Expatriate Management of Emerging Market Multinational Enterprises: A Multiple Case Study Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. EMNEs in a Volatile Environment
2.2. Expatriate Management of EMNEs
2.3. Effect of Volatile Environment on Expatriate Management of EMNEs
3. Methods
3.1. Research Design
3.2. Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Research Findings
4.1. Staffing Approach
“Although in the department of HR, we do not clarify any approach of international staffing policies and practices, we are experiencing a transformation to use more local employees. Ideally, we expect to hire employees who can best fit the region and work there. However, the process is very slow in our main production and R&D centres, it would be even slower or perhaps it would not happen in other regions. A change on the types of employees can be obviously found in our German production and R&D centres. In the first two years (2008 and 2009), we only sent Chinese expatriates to German. Then, we hired more local employees in the following two years (2010 and 2011), but the head of each department was still Chinese. Since 2012, head of each department changed to HCNs and even director of our German subsidiary changed to a TCN. Changing the director from a Chinese expatriate to a Belgian expatriate is a sign for full localisation and also an attempt to move to the regiocentric approach. It is hard, but we describe this process as ‘painful but happy”.(Inter05)
“In the North Africa region, we hire local employees with local knowledge to support us. However, they do not possess any right to make major decisions or even take part in the core business”.(Inter11)
“Sometimes it is really hard for us to operate business and deal with partners since we do not have the rights to make quick decisions on behalf of our company. We need more autonomy to response quickly as the market competition is intense”.(Inter12)
“Sometimes it was hard for us to leave the business to local employees, especially for technical issues. It does not always mean that local employees cannot perform well, but we can hardly rely on them since they do not know our products and services that well, even after a proper training”.(Inter18)
“In these areas, we either hire a small number of HCN employees or ask our dealer partners to provide local support for our foreign subsidiaries. The reason to use more PCNs is that we need to ensure our customer service centres have quality support by our own engineers. Thus, we send expatriates to provide best support to overseas subsidiaries and support centres because we believe that our engineers will provide best technical support”.(Inter13)
“There are two reasons for this situation: the supply of local engineers is high, which can ensure low costs and high quality of service; and more local customers would require more HCNs for better communications. We also have local middle-level staff in South Asia, but top-level staff are still PCNs to guarantee the control”.(Inter15)
“In manufacturing industries, we believe that management should be strictly controlled by PCNs, i.e., Chinese. It is impossible for us to achieve full localisation in one go. This process is on-going and needs to be done gradually, although in fact it is slower than our competitors”.(Inter21)
“We do take turns every two or three years so we can work in different environments. However, it is unrealistic to make all of our expatriates to take turns since it imposes higher costs when exchanging employees”.(Inter19)
“All the high-level and financial positions are held by our expatriates and 50 to 70 percent of employees are also Chinese. In addition, most expatriates working in developed countries are Chinese. In developing countries like India and Brazil, about 50 percent of managerial team members are HCNs. Although Chinese expatriates still dominate our managerial teams, we hired much more HCNs in our three production centres”.(Inter19)
“We are not actually in charge of business operations in the British subsidiary. The most important task for all the expatriates is to learn skills and improve themselves while working in the UK and then go back to work for the company as they have better experience in their own field. Besides, more than 70 percent of our business is still in the Chinese domestic market”.(Inter25)
“We are only and still in a very initial stage of the internationalisation process. Even though the overseas market can take up to 30 percent of our total sales revenue now, our intention for market expansion does not focus on the international market expansion. We concentrate more on the domestic market in China and the development in technology”.(Inter25)
4.2. Recruitment and Selection
“If an expatriate fails to adapt to foreign working environment, all we need to do is to get another one to go. However, the expatriate failure does not happen very often because our employees normally want to try their best and to be successful”.(Inter06)
“I do not think our current selection criteria are suitable as many departments overemphasise the importance of expatriates’ hard-core ability rather than their personal characteristics, working tendencies and family conditions. You know we have expatriates who failed their overseas assignment, not because their hard-core ability but rather their ability in other areas such as communication and interpersonal interactions”.(Inter05)
