“…Third, concerning the social support expatriates receive, many studies show that, in comparison to AEs, SIEs relie less on their companies for providing services since they have more limited or no access to pre‐departure training, to benefits and compensation packages for their expatriation, to career progression and repatriation plans as well as organizational policies to help them balance their life domains (Andersen et al ., 2012; De Cieri and Bardoel, ; Mäkelä and Suutari, ) or to deal with structural and career constraints such as difficulties to obtain the necessary visas and work permits in their host countries (Al Ariss and Özbilgin, ). Given their lack of organizational support, SIEs face more risk, encounter more insecurity and job instability (Richardson and Mallon, ), and have a weaker company attachment or embeddedness than AEs (Reiche et al ., ).…”