Publication | Closed Access
Owner CEO narcissism, international entrepreneurial orientation and post-entry speed of internationalization: an empirical study of exporting SMEs from China
31
Citations
117
References
2021
Year
International MarketingPost-entry SpeedInternational EntrepreneurshipMultinational EnterpriseEntrepreneurshipInternationalizationOrganizational BehaviorInternationalization DecisionsInternational Business StrategyManagementComparative ManagementInternational BusinessGlobal StrategyInternational ManagementMergers And AcquisitionsCorporate Social ResponsibilityCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementInternational Entrepreneurial OrientationMarketingGlobalizationOwner Ceo NarcissismCeo NarcissismBusinessBusiness Strategy
Purpose This study explores the impact of owner chief executive officers' (CEO) narcissism on the exporting small to medium-sized enterprises' (SMEs) decision-making on the international market expansion speed after their initial entry. Specifically, the authors use the mechanism of firms' international entrepreneurial orientation (IEO) to examine how owner CEO narcissism may influence SMEs' post-entry speed of internationalization (PSI), both directly and indirectly. Design/methodology/approach To test the hypotheses, the authors draw on data from a two-wave questionnaire and on archival export data from 291 Chinese exporting SMEs in three municipalities and 17 provinces from 2019 to 2020. Findings The results support the theoretical predictions that owner CEO narcissism shapes exporting SMEs' decisions on PSI, both directly and indirectly, through the mediation of firm-level IEO. Originality/value The study extends emerging research on the role of CEO narcissism in the upper echelons literature into the international marketing (IM) context. It also offers new insights into what drives exporting SMEs' IM decision-making from a psychological microfoundations perspective. Furthermore, the authors theoretically establish and empirically demonstrate the key role of a firm's IEO as a mediator to complement the existing literature's focus on the direct influence of CEO narcissism on firms' internationalization decisions.
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