Internationalization of SMEs
Lecture Notes
Lecture Notes
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 19 |
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Language | English |
Category | Marketing |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 22.01.2022 / 22.01.2022 |
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Push Factors for Internationalization / Definition
Push Factors
- high level of specialisation => reduced market opportunities and high R&D costs
- Expand towards specific niche arkets locally and globally
- Serve local customers that reside internationally
- Build production systems with units located internationally
Internationalization: a process where firms incease their operational involvement beyond their national territories..adaping firm's operations to the international market
Modes of Internationalization / The Upssala Model Stages
Modes of Internationalization: classical export, international partnerships, joint venures, licensing/franchising, foreign direct investment, import of goods/services or customers/talent.
The Upssala Model: Internationalization as an incremental stage-wise process (i.e., stage theory)
Stages:
1) Firm consolidates its position in the home market
2) Looks to expand to foreign market, starting with exporting to neighbouring countries (due to cultural/institutional similarities)
3) Enters into other foreign market operations and resource commitments
4) Firm's level of commitment is correlated with its experience and accumulated knolweddge in the international market arena.
The Upssala Model: 2 Assumptions / 4 Criticisms
Assumptions:
1) Managers are risk averse - "Psychic Distance"
Psychic Distance: the psychological block that prevents or distrubs the flow of information between firm and destination market agents. Includes factors such as, language barrier, culture, politicla system, level of education and level of indusstrial development
2) Market knowledge drives Internationalization = as market knowledge and market commitment increase, firms level of resource commitment increases.
Criticisms:
1) mere historical descriptions
2) 'provide-driven' instead of 'consumer-driven'
3) tends to view Internationalization as developing along specific patterns without managers deliberately influencing this process
4) Offers little advice on how to manage the transactions for going international.
Network Approach of Internationalization - a process where relationships are continuously established
Experiential Knowledge: gained through interactions / drives incremental operational and resource commitment
Relationships become 'bridges to foreign markets' and provide firm motivation and opportunity to internationalize.
3 Assumptions? 2 Criticisms/Drawbacks?
Assumptions of Network Theory:
- Phenomenon of creating, developing, utilizing relationships
- Requires less knowledge development and adjustment
- Firms can enter a ew market and Internationalize by developing new relationships, adding commitments to preexisting relationships, and harmonising company's position through a variety of relationships
Criticisms/Drawbacks
- Not a satisfactory model for predictions as too many variables
- Ignores relationships with competitive firms, domestic competition and govt. involvement
Born Global
- about 25% of all firms start exporting within less than 2 years of inception
- these firms are very young; in the tech. field; export focused
Emergence due to - (4) // Success factors (4 categories)
Emergence Due to
- Increasing niche markets
- rapid tech development, esp. in IT
- increased importance of global networks and alliances
- Entrepreneurs/managers with diversified and enriched capabilities
Success Factors: entrepreneurial / strategic / external environment / organizational
Entrepreneurial
- international vision / experience / knowledge
- educational background
- entrepreneurial cognition / ability
- personal network
Strategic
- Competitive strategy
- Market entry strategy
External Environment
- Industy condition
- geographic location
- government policies
Organizational
- financial condition
- innovation culture
- unique resources/product/services
- international business network
Impact of Covid-19 on GVC and Internationalization // Key developments
reshoring: process of bringing productive activities 'home' to a specific location
nearshoring: manufacturing being relocated to a country closer to home
Impact
- showed vulnerability of global supply chains due to inherent risk
- disruptions on top-tier and lower-tier suppliers
- global supply chains are chaging as regional networks and regional supply chains gain in importance
Key Developments
- Boost capabilities in contingency planning: quicker response time in crisis / run simulations in advance
- Localization/regionalization gains traction: reshoring/nearshoring and aligning with growing customer preference for locally made products
- Diversify supplier base and manufacturing footprint: reduce reliance on single source suppliers despite cost benefits
- Visiblity across the supply chain: effective collaboration and access to data
- Investments in supply chian digitalization: technology that makes supply chains more autonomous and intelligent; leads to better customer service, cost savings through operational efficiency, higher revenues, and launching of new business models.