“We do prefer employees not to have family constraints, which means unmarried employees are more welcome. However, it does not mean that it will be a critical criterion in expatriate selection. We allow our expatriates to take their family with them, though only a few of them would do”.(Inter13)
“We do not really consider about the age and gender in terms of expatriates. However, my observation is that most of expatriates are males between 25 and 35. In addition, expatriates are most likely unmarried, only high level staff or some service engineers would take their families with them if they are married”.(Inter19)
“There is more supply than demand for sending employees to work in overseas subsidiaries. As long as the company requires more expatriates, local employees are more than willing to go abroad; hence they have more intentions to solve cross-cultural adaptation issues by themselves”.(Inter19)
“Only mid–high-level expatriates and engineers can take one or two family members with them. In addition, not everyone would like to stay overseas if you do not have anything to do except for waiting for your partner to come home. In China we are nearly all dual-career couples, and it’s not easy to ask one’s spouse to give up her job. Most family members would stay for less than half a year and then go back to China”.(Inter22)
“Most of us would like to work overseas to gain some working experience; hence personal willingness is actually not a big problem. It is the same to flexibility; you always need to try to work there for several months so as to test your flexibility. Therefore, only two things truly matter: language and technical ability”.(Inter30)
4.3. Training and Development
“HR managers claim that CCTs are provided to us, but I, like other expatriates, do not think they are that useful. First, this type of training is often very short, a couple of hours or no more than a day. Second, the training materials are often too brief and too general, which does not give us much help in dealing local issues”.(Inter12)
2Our training is distinguished between different levels of employees with different period of time: basically, every expatriate has an annual training at the end of a year that last 25 days to one month; senior employees generally have more training sessions than lower-level employees, it is quite often they have additional short training sessions for a week. However, no training is specifically related to CCTs”.(Inter11)
“My work is to help our firm sell its products, and my career is to market the products from local to overseas market. Staff in my field have been trained to sell our firm’s particular products, and our knowledge is limited. I wish my firm can help me develop my career from one skill to more, and I will also be happy to take more responsibility if I can expand my job scope”.(Inter11)
“On the one hand, technicians can be promoted to different levels of engineers and even specialists. On the other hand, low-level officials can be promoted to different levels including manager, regional manager, head of department, and director. However, there is no specific programme that is designed for expatriate’s development. In addition, there are also no restrictions on contracts and resignation for expatriates. Expatriates do not need to pay for the training that our company has invested on them if they select to quit from us”.(Inter13)
“Training programmes are useful for hardcore skills development, but they often do not really work on problems our expatriates would face in overseas operations. Every year our training takes up our vacation time after the Chinese New Year”.(Inter20)
“There is rarely any promotion gate opened for expatriates. The promise of commission can also differ due to the constantly changing conditions in China. Once you stay too long with overseas operation, you are out of the circle of headquarter and lose attention of the management levels”.(Inter22)
“Although many staff want to work overseas, few of them can qualify the selection criteria, which makes the bargaining power more towards the company side. The company offers basic-level training, so the cost of training for an expatriate was low. Many expatriates would choose to resign after working for several years (normally three) as they received overseas working experience and become ‘hot’ in the global market. In this case our company would not get our investment back, so our policy is that the person who received training must work at least two years before they can resign”.(Inter19)
“Trainings for expatriates are often as useful as expected. They did provide sufficient information for us to know. However, when we have problems related to language or cultural issues, we are still foreigners who need help of local colleagues”.(Inter28)
“Although there is no specific promise or protocol for promotion of expatriates, we do have a career development plan for expatriates. For instance, an expatriate, who was sent to learn and improve one kind of technology, would be preferred for positions in charge of the work related to that kind of technology than other employees. In addition, expatriates are more likely to get promotion because we only send the best candidates to work overseas. Expatriates normally receive more attention from HQs and thus potentially have more opportunities to be promoted. However, expatriates will be promoted based on merits, the same requirement for domestic staff. Otherwise we can be accused of having an unfair practice”.(Inter28)
