Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T15:42:48.477Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

International strategy for the nonmarket context: stakeholders, issues, networks, and geography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Jonathan Doh
Affiliation:
Villanova University, Bartley Hall Rm 2079, Management, 800 Lancaster Avenue, Villanova, PA 19085, USA

Abstract

Multinational companies (MNCs) shape their nonmarket strategies in response to the social and political context in which they operate. Empirical evidence shows that these strategies frequently fall into one of two categories: they either consist of a disparate portfolio of disconnected country-level social and political programs or are composed of standardized corporate policies that are applied uniformly across geographies. The former type of strategy implies that MNC managers view their firm's context as extremely fragmented across country borders, while the latter reflects the perception of a highly homogeneous international environment. Yet, most industries and firms operate in a semi-globalized socio-political context. In this paper we propose that producing strategies that truly fit with the specific characteristics of an MNC's nonmarket context requires that this context be defined along four dimensions: stakeholders, issues, networks, and geography. Conceptualizing an MNC socio-political context in this way broadens dramatically the strategic choices of MNC managers. We illustrate the use of our model by describing four socio-political contexts frequently encountered by MNCs, and showing how alternative nonmarket strategies seem a better option than the standard “one-size-fits-all” or “every-country-a-different-strategy” approaches of today.

Type
Corporate Responsibility, Multinational Corporations, and Nation States
Copyright
Copyright © V.K. Aggarwal 2012 and published under exclusive license to Cambridge University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ahmad, M. M. 2006. “The NGO debate in ‘development.’” In: Behera, M. C. (ed.), Globalising rural development: competing paradigms and emerging realitites. New Dehli: Sage.Google Scholar
Ansoff, H. I. 1980. “Strategic issue management.” Strategic Management Journal 1: 131148.Google Scholar
Bach, D. and Allen, D. B. 2010. “What every CEO needs to know about nonmarket strategy.” Mit Sloan Management Review 51 (3): 4148.Google Scholar
Baron, D. P. 1995. “Integrated strategy – market and nonmarket components.” California Management Review 37 (2): 4765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baron, D. P. 1996. Business and its environment. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Bigelow, B., Fahey, L. and Mahon, J. F. 1991. “Political strategy and issues evolution: A framework for analysis and action.” In: Paul, K. (ed.), Contemporary issues in business ethics and politics. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen. pp. 126.Google Scholar
Blackett, T. 2003. “What is a brand?” In: Clifton, R. and Simmons, J. (eds.), Brands and branding. The Economist/Profile Books: London.Google Scholar
Bonardi, J. P. and Keim, G. D. 2005. “Corporate political strategies for widely salient issues.” Academy of Management Review 30 (3): 555576.Google Scholar
Brammer, S. J. and Pavelin, S. 2006. “Corporate reputation and social performance: the importance of fit.” Journal of Management Studies 43 (3): 435455.Google Scholar
Buchholz, R. A. 1988. Public policy issues for management. NJ: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Burt, R. S. 1992. Structural holes: the social structure of competition. structural holes: the social structure of competition. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Ch. 1–2.Google Scholar
Cantwell, J., Dunning, J. H. and Lundan, S. M. 2010. “An evolutionary approach to understanding international business activity: The co-evolution of MNEs and the institutional environment.” Journal of International Business Studies 41 (4): 567586.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cashore, B. 2002. “Legitimacy and the privatization of environmental governance: how non-state market-driven (NSMD) governance systems gain rule-making authority.” Governance-an International Journal of Policy and Administration 15 (4): 503529.Google Scholar
Cavusgil, S. T. and Zou, S. M. 1994. “Marketing strategy-performance relationship – an investigation of the empirical link in export market ventures.” Journal of Marketing 58 (1): 121.Google Scholar
Dahan, D., Doh, J. P. and Guay, T. R. 2006. “The role of multinational corporations in transnational institutional building: A policy-network perspective.” Human Relations 59 (11): 15711600.Google Scholar
Doh, J. P. and Teegen, H. 2002. “Nongovernmental organizations as institutional actors in international business: theory and implications.” International Business Review 11 (6): 665684.Google Scholar
Donaldson, T. and Preston, L. E. 1995. “The stakeholder theory of the corporation – concepts, evidence, and implications.” Academy of Management Review 20 (1): 6591.Google Scholar
Doz, Y., Santos, J. and Williamson, P. 2002. From global to metanational: how companies win in the knowledge economy. Cambridge: Harvard Business School Press.Google Scholar
Dunning, J. H. 1998. “Location and the multinational enterprise: a neglected factor?Journal of International Business Studies 29 (1): 4566.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunning, J. H. 2009. “Location and the multinational enterprise: a neglected factor?Journal of International Business Studies 40 (1): 519.Google Scholar
Foreman, K. 1999. “Evolving global structures and the challenges facing international relief and development organizations.” Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly 28 (Suppl 1): 178197.Google Scholar
Freeman, E. R. 1984. Strategic management: a stakeholder approach. Marshfield, MA: Pitman Publishing.Google Scholar
Friedman, T. L. 2005. The world is flat: a brief history of the twenty-first Century, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.Google Scholar
Frooman, J. 2010. “The issue network: reshaping the stakeholder model.” Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences-Revue Canadienne Des Sciences De L Administration 27 (2): 161173.Google Scholar
Ghemawat, P. 2003a. “Semiglobalization and international business strategy.” Journal of International Business Studies 34 (2): 138152.Google Scholar
Ghemawat, P. 2003b. “The forgotten strategy.” Harvard Business Review 81 (11): 7684.Google ScholarPubMed
