Acquisition versus greenfield in Colombia: reviewing the effect of cultural distance and vicarious experience
Enlaces del Item
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10818/55618Visitar enlace: https://journals.sagepub.com/d ...
ISSN: 1470-5958
DOI: 10.1177/14705958211064435
Compartir
Estadísticas
Ver Estadísticas de usoCatalogación bibliográfica
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemFecha
2022Resumen
The relation between the cultural distance and the firm’s entry modes to foreign countries has
received considerable research attention, and studies have shown the role of experience in this
relation. However, previous research has only studied direct experience and neglected the study of
vicarious experience. Using a sample of 355 foreign companies that entered Colombia (2007–
2017), this research reviews the effect of cultural distance on entry mode choice (e.g., Acquisition
vs. Greenfield) and examines the moderating role of vicarious experience in this relationship. The
study concludes that the cultural distance positively affects the entry probability by acquisition, and
the vicarious experience negatively affects this relationship in four cultural dimensions. If firms have
vicarious experience, the effect of cultural distance on the acquisition probability is less and
positively influences the entry probability by Greenfield when the cultural distance is in power
distance, uncertainty avoidance, individualism, and long-term orientation. Nevertheless, vicarious
experience has the opposite effect when considering the masculinity dimension. Consequently, we
highlight the importance of considering vicarious experience as a different variable of direct experience and the individual effects of cultural distance dimensions for cross-cultural studies in
management
Ubicación
International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, Vol 22 Núm (1), pág37–57.;