points, quantify adoption triggers, and refine the MVP and business model through qualitative fieldwork and pilot deployments. By linking behavior, experimentation, and strategy, this study lays a theory-driven pathway toward inclusive digital transformation in informal housing in emerging economies, with empirical validation planned for subsequent research phases.
Financial Assessment of Potential Carbon Pricing Policy and Energy Transition Scenarios in Indonesia’s Nickel HPAL Project Tio Gefien Imami; Ana Noveria
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.417

Abstract

Indonesia’s mandate to achieve Net Zero Emissions (NZE) by 2060 exerts unprecedented pressure on energy-intensive mineral processing sectors to decarbonize while maintaining economic viability. While the macro-level implications of carbon policies are well documented, project-level financial responses to the simultaneous imposition of domestic carbon pricing (Nilai Ekonomi Karbon - NEK), the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), and renewable energy transition pathways remain underexplored. This study quantifies the financial resilience and risk profiles of a representative large-scale state-owned High-Pressure Acid Leach (HPAL) nickel project in Eastern Indonesia under diverse policy trajectories. A 20-year scenario-based Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model was developed (WACC = 14.89%)  and integrated with Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate four configurations: (1) a gas-powered baseline; (2) gas subject to NEK; (3) gas subject to both NEK and CBAM; and (4) a solar-powered configuration incorporating NEK, CBAM, and a 10% carbon-offset allocation. Results demonstrate that while dual carbon-pricing regimes significantly compress project margins, transitioning to solar-powered operations curtails cumulative emissions and hedges against long-term regulatory volatility. Sensitivity analysis identifies nickel pricing, sales volume, and input costs as the primary determinants of valuation. Monte Carlo simulations reveal that the renewable configuration yields a more concentrated Net Present Value (NPV) distribution, indicating enhanced resilience amid extreme policy and price uncertainty. Ultimately, the project maintains financial viability across all scenarios, though performance depends on the architecture of international carbon regimes and energy procurement strategies. This research internalizes carbon-policy uncertainty into project-level capital budgeting, providing a framework for navigating the decarbonization of critical mineral value chains.
Linking Organizational Climate to Work Engagement in Higher Education Institutions Dwi Amelia, Ifa; Saragih, Susanti
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.424

Abstract

Organizational climate plays a crucial role in shaping employee work engagement, particularly in non-profit institutions, such as universities, where limited resources necessitate strategic human resource management. This study investigated how various dimensions of organizational climate, such as leadership, employee relations, organizational commitment, job satisfaction, and employee motivation, affected work engagement among 272 employees at a university in Bandung, Indonesia. Using simple and multiple regression analyses, the results show that, while all five dimensions significantly influence work engagement when tested individually, only organizational commitment and employee motivation remain strong predictors when examined together. These findings indicate that internal factors, such as employees’ emotional attachment to their organization and intrinsic motivation, play a more decisive role in fostering engagement than structural or relational factors. The results also extend the Social Exchange Theory by highlighting that reciprocal relationships between organizational support and employee dedication are primarily strengthened through mechanisms of commitment and motivation. From a practical perspective, this study highlights the importance of human resource strategies that foster internal motivation and enhance organizational commitment. These include implementing transparent reward systems, providing career development opportunities, and recognizing employee contributions. Such initiatives can help universities create a more supportive and engaging work environment, despite resource limitations. Overall, this study adds to the literature on organizational climate by identifying the most influential factors for building and sustaining work engagement within education institutions, offering both theoretical insights and actionable implications for HR practitioners.
The Logistics Financier as a Strategic Orchestrator: Simulating Supply Chain Finance to Unlock Profitability in State-Owned Logistics Ria, Poeti; Rahadi, Raden Aswin
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.425

