Support International Business Expansion with Sequential Reviews


Book Description

This chapter is about the multinational company's decision on whether to enter new foreign markets using direct investment, exporting, or developing a local partner for distribution, with the possibility of scaling the investment under different demand levels. The perception of the host market demand does not remain the same during the investment period due to additional information and economic or political reasons. Therefore, the influence of uncertainty can be addressed by recombining a trinomial lattice model with changing uncertainty, to value investments with several interacting options. Overall, in this chapter we enhance the knowledge associated with exploring foreign markets subject to different demand uncertainties, valuing the flexibility of sequential options.




The New Institutionalism in Strategic Management


Book Description

In this exciting volume, a diverse and accomplished group of scholars work to integrate theories of institutions with strategic management. The research they present examines a wide range of industrial contexts, ranging from American retailing at the end of the nineteenth century, to German tax law at the beginning of the twenty-first.




Foreign Direct Investment


Book Description

Foreign Direct Investment examines the different approaches to explaining the growth and distribution of FDI in the world. Pulling together contributions from an array of international experts, this study combines theoretical with empirical work on issues such as computable general equilibrium modelling, trade, intellectual property, environment, l




International Business Strategy


Book Description

With stagnated demand in many home economies, the need to internationalize and exploit foreign market opportunities has never been more paramount for businesses to succeed at a global level. However, this process raises a number of questions, such as: can firms use their knowledge of one market in the next? Can firms pursue internationalization on several fronts at the same time? How should firms handle cultural and institutional differences between markets? This textbook provides students with the core research in international business and strategy, including organization, efficiency, external relationships and the challenges found in an increasingly multicultural world. Each part begins with a presentation of the issues and controversies faced in that particular area, followed by a synthesis of the research which provides avenues for future research. To facilitate and encourage further debate and learning, each part also includes at least one original case study. Compiled by two of the World's leading scholars of international business, and supplemented with critical commentaries and a range of integrative case studies, this comprehensive textbook provides advanced students of international business and strategy with a resource that will be invaluable in their studies and beyond.




Multinational Firms' Sequential Entry Strategies


Book Description

This dissertation, "Multinational Firms' Sequential Entry Strategies" by Yong, Gerald, Gao, 高勇, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: Abstract of thesis entitled Multinational Firms' Sequential Entry Strategies Submitted by Gerald Yong Gao for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Hong Kong in May, 2006 With multinational firms' increasing commitments to the global market in the last several decades, research on foreign market entry and investment has attracted much attention in the field of international marketing/business. A large volume of conceptual and empirical work has examined the determinants of entry mode choices, the timing of entries, and the performance implication of entry timing and mode choices. Most of previous studies only focused on firms' one-time entry. Evidently, multinational firms often engage in a series of entries over time in key foreign markets. The purpose of this thesis is to contribute to the emerging research stream of sequential entry activities and provide more insights on the dynamic process of multinational firms' market entry behaviors. This thesis focuses on sequential entry strategies of multinational firms. It consists of three studies each addressing a subtopic. In the first study, I examine sequential entry mode choices of multinational firms. Previous studies suggest that firms tend to adopt the same entry mode that they have used before. Meanwhile, some studies also propose that firms tend to switch entry modes over time. Taking the organizational learning perspective, I examine the influences of firms' learning from their own entry experience, competitors' entry experience, and their own international experience. I found that firms have the tendency of adopting the same mode used previously, but they will also switch to a higher commitment mode when they have accumulated more entry experience. The IIfindings provide new insights on the evolution of firms' entry mode choices in a foreign market. In the second study, I examine the pacing of multinational firms' sequential entry activities in foreign markets, i.e., how fast firms undertake a series of entries over time. I propose that the pacing of sequential entries is influenced by firms' learning in foreign markets and market attractiveness. Furthermore, I examine the process of multinational firms' within-market expansion and investigate how firms' learning enables them to conquer the constraints of expansion. The empirical results provide supportive evidence for the predictions. In the third study, I examine the effect of organizational learning on multinational firms' subsidiary performance. I develop different profiles of experience at firm level including general entry experience, entry specific experience, and exporting experience, and examine whether experience accumulation contributes to subsidiary performance. Furthermore, I also investigate the performance implication of learning at subsidiary level of multinational firms. I found that firms' general entry experience has no effect on the financial performance of subsidiaries. On the contrary, entry specific experience, exporting experience, and subsidiary experience exhibit positive effects on subsidiary performance. The empirical results also provide supporting evidence that the effect of exporting experience will get weaker as firms accumulate more entry specific experience. II




Real Options and Strategic Technology Venturing


Book Description

This book seeks to answer “why, when and how are real options used in strategic technology venturing?” This work tests for the role of real options in decision making involving three types of firms in decreasing order of technology-dependence – technology-driven (TD) (where the profit is fully dependent on new technology creation and leveraging), technology-based (TB) (where the profit is enabled and supported by technology) and technology-neutral (TN) (where the profit is almost independent of technology). It also deals with strategic and non-strategic types of decisions driven by real options. This analysis shows that an environment presenting co-opetitive (simultaneous competition and collaboration) conditions triggers the use of real options (why), that serve to transform the position, posture and propensity of businesses to innovate and thus they co-evolve (when) into more effective and efficient forms of businesses (co-specialization) (how). The authors demonstrate that embracing risk and uncertainty can increase levels and probability of new venture formation. However, their simulation also shows that it should be adapted to the risk profile of the firm and that timing is also a factor to be considered. Although engaging the concepts of real options, this analysis does not focus on a specific investment valuation methodology, but highlights the relationship between knowledge and risk and rather addresses the management of mindsets, as moving towards a systematic conceptualization of real options represents a different paradigm in decision making.




Innovations in International and Cross-Cultural Management


Book Description

Presenting cross-cultural research on a wide range of organizational topics, this book ranges from the individual to the macro level. Among the issues examined are: organizational trust in international settings, HRM issues in international joint ventures, developing strategic advantage across borders, and social partnerships for sustainable growth.




Emerging Market Multinationals


Book Description

This book examines the challenges faced by emerging market multinationals as they develop their international operations and proposes actionable solutions.




Imperfect Institutions


Book Description

The emergence of New Institutional Economics toward the end of the twentieth century profoundly changed our ideas about the organization of economic systems and their social and political foundations. Imperfect Institutions explores recent developments in this field and pushes the discussion forward by allowing for incomplete knowledge of social systems and unexpected system dynamics and, above all, by focusing explicitly on institutional policy. Empirical studies extending from Africa to Iceland are cited in support of the theoretical argument. In Imperfect Institutions Thráinn Eggertsson extends his attempt to integrate and develop the new field that began with his acclaimed Economic Behavior and Institutions (1990), which has been translated into six languages. This latest work analyzes why institutions that create relative economic backwardness emerge and persist and considers the possibilities and limits of institutional reform. Thráinn Eggertsson is Professor of Economics at the University of Iceland and Global Distinguished Professor of Politics at New York University. Previously published works include Economic Behavior and Institutions (1990) and Empirical Studies in Institutional Change with Lee Alston and Douglass North (1996).