“The tasks for expatriates used to be vague, they only told us to work overseas but did not specify what they expected you to complete or achieve. It is better nowadays, but you still need to work hard by yourself, otherwise you may learn nothing”.(Inter24)
“Once one is selected as an expatriate, the company will extend his/her contract and ask the person to sign related terms such as training agreement. The person also needs to pay the training costs during the expatriation period (in case one fails the overseas assignment by returning home earlier or jumps to another firm, the training money paid would not be refunded). In addition, the person needs to submit his/her interest in career development, otherwise this person may not be considered by HR staff”.(Inter30)
4.4. Knowledge Transfer
“Knowledge transfer has slight impacts on management level of headquarters. For instance, expatriates who are sent to Germany have learned and changed many ideas or concepts such as technical and managerial skills through working overseas. They play a significant role to transfer new knowledge learned overseas back to our colleagues in China and other subsidiaries. However, it is very often our management level consider that only technical skills can be transferred but not different management practices or styles as our managers do not believe they fit Chinese conditions due to cultural differences”.(Inter07)
“Unless you are in a high position, the knowledge transfer from us to headquarters is often limited, especially when you are working in some less developed countries”.(Inter12)
“Our knowledge transfer is mostly restricted to technology; management concepts can be hardly taken by our headquarters. This is due to the fact that the executives do not pay much attention to those concepts while they believe it is generally not suitable to Chinese conditions”.(Inter17)
“In subsidiaries of Europe or the US, my colleagues may transfer knowledge back to China. However, in South Asia, we generally transfer our knowledge to this region”.(Inter18)
“Working overseas gives me a lot of information and knowledge that I would not ever think of before. I may bring them to work in my home country, which can improve my effectiveness. However, I do not think other staff would like to learn or follow as they work in Chinese way for too long. Additionally, I would not be encouraged or rewarded for transferring back new way of doing things at home. Therefore, instead of ‘showing off’, I might be better to keep the old way”.(Inter21)
“The main purpose of sending our expatriates to work in our British subsidiary is to learn skills and knowledge and transfer them back to headquarters. With several years of working experiences in developed countries, we expect our expatriates to help us improve R&D in the same field and enhance technological communication when they come back”.(Inter26)
“I believe we are playing important roles in knowledge transfer. Despite of the technological knowledge, we also expand our horizons, learn other ways to think, improve our communication skills, and have better understanding of different cultures. These are as important as the technical skills we learned, because these can give us the ability and strength to understand why we have these differences rather than copy paste everything we learned in UK. As Chinese saying: know what is and why it is”.(Inter31)
5. Discussion
5.1. Expatriate Management of Market-Seeking Chinese MNEs
5.2. Expatriate Management of Strategy Asset-Seeking Chinese MNEs
5.3. Challenges in Expatriate Management of Chinese MNEs
6. Contributions, Implications and Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Semi-Structured Interview Questions
- Please explain your background and experience in firm.
- What type of employees does your firm have, i.e., parent country nationals, host country nationals or third country nationals?
- When your firm choose expatriates, what are the reasons to consider different types of employees? What are the environmental factors that may affect the consideration?
- What are the main features of expatriate policies and practices used by your firm, can you give some examples to identify that?
- Does your firm have specific policies on expatriate recruitment and selection? If yes, what selection criteria are used?
- Does your firm have special programmes for their expatriate training and development? If yes, what are the main features of these programs?
- What roles are Chinese expatriates playing in terms of knowledge transfer between host countries and China?
- Any problems and suggestions that relate to existing management of expatriates in Chinese MNEs you want to add?
References
- Bader, Bader, Nicola Berg, and Dirk Holtbrugge. 2015. Expatriate performance in terrorism-endangered countries: The role of family and organizational support. International Business Review 24: 849–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Bader, Benjamin, and Nicola Berg. 2013. An empirical investigation of terrorism-induced stress on expatriate attitudes and performance. Journal of International Management 19: 163–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Belderbos, René A., and Mariëlle G. Heijltjes. 2005. The determinants of expatriate staffing by Japanese multinationals in Asia: Control, learning and vertical business groups. Journal of International Business Studies 36: 341–54. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Buckley, Peter J., Liang Chen, L. Jeremy Clegg, and Hinrich Voss. 2018. Risk propensity in the foreign direct investment location decision of emerging multinationals. Journal of International Business Studies 49: 153–71. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Buckley, Peter J. 2018. Internalisation Theory and Outward Direct Investment by Emerging Market Multinationals. Management International Review 58: 195–224. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Budhwar, Pawan S., Randall S. Schuler, and Paul Sparrow. 2009. International Human Resource Management. London: Sage Publications. [Google Scholar]
