Internationalization of SMEs
lectures and notes
lectures and notes
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 105 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Gestion d'entreprise |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 08.01.2022 / 17.01.2022 |
Lien de web |
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why is it harder to export services than manufactured goods?
- Service export needs more than packing and sending a product
- Services
- need more skill in personnel
- face more cultural / language barriers
- face diverse expectations
How service companies differ from manufacturing companies
- Work with customer: in services, the client is the target and is essential
- The service does not exist without the customer, he is integrated in production process
- Characteristics of services vs manufactured products
- Tangibility of the service is not always the same ex. restaurants or teaching
- Marketing (restrictions and implications)
- A service is difficult to market because you can’t see it
- Loyalty depends more on the staff ad their relationship to clients
- Role of staff
- Performance of staff is less easy to monitor
- Services are less standardized, because different people offer the service differently
5 features of services
- Intangibility: some outcomes are tangible, large spectrum
- Inseparability: production and outcome happen at same time. Not always true ex. communication service can be asked for and sent later
- Heterogeneity: difference amongst providers
- Perishability: goes fast after it is received ex. taxi ride, spectrum
- Ownership: client doesn’t own the service; the service doesn’t enable the client to offer it himself
local bound services
- Location choice for tradeable services is considerably greater than for location-bound services, choice dependent on:
- Need to adapt products to local market conditions
- Transport costs (tariff barriers)
- Economies of scale in production
- Availability of factor inputs (qualified personnel)
- Degree of vertical and horizontal integration within the firm
- (horizonal = same level of firm activities, vertical = upstream or downstream in value chain)
- Government restrictions
resource based view
Explains how competitive advantage is generated by unique bundle of resources at core of firm
5 resource groups of RBV
- Managerial resources
- Knowledge-based resources
- Organizational capabilities
- Relational resources
- Physical resources
- Together = export performance, competitive advantage
service characteristics and factors influencing the market entry decision
- Firm characteristics: size, service type, years in business
- management characteristics
- firm-level resources
- host country factors
- choice inernational market entry mode / involvement
classical export vs FDI for services
- Difference between FDI and exporting
- If the resources don’t allow to do FDI, favor classical exporting
- Classical export is more difficult for services
- Online-based services are easier to export than services needing personal and skills
- Features that make marketing of service different and more challenging than marketing of goods, especially for international markets:
- Product embodied in skilled personnel
- Relatively high degree of client involvement
- Relatively low capital intensity
- Project-based nature of business
service firm specific resources
- technical facilitation
- process quality
- relational competence
- cultural sensitivity
- country of origin
- tangible cues
- service climate
- product differentiability
- management commitment
service types
degree of tangibiliy
degree of face to face contact
7 Main strategies to internationalize services
- Direct export
- System export (follow large customer abroad or joint export by 2 or more complementary firms)
- Owned subsidiary, direct entry (service-producing organization of its own in foreign market)
- Indirect entry, intermediate mode: franchising and licensing
- Electronic marketing, internet
- Cooperating with partners / strategic alliances
- Fetching or importing clients
4 Internationalization drivers for service firms
- Market-driven
- Find big demand somewhere
- New actor in own market that pushes firm out
- Customer-driven
- Follow a customer
- Technology-driven
- New possibilities linked to technology
- Project-driven
3 push factors of internationalization
- market expansion strategy (niche)
- follower strategy (customer)
- transfer production units
internationalization, def
firm increasing its operational involvement beyond national boundaries
5 modes of internationalisation
- direct and indirect export
- FDI: producing abroad
- import (cusromers, resources, goods, staff)
- international partnership
- international incentives
- franchising or licensing
uppsala model, steps
- indirect exporting
- direct exporting
- own exporting
- franchising
- joint venture
- wholly owned subsidiary
uppsala model approach
- firm's level of commitment positively correlated to experience and accumlated knowledge from previous interactions
- effectuation approach: try out and see result
- causation approach: market study
assumptions of uppsala model
- internationalisation is risky, managers are risk averse
- market knowledge is driver of internationalisation
- experimental (experience before knowledge)
- resource commitment defined by market knowledge and market commitment
I-model stages
- export awareness
- export intention
- export trial
- export evaluation
- export acceptance
critics uppsala and I model
- presented as historical descriptions
- not customer driven
- iternationalization follows patters, little influence of manager
- litlle advice to manager
network approach
- internationalisation is a process of constinuously establishing relationships and managing them
- experimental knowledge
- relationships embedded in networks
- firm enters market through
- new relationships w actor in new market
- additional commitment in already existing market
typoloogy of firms 4 (degree of int)
- early starter: low degree of int of firm, low degree of int of newtorks
- late starter: low degree of int of firm, low degree of int of networks
- lonely international: high degree of int of firm, low degree of int of netowrks
- international among others: high degree of int of firm, high degree of int of netowrks
measure degree of int of firm
- market diversification (nb of countries)
- export intensity (% of turnover abroad)
measure degree of int of networks
nb of international relationships
proportion of international relationships
open questions w network approach
- no predictability (too many variables, no pattern)
- no criteria for types of participants
- ignores external factors and actors
types of networks
- personal or professional
- bonding ties (common background)
- bridging ties (common sector)
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