This article examines the phenomenon of dynamic capabilities in international new ventures (INVs) from emerging markets. While this research stream is gaining traction, the literature is fragmented as to how INVs from emerging markets develop dynamic capabilities to overcome resource constraints and legitimacy issues. The authors highlight the importance of a comprehensive international entrepreneurial culture (IEC) to better understand how these INVs develop dynamic capabilities and foster international performance. This study draws on organisational learning and the knowledge-based view (KBV) to examine the role of IEC in shaping dynamic capabilities and international performance under various levels of market turbulence. To conduct our analyses, this study uses a sample of INVs from India – a key emerging market. The results indicate that IEC shapes dynamic capabilities and both support superior international performance. The findings also confirm the utility of IEC towards dynamic capabilities and international performance when operating in turbulent markets.
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effects of a firm’s entrepreneurial proclivity on market performance for large, publicly traded US firms. This study draws upon the five-dimensional view of corporate entrepreneurship (CE) and develops hypotheses aimed at understanding the effects of direct effect of CE cues of proactiveness, autonomy, innovativeness, competitive aggressiveness and risk-taking on stock performance during earnings conference calls.
Design/methodology/approach
The entrepreneurial orientation of 339 firm post-earnings announcement conference calls is analyzed through a content analysis of transcripts, and the impact of CE cues on stock price is measured using event-study methodology.
Findings
The results suggest that the cueing the CE dimensions of innovativeness, risk-taking and especially autonomy have a positive effect on market performance during conference calls, while competitive aggressiveness has a negative effect. No effect was found for proactiveness.
Research limitations/implications
The effect of entrepreneurial proclivity on firm value is not uniform. Not all dimensions of CE have a positive effect on market performance at a corporate level, and measuring each dimension of CE separately may be a valuable approach for future research.
Practical implications
Firms may create more value when they cue specific entrepreneurial attributes, and cueing competitive aggressiveness may not be desirable.
Originality/value
This study fills a gap in the literature by measuring the direct effect of CE cues on market performance through an innovative research design which relies on computer-aided text analysis.
Purpose-This study is a replication of Wolff and Reed's (2000) work. The purpose of this paper is to examine how the combination of resources brought to joint ventures influence parent-firm performance. This study is also interested in whether or not the exposure of immobile resources through the semi-transparent membrane of the joint venture can have negative effects on parent-firm performance. Design/methodology/approach-The sample consists of two-parent joint ventures formed by publicly traded US firms between 1997 and 2013. The event-study methodology is used to calculate each parent-firm's abnormal returns. This work also uses content analysis to analyze parent-firms' annual reports (10-K). Findings-While Wolff and Reed's results on resource allocation within joint ventures were not statistically significant, this replication study provided strong support to the resource allocation hypothesis. It was found that intangible resource heterogeneity within a joint venture creates higher performance gains for parent-firms than tangible resource heterogeneity. This work also successfully replicated Wolff and Reed's findings on the negative impact of immobile resources exposure on parent-firm performance. Wolff and Reed's results on resource complementarity were, however, not successfully replicated. Originality/value-This replication study goes beyond simply showing that engaging in a joint venture strategy creates value for parent-firms. Through the use of a new content analysis method, this study was able to provide strong support for Wolff and Reed's theory on the performance gains provided by resource heterogeneity in a joint venture setting, and to confirm the results on potential adverse performance effects of immobile resources exposure.
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