TheEditor’sCorner With this new issue, the journal continues with the phase of gaining in- ternationalrecognitionwiththeretainedfocusonthetransitionresearch and the emphasis on openness to different research areas, topics, and methods, as well as the international and interdisciplinary research na- tureofscholarlyarticlespublishedinthejournal. The current issue covers topics such as the technological intensity of industries, the information and communication technology adoption policy, the interconnectedness of capabilities and barriers to entry, the ethics in international economic organisations, and the issue of inter- nal marketing in schools. This issue starts with a paper of Štefan Bo- jnec and Matjaž Novak who present the results of the analysis of the technological intensity of industries classified by technology levels and patterns in Slovenian merchandise trade developments. Hazbo Skoko, Branka Krivokapi´ c-Skoko, Marinko Škare, and Arnela Ceri´ c build the modelofinformation andcommunicationtechnologyadoption inAus- tralian and Croatian sme s. S. Phineas Upham suggests that capabilities and barriers to entry tend to be interconnected in such a way that sacri- ficingoneofthemcanleadtothesubsequentvulnerability orerosion of the other. This claim is illustrated with astudyof theus bicycle market. BrunoS.Sergiexaminesethicsininternational economicorganizations; in his paper he sees ethics and morals as two interconnected concepts, and suggests that the rationale that binds all economic agents to their respective obligations must be interpreted by effective courses of action dictated by economic realities. In the last paper, Vinko Logaj and Anita Trnavˇ ceviˇ c discuss the elements of internal marketing that are essential for teacher and customer satisfaction with the aim of indicating oppor- tunities for the implementation of internal marketing philosophy and related strategiesinSlovenianschools. BoštjanAntonˇ ciˇ c Editor ManagingGlobalTransitions4 (1):3