International entrepreneurship, inter-firm collaboration, and export capability development
This chapter reports on an investigation into the role of inter-firm collaboration with rivals(also known as ‘coopetition’) as a potential transformative mechanism to help facilitate export capability development. Specifically, developing capabilities via collaborative rather than individualistic practices in respect of decision-makers’ product-market strategies. Underpinned by a capabilities perspective of resource-based theory, it reports on data from interviews with owner-managers of 27 smaller-sized, under-resourced New Zealand wine producers, together with secondary data (where possible).These wine producers were all engaged in exporting rather than other modes of market entry, but varied in terms of intensities and scope of activities. New insights evidence the importance of well-managed collaborative activities with appropriate (trustworthy and complementary) rivals to avoid ‘dark-side’/opportunistic practices. This helps transform certain ‘operational’ capabilities into at least ‘threshold’, if not, ‘dynamic’ capabilities. However, capabilities regarding pivot and/or exit strategies are also important where win/win benefits among partners no longer exist.
This is a draft chapter. The final version is available in A Research Agenda for International Entrepreneurship edited by C. Felzensztein and S. Fuerst, published in 2023, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/gbp/a-research-agenda-for-international-entrepreneurship-9781803925684.html
The material cannot be used for any other purpose without further permission of the publisher, and is for private use only.
History
Citation
Crick, J.M., and Crick, D. (2023). International entrepreneurship, inter-firm collaboration, and export capability development. In C. Felzensztein., and S. Fuerst (eds.). A Research Agenda for International Entrepreneurship, Edward Elgar Publishing (2023).Author affiliation
School of BusinessVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)