having changed something “for the better” - and inviting others to be part of it
Konstantinos Konstantinidis, M.D., Ph.D.
Director - ExCtu - addressing the Health Tourism Sector "Builder Class" (a.k.a. the "growth makers" and “developers”) with originated T-shaped knowledge for thinking and doing.
…the Contemporary Health Tourism Economic Ecosystem (of Stakeholders and Legal Entities)
BTW, the background picture used to illustrate this article was borrowed from a 2013 “piece” in World Intellectual Property Review titled: UK copyright law: a change for the better? (?https://www.worldipreview.com/article/uk-copyright-law-a-change-for-the-better?).
In short – and to a large degree – the Contemporary Health Tourism Economic Ecosystem (of Stakeholders and Legal Entities) is about having changed something for the better and inviting others to become part of it.
"better things" are appreciated when they can be compared – and by inviting others to become “part of it” – and benefit.
The comparison is made between the “new” (contemporary) and the “timeworn” (conventional).
Contemporary Health Tourism is as much about health as it is about travel, tourism, hospitality and a wide range of sector-supporting services.
Consequently, the invitation, to be part of it and benefit, is extended to a diverse, yet integrated, stakeholder base.
Incidentally, Better Things usually come about as a result of change (transformation).
And, the best way to bring about change, is by introducing a new model that makes the existing model obsolete (Richard Buckminster Fuller) - Post | LinkedIn .
BTW, according to Cambridge Dictionary, the phrase “change for the better” means: to improve.