- Caligiuri, Paula, Helen De Cieri, Dana Minbaeva, Alain Verbeke, and Angelika Zimmermann. 2020. International HRM insights for navigating the COVID-19 pandemic: Implications for future research and practice. Journal of International Business Studies 51: 697–713. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chen, Liang, Yi Li, and Di Fan. 2021. Who are the most inclined to learn? Evidence from Chinese multinationals’ internationalization in the European Union. Asia Pacific Journal of Management 38: 231–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Cheng, Hsiang-Lin, and Carol Yeh Yun Lin. 2009. Do as the large enterprises do? International Business Review 18: 60–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Choi, Yoona, Lin Cui, Yi Li, and Xizhou Tian. 2020. Focused and ambidextrous catch-up strategies of emerging economy multinationals. International Business Review 29: 101567. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cooke, Fang Lee, Mingwei Liu, Leigh Anne Liu, and Chao C. Chen. 2019. Human resource management and industrial relations in multinational corporations in and from China: Challenges and new insights. Human Resource Management 58: 455–71. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cooke, Fang Lee, Michael Dickmann, and Emma Parry. 2021. IJHRM after 30 years: Taking stock in times of COVID-19 and looking towards the future of HR research. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 32: 1–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cui, Lin, Klaus E. Meyer, and Helen Wei Hu. 2014. What drives firms’ intent to seek strategic assets by foreign direct investment? A study of emerging economy firms. Journal of World Business 49: 488–501. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cui, Lin, Yi Li, Klaus E. Meyer, and Zijie Li. 2015. Leadership Experience Meets Ownership Structure: Returnee Managers and Internationalization of Emerging Economy Firms. Management International Review 55: 355–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cui, Lin, and Fuming Jiang. 2012. State ownership effect on firms’ FDI ownership decisions under institutional pressure: A study of Chinese outward-investing firms. Journal of International Business Studies 43: 264–84. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Dabic, Marina, Miguel Gonzalez-Loureiro, and Michael Harvey. 2015. Evolving research on expatriates: What is ‘known’ after four decades (1970–2012). International Journal of Human Resource Management 26: 316–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- De Cieri, Helen, and Peter J. Dowling. 2012. Strategic human resource management in multinational enterprises: Developments and directions. In Handbook of Research in International Human Resource Management. Edited by G. Stahl, I. Bjorkman and S. Morris. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. [Google Scholar]
- Dowling, Peter. J., Marion Festing, and Allen D. Engle. 2013. International Human Resource Management, 6th ed. Hampshire: Cengage Learning EMEA. [Google Scholar]
- Eisenhardt, Kathleen M. 1989. Building Theories from Case-Study Research. Academy of Management Review 14: 532–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Eisenhardt, Kathleen M., and Melissa E. Graebner. 2007. Theory building from cases: Opportunities and challenges. Academy of Management Journal 50: 25–32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Elia, Stefano, Mario Kafouros, and Peter J. Buckley. 2020. The role of internationalization in enhancing the innovation performance of Chinese EMNEs: A geographic relational approach. Journal of International Management 26: 100801. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fan, Di, Lin Cui, Yi Li, and Cherrie Jiuhua Zhu. 2016. Localized learning by emerging multinational enterprises in developed host countries: A fuzzy-set analysis of Chinese foreign direct investment in Australia. International Business Review 25: 187–203. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Fan, Di, Cherrie Jiuhua Zhu, and Chris Nyland. 2012. Factors affecting global integration of Chinese multinationals in Australia: A qualitative analysis. International Business Review 21: 13–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fee, Anthony, and Susan McGrath-Champ. 2017. The role of human resources in protecting expatriates: Insights from the international aid and development sector. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 28: 1960–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Feely, Alan J., and Anne-Wil Harzing. 2003. Language management in multinational companies. Cross Cultural Management: An International Journal 10: 37–52. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Guthrie, James P., Ronald A. Ash, and Charles D. Stevens. 