Forming alliances is a key strategy for firms entering emerging economies. Business opportunities for market entrants are promising and challenging at the same time. Promising because the rapid economic growth provides opportunities to tap new market potentials and challenging because emerging economies display dynamic and complex host environments for inter-firm cooperation. Prospected benefits of alliance strategies are often not realized or insufficient. High failure rates or weak performance are indicators for the inherent complexity that the formation and operation of international alliances entails. This book introduces a resource-based and agency-theoretic perspective on alliance formation analyzing factors that influence the potential to realize competitive advantages through inter-firm cooperation. It presents a framework that integrates (inter)organizational and strategy research in order to investigate determinants of the alliance formation process of partner selection and alliance configuration in the distinct setting of emerging economies. The proposed framework is matched with empirical findings on the basis of a case study on alliances between small and medium-sized firms from industrialized countries and firms from China.
Reihe
Thesis
Dissertationsschrift
2010
Universität Flensburg
Sprache
Verlagsort
Augsburg / Baden-Baden
Deutschland
Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
Klebebindung
Maße
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-86618-672-9 (9783866186729)
DOI
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Tade W. Peters studied business administration at the Freie Universität Berlin with a focus on Management and Marketing. He completed his Ph.D. studies at the Chair of Strategic and International Management at the University of Flensburg. Since 2009 he works for a major German airline.