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Foreign market entries, exits and re-entries: The role of knowledge, network relationships and decision-making logic

Authors :
Susan Freeman
Tiia Vissak
Barbara Francioni
Vissak, Tiia
Francioni, Barbara
Freeman, Susan
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We focus on the following question: how are knowledge, network relationships and decision-making logic interrelated throughout the internationalization process – foreign market entries, exits and re-entries? We contribute to the internationalization literature, network approach and effectuation theory that have not examined these interrelationships during internationalization – especially de- and re-internationalization – in detail yet. Thereby,we provide a more complete view of internationalization. Based on a single punctuated longitudinal case study,we show that lack of knowledge results in mostly effectual (opportunity-driven) decision-making: finding customers via weak ties, trade fairs and unsolicited export orders and experiencing numerous market exits and re-entries due to “experimenting”. Knowledge acquisition leads to more causal (systematic, plan-driven) decision-making and stronger ties, but serendipitous (“by chance”) entries can still occur, and exiting and re-entering foreign markets may continue. We suggest that managers should network and acquire knowledge actively, use both decision-making logics and accept uncertainty as normal during internationalization. Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9380036fd497f7796615122d58eb55f