articleStrategic Management JournalMar 28, 2002Closed access

Pace, rhythm, and scope: process dependence in building a profitable multinational corporation

London Business School · Tilburg University

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Abstract

Abstract Many potential benefits of foreign expansion have been identified in the literature, yet empirical support that multinational firms perform better than domestic firms is mixed. This paper takes a longitudinal perspective and argues that how much a firm benefits from having foreign subsidiaries depends on its process of internationalization. We argue that a firm's capacity to absorb expansion is subject to constraints: some expansion patterns increase profitability less than others, owing to diseconomies of time compression. We hypothesize that the speed of internationalization, the spread of the geographical and product markets entered, and the irregularity of the expansion pattern negatively moderate…

Citation impact

761
total citations
FWCI
52.86
Percentile
100%
References
117
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Internationalization
  • Multinational corporation
  • Profitability index
  • Diseconomies of scale
  • Industrial organization
  • Panel data
  • Subsidiary
  • Pace
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Partnerships for the goals
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