Post-entry operation of foreign firms in a host country: the role of mutual forbearance and organisational learning in their product segment entry choices
Date
2017
Authors
Jin, Tuofu
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Publisher
Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
International business scholars who are interested in how foreign
firms enter and operate in a host market have predominantly
focused on the decisions managers make at the time of entry.
Consequently, as Hennart and Slangen (2015) have pointed out, we
know relatively little about foreign firms’ post-entry
operation. Moreover, the few studies that have examined the
post-entry operation of foreign subsidiaries in a host market
have focused mostly on changes in governance mode (Chang &
Rosenzweig 2001; Driffield, Mickiewicz & Tethemouri 2016; Puck,
Holtbrügge & Mohr 2009). Changes of product scope in the host
country—which is a function of the subsidiary’s choice of
which product segments in the host country to enter or stay out
of—has received comparatively sparse attention (except for
Chang 1995; Mitchell, Shaver & Yeung 1994).
In this study, I examined the product segment entry decisions
of foreign automobile assemblers in the United States in a bid to
better understand their post-entry dynamics in their product
scope. First, I took a historical approach and examined Honda
Motor and BMW’s initial entry and product scope dynamics in the
United States auto market. Next, I conducted a quantitative study
to understand the potential drivers of foreign firms’ segment
choices during their post-entry into a host market. Specifically,
I developed predictions from mutual forbearance and
organisational learning perspectives, and tested them using data
on product segment entries by foreign automobile assemblers in
the United States between 1987 and 2015.
Results show that foreign firms take into account both their
rivals’ reaction function and their own operating experience in
a product segment when they make segment choice decisions.
Specifically, a foreign firm’s probability of entering a
product segment has a curvilinear relationship with its
multi-segment contact level with rivals in that segment and a
positive relationship with its own prior experience in that
segment. Further, the curvilinear relationship between segment
entry likelihood and multi-segment contact is strengthened as a
foreign firm’s prior segment experience increases.
This study makes three theoretical contributions. First, it
adds to international business scholars’ knowledge of foreign
firms’ post-entry operation, particularly their segment choice
dynamics. Second, it discusses two time orientations, namely,
future and past’s role in foreign firms’ segment choice
decision-making. Third, my focus on product segment choice aligns
the foreign market entry literature with the real business
environment. Indeed, after their initial entry into a host
market, foreign firms will face competition at the product
segment level; yet, to date, overwhelming attention has been
given to geographical market choice.
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Keywords
Post-entry dynamics, mutual forbearance, multi-segment contact, organisational learning, segment experience, product segment entry
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