Ghemawat, P. 2007. Redefining global strategy; crossing borders in a world where differences still matter. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.Google Scholar
Guillen, M. 2001. “Is globalization civilizing, destructive or feeble?Annual Review of Sociology 27: 261281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris-Curtis, E., Marleyn, O. and Bakewell, O. 2005. “The implications for northern NGOs of adopting rights-based approaches.” In: Centre, INTaR (ed.), Oxford: INTRAC.Google Scholar
Heclo, H. 1978. “Issue networks and the executive establishment.” In: King, A. (ed.), The new american political system. Washington, DC: The American Enterprise Institute.Google Scholar
Hultman, M., Robson, M. J. and Katsikeas, C. S. 2009. “Export product strategy fit and performance: An empirical investigation.” Journal of International Marketing 17 (4): 123.Google Scholar
Husted, B. W. and Allen, D. B. 2011. Corporate social strategy: stakeholder engagement and competitive advantage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Keck, M. E. and Sikkink, K. 1998. Activists Beyond Borders: advocacy networks in international politics. Ithaca: Cornell University.Google Scholar
Kingdon, J. H. 1984. Agendas, alternatives and public policies. New York, NY: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Konig, T. 1998. “Modeling policy networks.” Journal of Theoretical Politics 10 (4): 387388.Google Scholar
Kostova, T. and Roth, K. 2002. “Adoption of an organizational practice by subsidiaries of multinational corporations: institutional and relational effects.” Academy of Management Journal 45 (1): 215233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lenox, M. J. and Eesley, C. E. 2009. “Private environmental activism and the selection and response of firm targets.” Journal of Economics and Management Strategy 18 (1): 4573.Google Scholar
Lessard, D. and Lucea, R. 2009. “Mexican multinationals; insights from CEMEX.” In: Ramamurti, R. and Singh, J. V. (eds.), Emerging multinationals from emerging markets. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lindenberg, M. and Dobel, J. P. 1999. “The challenges of globalization for northern international relief and development NGOs.” Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly 28 (4): 425.Google Scholar
Mahon, J. F., Heugens, P. P. M. A. R. and Lamertz, K. 2004. “Social networks and nonmarket strategy.” Journal of Public Affairs 4 (2): 170189.Google Scholar
Marres, N. and Rogers, R. 2008. “Subsuming the ground: how local realities of the Fergana Valley, the Narmada Dams and the BTC pipeline are put to use on the Web.” Economy and Society 37 (2): 251281.Google Scholar
McWilliams, A., Siegel, D. S. and Wright, P. M. 2006. “Corporate social responsibility: Strategic implications.” Journal of Management Studies 43 (1): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miles, R. A. 1987. Managing the corporate social environment: a grounded theory. NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Mitchell, R. K., Agle, B. R. and Wood, D. J. 1997. “Toward a theory of stakeholder identification and salience: Defining the principle of who and what really counts.” Academy of Management Review 22 (4): 853886.Google Scholar
Naman, J. L. and Slevin, D. P. 1993. “Entrepreneurship and the concept of fit – a model and empirical testS.” Strategic Management Journal 14 (2): 137153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peteraf, M. and Reed, R. 2007. “Managerial discretion and internal alignment under regulatory constraints and change.” Strategic Management Journal 28 (11): 10891112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, J. E., Preston, L. E. and Sachs, S. 2002. Managing the extended enterprise: The new Stakeholder view. California Management Review 45 (1): 6.Google Scholar
Powell, T. C. 1992. “Organizational alignment as competitive advantage.” Strategic Management Journal 13 (2): 119134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prakash, A. 2002. “Beyond seattle: globalization, the nonmarket environment and corporate strategy.” Review of International Political Economy 9 (3): 513537.Google Scholar
Robertson, R. 1992. Globalization: social theory and global culture. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Rowley, S. R. and Berman, S. L. 2000. “A brand new brand of corporate social performance.” Business and Society 39: 397.Google Scholar
Rowley, T. J. 1997. “Moving beyond dyadic ties: A network theory of stakeholder influences.” Academy of Management Review 22 (4): 887910.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Savitz, A. W. and Weber, K. 2006. Triple bottom line; how today's best-run companies are achieving economic, social, and environmental success - – and how you can too. San Francisco, CA: John Wiley and Sons, Inc.Google Scholar
Scheffer, D. and Kaeb, C. 2010. “The five levels of CSR compliance: The resilience of corporate liability under the Alien Tort Statute and the case for a counterattack strategy in compliance theory.” Berkeley Journal of International Law 327353.Google Scholar
Scott, W.R. 2001. Institutions and organizations (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Sikkink, K. 1993. “Human rights, principled issue-networks, and sovereignty in Latin America.” International Organization 47 (Summer): 411442.Google Scholar
Skok, J. E. 1995. “Policy issue networks and the public policy cycle: A structural-functional framework for public administration.” Policy and Implementation 55 (4): 325332.Google Scholar
Smith, C. 1980. “Social networks as metaphors, models and methods.” Progress in Human Geography 4 (December): 500524.Google Scholar
Smith, J., Pagnuco, R. and Lopez, G. A. 1998. “Globalizing human rights: The work of transnational human rights NGOs in the 1990s.” Human Rights Quarterly 20 (2): 379412.Google Scholar
Wasserman, S. and Galaskiewicz, J. 1994. Advances in social network analysis: research in the social and behavioral sciences. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Whitley, R. 1999. Divergent capitalisms: the social structuring and change of business systems. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yaziji, M. and Doh, J. P. 2009. NGOs and corporations; conflict and collaboration. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Zaheer, S. 1995. “Overcoming the liability of foreigness.” Academy of Management Journal 38 (2): 341363.Google Scholar
Zahra, S. A., Ireland, R. D. and Hitt, M. A. 2000. “International expansion by new venture firms: International diversity, mode of market entry, technological learning, and performance.” Academy of Management Journal 43 (5): 925950.Google Scholar