Uncertainty in Internationalization
- Integral part of business; success of a venture depends uponthe response of entrepreneurs towards uncertainty; decision-taking involves a high degree of uncertainty
Casual Logic: approach / challenges
Approach: goals and means
- tries to achieve a certain goal
- Uses the best possible means to go there
- tries to maximise the decision outcomes
Challenges
- limited flexibility
- limitations of getting information (in reality, we have missing information)
- what defines our goals? end or means?
- does not cope well with uncertainty
Effectual Logic - approach / cycles / principles
Approach: no specific goals / looks at means
- looks at the means one has access to
- creates ends from the means without pre-selected goals
- Risks no more than the entrepreneur is prepared to lose
- Treats surprises as positive/remains opens to them
- Leverages contingencies into opportunities
Effectual Cycle:
- Interact wth potential / actual stakeholders
- Internations lead to new means
- generating means is an on-going process
Effectual Principles
- Means: only put in danger what you can afford to lose
- Worldview: a perspective wherein you are able to control the current situation
- Leverage contingencies: choosing the best and making a plan; but have the ability to pivot when needed
- Internationalization: constantly generating new means
Resource Based View (RBV) - critearea to determine competitive advantage of a product/firm
Competitive advantage - exploiting the business capacity to strategize/capitalize on the resource
4 point criteria and assesment?
Criteria
1. Valuable: provides a competitive advantage
2. Rare: control scarce resources/capabilities; owning something that's hard to find but not in demand
3. Difficult to imitate: expensive to duplicate resource/capability. Difficult to find substitute of your product.
4. Exploited: organised management processes, systems, structure and culture to capitalize on resource and capabilities
- 4 yes: business with competitive advantage
- resource tends to be their knowhow
- 3 yes: longterm profitable business mode
- by the time competitors catch-up, you can be ahead, giving longterm financial sustainability
- 2 yes: profitable business model
- depends on how fast competitors copy
- 1 yes: sustainable business model
- shortterm advantage as competitors can do the same
- all no: non sustainable business
VRIO or RBV Analysis - Resources / Capabilities / Strategy / Competitive Advantage
- a lot of investors understand that the most valuable resource tends to be the people/entrepreneurs (plus the valuable idea)
Resources: tangible + intangible assets a firm chooses to use and implement its strategies
Capabilities: resources firms use to organize and exploit other resources
Strategy: a firm's theory of how it is going to gain and sustain competitive advantage
Competitive Advantage: when a firm creates more economic value than its competitors
Knowledge: tacit and explicit / capability / competence
Knowledge: a familiarity, awareness or understanding of someone/ something, such as facts (propositional knowledge), skills (procedural knolwedge), or objects (acquaintance knowledge)
Tacit Knowledge: non verbalized / hard to formulize/ rooted in skills, experiences, insights, judgements / can be shared via interactins / technical dimensions (knowhow) of skills and capabilities / cognitive dimensions of beliefs, ideals, values, schemata, mental models
Explicit Knowledge: codified knowledge that can be expressed in writing, drawings, or computer programs
Knowledge generation: institutional knowledge - understand target markets / network knowledge (social and business) - contacts to develop business activities / internationalization knowledge
Capability: the ability to perform/achieve certain actions/outcomes
Competence: the set of demonstrable characteristics/skills that enable and improve the efficiency/performance of a job
Antecendent: a thing that logically precedes anothers
4 Antecedents to Internationalization
Antecendents
1. Government Export Programs
- facilitates contacts via trade fairs in foreign markets
- organized visits whereby managers develop their own networks
- provide export counselling to overcome lack of expeience in the international market
2. Home Market Difficulties
- intense rivalry / domestic uncertainties
3. Firm Size
- Based on RBV theory ; size depends on firm's managerial and financial resources
- Export depends on domestic success (stage theory)
- Larger export market = greater export intensity
4. Networks
- contact with suppliers, customers and govt. agencies
- associations with foreign actors for new international opportunities
Characteristics of international orientation / international innovativeness
characteristics of international orientation
- world as "market", not just home country
- the value system of the organization encourages exploration of opportunities abroad
- management communicates vision to employees
- develops human and other resources to achieve internationalization goals
characteristics of international innovativeness
- leading technological edge of its industry in international markets
