“…The internationalization process is based on assumptions about (1) the opportunity to create and capture economic value, (2) the decision-making process underpinning the evaluation of international entrepreneurial opportunities (IEOs), and (3) time, against which all decision-making processes can be explained (Chandra, Styles, & Wilkinson, 2009;Jones & Coviello, 2005;Maitland & Sammartino, 2015;Zahra, Korri, & Yu, 2005). Despite the burgeoning research on internationalization over the past four decades, decision-makers' cognitive processes in internationalization decisions, and how the processes evolve over time, remain underexplored and poorly understood (Benito, Petersen, & Welch, 2009;Hennart & Slangen, 2015;Maitland & Sammartino, 2015;Zahra, Korri, & Yu, 2005). A growing number of IB scholars have repeatedly highlighted the need to study decision-makers' decision styles, biases and cognitive processes (e.g., Barkema & Shvyrkov, 2007;Hennart, 2009;Hutzschenreuter, Pedersen, & Volberda, 2007;Williams & Grégoire, 2015) and ''to explicitly incorporate the role and influence of time'' (Jones & Coviello, 2005: 290) in internationalization research.…”