Author:
Alexander Nicholas,Rhodes Mark,Myers Hayley
Abstract
PurposeThe increasingly important role of international retail companies in the distribution and marketing of goods highlights important gaps in the literature. One of these gaps concerns a scientifically based understanding of the key, underlying drivers in the market selection process of such companies. The purpose of this paper is to establish a more robust understanding of international retailers' market selection process.Design/methodology/approachThis paper econometrically tests hypotheses derived from recent literature and models the international actions of retailers based in 13 home and ten host markets.FindingsThe results highlight the importance of host market characteristics and the importance of understanding host market selections in the context of home market retail structural development and, by implication, the relative lack of importance of secondary managerial input factors.Research limitations/implicationsThe model presented here fundamentally challenges assumptions concerning the role of managers in market selection decisions in the light of sustainable patterns of international activity.Practical implicationsThese findings suggest that managers responsible for international market selection decisions do not have the freedom of action implied in the marketing literature and that their actions are constrained by structural market conditions.Originality/valueThe relationships identified explain six‐ to seven‐tenths of the pattern of expansion in the markets considered. This would suggest that managerial input is important in the process of marketing activity but that it is important within a broader framework.
Subject
Marketing,Business and International Management
Cited by
30 articles.
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