- SME invented a lot of the tech. emebedded in the product
- SME employs most skilled specialists in design and manufacturing of products
- Recognised in international markets for product's technological superiority
- First (v. competitors) to introduce product innovations or new operating approaches
- In the last 5 yrs, SME has already marketed many products to foreign markets
3 Drivers of International Entrepreneurial Orientation
1. Cultural values and national religious values
- The beliefs, values and attitudes of religions may have implications for EO
- Social entrepreneurship may be driven quite directly by religious and moral values - less risky taking and autonomy, but more innovativeness
2. National Economic Development
- Entrepreneurs in poor regions are motivated and proactive, take as little risk as possible, and innovative only when absolutely necessary
- In developed economies with enough resource available to entrepreneurs the requirements for an influential EO may be significant and multifaceted
3. Diasporas and Racial Separation
- Entrepreneurship commonly demonstrated by “excluded” groups - minorities in given society who cannot fit into the mainstream economy or social hierarchy
- Such groups exhibit a good deal of proactiveness and are willing to take risks
- The level of innovativeness demonstrated by these groups is highly sector-dependent
Non-Profit Approach - self-governed entities driven by societal need; do not distribute revenues as profits
Motivations / Processes / Outcomes / Innovativeness / Risk-taking
Understanding non-profit entrepreneurial organizations
Motivation: Opportunities are not tied to creation of wealth for owners, but rather to the need to serve a social purpose while remaining financially sustainable
Processes - the set of key activities through which non-profits generate cash flow (donations and grants, concerts, gift shops etc.)
Outcomes: social and financial indicators
Innovativeness:
- emphasis on achieving core mission: increasing efficiencies / serving more individuals / enhancing what is done for individuals
- emphasis on generating new sources of revenue: selling products or launching ventures that supplement to/independent of social mission
- emphasis on innovation directed at both mission accomplishment and revenue generation in concert with one another
Risk-taking
- Risk involves the potential for financial loss as well as potential for loss in achieving social impact
- E.G.: heightened competition for donor funding and grants leads to non-profits to increasingly charge fees for their products & services as a means to supplement external funding sources.
Understanding non-profit EO
- Social, mission-centric innovation, commercial innovation, unique case in which innovation includes both social and commercial aspects
- Social, financial & stakeholder-relevant risk
- Proactiveness relative to similar organisations in terms of social & commercial innovation as well as relative to stakeholder expectations
Defining Informal sector
definition : Entrepreneurial activities that take place partially or fully outside of formal institutional boundaries, but inside informal institutional boundaries for large segments of society
- In practice, many entrepreneurs are neither wholly formal nor wholly informal but display varying levels of (in)formalisation - based on the dimensions of legal status as a company, tax registration, and formal accounts
Internationalization of Service Providers
- since the mid-1990’s trade in services has become the most dynamic segment in international trade
- Hard to internationalise services
- Services have a huge potential to internationalise
- Service exports are under explored, especially in SME’s
Behaviour of Trades/Services
- According to the WTO, during the pandemic, exports of some services have increased their share, because social distancing measures have increased the demand for services that can be provided digitally (communication services, shopping, education, medicine & entertainment)
How do service companies differ from other companies?
- how much is the customer integrated into the services?
- no real ownership in it
- Staff are the face of the company
5 characteristics of service companies / internationalization of service firms
5 characteristics
- Intangibility - unable to touch it
- Inseparability - car is in better shape now than before it was serviced for example
- Heterogeneity - Imagine every service is different, you cannot get the same service twice
- Perishability - Once you consume it, you cannot reuse it, unless it is a consultancy
- Ownership - if you receive a service, you cannot use the service again after
Internationalization:
- Importing clients
- Australia- millions of students going to study there
- How mobile is the service? How mobile is the customer?
- If you have a location bounded services: auslanderbehorde
Service Companies and RBV Theory
- Service company has certain managerial resource knowledge on doing businesses abroad
- Relational resources: access to clients
- Has an influence on whether you can do exports