2003. Are women “better” than men?: Personality differences and expatriate selection. Journal of Managerial Psychology 18: 229–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hocking, J. Barry, Michelle Brown, and Anne-Wil Harzing. 2007. Balancing global and local strategic contexts: Expatriate knowledge transfer, applications, and learning within a transnational organization. Human Resource Management 46: 513–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jackson, Terence, and Frank M. Horwitz. 2018. Expatriation in Chinese MNEs in Africa: An agenda for research. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 29: 1856–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Jiang, Kaifeng, David P. Lepak, Jia Hu, and Judith C. Baer. 2012. How Does Human Resource Management Influence Organizational Outcomes? A Meta-analytic Investigation of Mediating Mechanisms. Academy of Management Journal 55: 1264–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lin, Carol Yeh-Yun, Ting-Chun Lu, and Hsiao-Wen Lin. 2012. A different perspective of expatriate management. Human Resource Management Review 22: 189–207. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Luo, Yadong, and Rosalie L. Tung. 2018. A general theory of springboard MNEs. Journal of International Business Studies 49: 129–52. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mendenhall, Mark, and Gary Oddou. 1985. The Dimensions of Expatriate Acculturation—A Review. Academy of Management Review 10: 39–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Meyer, Klaus E., and Katherine R. Xin. 2018. Managing talent in emerging economy multinationals: Integrating strategic management and human resource management. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 29: 1827–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Minbaeva, Dana. 2020. Disrupted HR? Human Resource Management Review, 100820. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Oi, Jean Chun. 2011. Going Private in China: The Politics of Corporate Restructuring and System Reform. Stanford: Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center Books. [Google Scholar]
- Patton, Michael Quinn. 2005. Qualitative Research. In Encyclopedia of Statistics in Behavioral Science. Edited by Brian S. Everitt and David C. Howell. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., pp. 1633–36. [Google Scholar]
- Posthuma, Richard A., Jase R. Ramsey, Gabriela L. Flores, Carl Maertz, and Rawia O. Ahmed. 2019. A risk management model for research on expatriates in hostile work environments. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 30: 1822–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Puck, Jonas F., Markus G. Kittler, and Christopher Wright. 2008. Does it really work? Re-assessing the impact of pre-departure cross-cultural training on expatriate adjustment. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 19: 2182–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rui, Huaichuan, Miao Zhang, and Alan Shipman. 2017. Chinese expatriate management in emerging markets: A competitive advantage perspective. Journal of International Management 23: 124–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Salidjanova, Nargiza. 2011. Going Out: An Overview of China’s Outward Foreign Direct Investment. Washington: China Economic And Security Review Commission. [Google Scholar]
- Scullion, Hugh, David G. Collings, and Patrick Gunnigle. 2007. International human resource management in the 21st century: Emerging themes and contemporary debates. Human Resource Management Journal 17: 309–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Selmer, Jan. 2004. Expatriates’ hesitation and the localization of Western business operations in China. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 15: 1094–107. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shen, Jie, and Fuming Jiang. 2015. Factors influencing Chinese female expatriates’ performance in international assignments. International Journal of Human Resource Management 26: 299–315. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shen, Jie, and Roger Darby. 2006. Training and management development in Chinese multinational enterprises. Employee Relations 28: 342–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stone, Raymond J. 2010. Human Resource Management, 7th ed. Milton: John Wiley & Sons Australia. [Google Scholar]
- Tao, Fang, Xiaohui Liu, Lan Gao, and Enjun Xia. 2018. Expatriates, subsidiary autonomy and the overseas subsidiary performance of MNEs from an emerging economy. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 29: 1799–826. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Tharenou, Phyllis, Ross Donohue, and Brian Cooper. 2007. Management Research Methods. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Thite, Mohan, Adrian Wilkinson, and Dhara Shah. 2012. Internationalization and HRM strategies across subsidiaries in multinational corporations from emerging economies—A conceptual framework. Journal of World Business 47: 251–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Thite, Mohan, Pawan Budhwar, and Adrian Wilkinson. 2014. Global Hr Roles and Factors Influencing Their Development: Evidence from Emerging Indian It Services Multinationals. Human Resource Management 53: 921–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Wang, Dan, Susan Freeman, and Cherrie Jiuhua Zhu. 2013. Personality traits and cross-cultural competence of Chinese expatriate managers: A socio-analytic and institutional perspective. International Journal of Human Resource Management 24: 3812–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wang, Stephanie Lu, Yadong Luo, Xiongwen Lu, Jinyun Sun, and Vladislav Maksimov. 