Abstract

As the logistics industry undergoes rapid transformation, companies are evolving beyond their traditional role of transporting goods to become orchestrators of capital and information flows. While Supply Chain Finance (SCF) is widely recognized for optimizing working capital, its application in state-owned enterprises (SOEs) remains underexplored, particularly due to regulatory restrictions prohibiting direct lending. Addressing this gap, this study proposes an adaptation of the Logistics Financier orchestration model tailored for an Indonesian state-owned logistics enterprise currently experiencing a liquidity shortfall of IDR 4.3 billion. Employing an exploratory sequential mixed-method design, this research integrates expert interviews to construct model parameters and utilizes Monte Carlo simulation to assess financial robustness. The simulation reveals that a holistic SCF approach—integrating Purchase Order (PO) Financing and Reverse Factoring—can effectively bridge a funding gap of IDR 39 billion and generate an expected net profit of IDR 12.8 billion. However, a critical finding indicates negative profitability (-1.62%) within the Government segment, highlighting a theoretical misalignment between market-driven SCF tools and bureaucratic governance structures. This study contributes to SCF literature by conceptualizing the orchestrator’s role as a financial intermediary and empirically demonstrating that SCF serves as a high-sensitivity value amplifier. Its effectiveness depends on institutional context and strict operational discipline.
Hybrid Technology Internalisation Strategies in Industrial Services: The Case of Foam Pigging Levina Marchyani; Raden Aswin Rahadi
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.436

Abstract

Technology acquisition in specialised industrial services often fails to translate into internal capability when knowledge remains externalised. In Indonesia, foam pigging technology remains sourced from external actors, despite growing local content requirements and strategic interest in industrial independence. This study examines the case of PT BES by applying the Resource-Based View (RBV) and Knowledge-Based View (KBV) to assess internalisation pathways. Using a mixed-method approach, the study combines SWOT analysis and discounted cash flow modelling—covering Net Present Value (NPV), Internal Rate of Return (IRR), and Cash-on-Cash (CoC) returns—to evaluate two options: talent acquisition (TA) and joint venture (JV). Results show that while both approaches are financially viable, TA enables early control and learning, whereas JV offers long-term expansion with shared risk. The proposed hybrid sequence—TA followed by JV—supports gradual internal capability formation. This case contributes to technology management literature by demonstrating how hybrid strategies can resolve the tension between knowledge dependence and capability development under regulatory constraints.
Market Reactions To Changes In Sri-Kehati Index Constituents In The Post-COVID-19 Period Tarigan, Louis Orlanda; Kitri, Mandra Lazuardi
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.438

Abstract

This study examines market reactions to the semi-annual rebalancing announcements of the SRI-KEHATI Index in Indonesia during the post-COVID-19 period (2022–2024). As environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing gains increasing global relevance, understanding how investors in emerging markets respond to sustainability-related index changes is crucial. Using an event study methodology based on a single-index market model, this research analyzes abnormal returns and trading volumes around five rebalancing announcements involving 18 inclusions and 17 exclusions. The results reveal significant short-term positive abnormal returns and heightened trading volumes following stock inclusions, while exclusions trigger negative price reactions accompanied by increased trading activity. These findings support the price pressure hypothesis and, to some extent, the sustainability taste hypothesis, suggesting that short-term market reactions are driven by temporary demand shifts and growing ESG awareness among investors. However, no persistent long-term abnormal returns are observed, indicating that the Indonesian capital market remains only partially efficient in assimilating ESG-related information. This study contributes to the literature on sustainable finance by providing post-pandemic evidence from an emerging market context and offers practical implications for investors, regulators, and policymakers advancing ESG integration.
The The Impact of Green Credit Policies on the Financial Performance of Indonesian Banking: English Bahtiar, Jessica Yunanda; Faturohman, Taufik
Journal Integration of Management Studies Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Article In Press
Publisher : Integrasi Sains Media

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58229/jims.v4i1.429

Abstract

This study analyzes the impact of Green Credit Policies (GCP) on the financial performance of Indonesian banking institutions. Utilizing a framework grounded in stakeholder and legitimacy theories, this research examines the extent to which green credit initiatives influence key financial metrics, specifically Return on Equity (ROE) and Earnings Per Share (EPS). The dataset comprises a panel of 33 Indonesian banks observed from 2020 to 2024. Panel data regression models were applied to test the hypothesized relationships. The findings indicate a positive correlation between GCP and financial performance, suggesting that transparency and sustainability practices foster financial resilience and long-term sustainability. To address potential endogeneity bias and reverse causality, robustness checks were conducted to validate the empirical results. This study contributes to the green finance literature by providing empirical evidence regarding the financial benefits of GCP implementation. The implications advocate for regulatory frameworks that promote transparency, highlighting that integrating sustainability into corporate strategies enhances competitive advantage and profitability.

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