2014. Autonomy delegation to foreign subsidiaries: An enabling mechanism for emerging-market multinationals. Journal of International Business Studies 45: 111–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wong, May M. L. 1996. Shadow Management in Japanese Companies in Hong Kong. Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources 34: 95–110. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wu, Jie, and Xiaoyun Chen. 2014. Home country institutional environments and foreign expansion of emerging market firms. International Business Review 23: 862–72. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yan, Zheng Joseph, Jiuhua Cherrie Zhu, Di Fan, and Paul Kalfadellis. 2018. An institutional work view toward the internationalization of emerging market firms. Journal of World Business 53: 682–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yano, Yasukata. 2009. English as an international lingua franca: From societal to individual. World Englishes 28: 246–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yin, Robert K. 2014. Case Study Research: Design and Methods, 5th ed. Los Angeles: Sage Publications. [Google Scholar]
- Zheng, Nan, Yingqi Wei, Yabin Zhang, and Jingjing Yang. 2016. In search of strategic assets through cross-border merger and acquisitions: Evidence from Chinese multinational enterprises in developed economies. International Business Review 25: 177–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Zhong, Yifan, Cherrie Jiuhua Zhu, and Mingqiong Mike Zhang. 2015. The management of Chinese MNEs’ expatriates. Journal of Global Mobility: The Home of Expatriate Management Research 3: 289–302. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zhong, Yifan, Yameng Li, Jian Ding, and Yiyi Liao. 2021. Risk Management: Exploring Emerging Human Resource Issues during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14: 228. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zhu, Cherrie Jiuhua, Helen De Cieri, Di Fan, and Mingqiong Mike Zhang. 2018. Expatriate management in emerging market multinational enterprises (EMNEs): Reflection and future research agenda. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 29: 1787–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Region of Origin | A Providence in the Middle Part of China | |||
Company pseudonym | Case01 | Case02 | Case03 | Case04 |
Industry | Heavy machinery | Equipment | Heavy machinery | Electric machinery |
Ownership | POE | POE | SOE | SOE |
No. of employees overseas/domestic staff | 800~900/68,000 | 40/2000 | 400~500/30,000 | 40/5400 |
Host countries | Four main production and R&D centres in Germany, India, UK and US, six regional units serve as service centres cover business in 110 countries | One main subsidiary in US, four support subsidiaries in US and UK and ten customer centres cover business in 70 countries | Three production centres in Germany, India and Italy, nine regional units serve as service centres to cover business in 80 countries | Acquired one company from UK and kept it as its subsidiary |
Establishment method | Brownfield, Greenfield | Greenfield | Brownfield, Greenfield | Brownfield |
Year of FDI | 2008 | 2008 | 2008 | 2008 |
FDI motivations | Market expansion | Market expansion, internationalisation | Market expansion | Technology-seeking |
Company | Interviewee Pseudonym | Position of Interviewee | Age | Gender | Overseas/Working Experience |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case01 | Inter01 | Director, responsible for one major region | 50–59 | M | 5 years in overseas operations |
Inter02 | Director Assistant | 20–29 | F | 2 years assisting Director | |
Inter03 | Head of Department (Department of Marketing, Department of Customer Service) | 25–34 | M | 2 years in Asia-Pacific | |
Inter04 | Head assistant of Department (Department of Marketing) | 20–29 | F | 2 years in Asia-Pacific | |
Inter05 | Manager (Department of Human Resource) | 20–29 | F | 3 years in Germany | |
Inter06 | Manager (Department of Human Resource) | 20–29 | M | 3 years in HQ | |
Inter07 | Manager (Department of R&D) | 25–34 | M | 2 years in Germany | |
Inter08 | Former Analyst (Department of R&D) | 20–29 | M | 1 year in Germany | |
Inter09 | Product Manager (Department of Sales) | 20–29 | M | 1.5 years in Russia | |
Inter10 | Marketing Representative (Department of Marketing) | 20–29 | M | 1 year in Middle East | |
Inter11 | Marketing Representative (Department of Marketing) | 20–29 | M | 1 year in North Africa | |
Inter12 | Marketing Representative (Department of Marketing) | 20–20 | M | 1 year in North Africa | |
Case02 | Inter13 | Head of Department (Department of Human Resource) | 30–39 | M | 5 yeas in HQ |
Inter14 | General Manager (Department of International Customer Service) | 30–39 | M | 2 years in Europe, 2 years in Asia-Pacific | |
Inter15 | Deputy General Manager (Department of International Customer Service) | 30–39 | M | 6 years in South Asia | |
Inter16 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 20–29 | M | 1.5 in South Asia, 6 months in Latin America | |
Inter17 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 25–34 | M | 3 years in Europe | |
Inter18 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 25–34 | M | 4 years in South Asia | |
Case03 | Inter19 | Regional Manager (Department of Overseas Business) | 30–39 | M | 4 years in Middle East, 1 year in Russia, 6 months in Europe, 6 months in America |
Inter20 | Sales Manager (Department of Overseas Business) | 30–39 | M | 3 years in Australia | |
Inter21 | Sales Manager (Department of Overseas Business) | 30–39 | F | 6 years in the UK | |
Inter22 | Service Manager (Department of Overseas Business) | 30–39 | F | 6 years in HQ and Overseas | |
Inter23 | Administration supervisor (Department of Overseas Business) | 30–39 | F | 6 years in HQ | |
Case04 | Inter24 | Deputy Chief Engineer | 50–59 | M | 3 years in the UK |
Inter25 | Deputy Chief Engineer | 50–59 | M | 3 years responsible for overseas business, but in HQ | |
Inter26 | Head of Department (Department of Human Resource) | 40–49 | F | 4 years responsible for overseas business, but in HQ | |
Inter27 | Head of Department (Department of Quality and Safe) | 30–39 | M | 1 year in the UK | |
Inter28 | Deputy Head of Department (Department of Manufactory) | 30–39 | M | 3 years in the UK | |
Inter29 | Supervisor (Department of Human Resource) | 20–29 | M | 4 years responsible for overseas business, but in HQ | |
Inter30 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 20–29 | F | 2 years in the UK | |
Inter31 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 20–29 | M | 2 years in the UK | |
Inter32 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 20–29 | M | 1.5 years in the UK | |
Inter33 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 20–29 | M | 1.5 years in the UK | |
Inter34 | Engineer (Department of International Customer Service) | 20–29 | M | 1 year in the UK | |
Inter35 | Deputy Chief Economist | 50–59 | M | 5 years responsible for overseas business but in HQ, 1 year in the UK | |
Inter36 | Supervisor (Department of Human Resource) | 20–29 | M | 3 years responsible for overseas business, but in HQ | |
Inter37 | Deputy Head of Department (Department of R&D) | 30–39 | M | 6 months in the UK | |
Inter38 | Deputy Head of Department (Department of Human Resource) | 30–39 | M | 3 years responsible for overseas business, but in HQ | |
Inter39 | Supervisor (Department of Human Resource) | 20–29 | M | 3 years responsible for overseas business, but in HQ |
Company Pseudonym | Case01 | Case02 | Case03 | Case04 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Market-seeking Chinese MNEs | Strategic asset-seeking Chinese MNEs | ||
Staffing Approach | PCNs | PCNs | PCNs | HCNs |
ethnocentric | ethnocentric | ethnocentric | polycentric | |
PCNs required autonomy | PCNs in control | PCNs required autonomy | PCNs were sent to learn from HCNs; HCNs with high autonomy | |
transform to polycentric; regiocentric | no plan to transform | transform to polycentric; regiocentric | no plan to transform | |
few TCNs | very few TCNs | few TCNs | no TCNs | |
HCNs and TCNs expect to grow | PCNs were sent in a routine | HCNs and TCNs expect to grow | PCNs were sent in a routine | |
Knowledge Transfer | technology transfer from china | technology transfer to china | ||
no management practices transfer to China | management practices transfer to China | |||
individual level, not group level | group level | |||
Recruitment and Selection | technical ability, language ability, flexibility or knowledge transfer were considered | |||
cross-cultural competence, adjustability or adaptability were not considered | ||||
lack of firm support, rare dual-career couples, no emphasis of family support | ||||
only gender issues in Case02, all others give the same fair opportunities, but females are less willing to work overseas | ||||
Training and Development | pre-departure training and recurrently annual training: language training, cross-cultural training and expatriate job training | |||
expatriate job training does not differentiate between home and host countries | ||||
on-the-job training tailored for expatriates | detailed training plans | |||
limited career development for PCNS; none for HCNs | HCNs and PCNs have different career paths | |||
PCNs have better promotion opportuniteis than HCNs, but still few opportunities in overseas subsidiaries | HCNs stay in the subsidiary |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Zhong, Y.; Zhu, J.C.; Zhang, M.M. Expatriate Management of Emerging Market Multinational Enterprises: A Multiple Case Study Approach. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14, 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060252
Zhong Y, Zhu JC, Zhang MM. Expatriate Management of Emerging Market Multinational Enterprises: A Multiple Case Study Approach. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2021; 14(6):252. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060252
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhong, Yifan, Jiuhua Cherrie Zhu, and Mingqiong Mike Zhang. 2021. "Expatriate Management of Emerging Market Multinational Enterprises: A Multiple Case Study Approach" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14, no. 6: 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060252
APA StyleZhong, Y., Zhu, J. C., & Zhang, M. M. (2021). Expatriate Management of Emerging Market Multinational Enterprises: A Multiple Case Study Approach. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 14(6), 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060252