2014
DOI: 10.1057/jibs.2014.30
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The attention stimulus of cultural differences in global services sourcing

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Cited by 37 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
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“…In addition, our evidence corroborates the predictions that cross-border service partnerships and captive service offshoring are strategic options that provide greater innovation outcomes than internal provision of services, whereas domestic partnerships do not seem to be associated with an innovation premium. This finding is important, as it upholds the literature emphasizing proximity to foreign clients (Jones & Wren, 2016;Peeters et al, 2015) and international knowledge sharing (Hansen et al, 2005;Hoetker, 2005), rather than the literature highlighting proximity between production and suppliers underlying economic geography debates (Jacobs et al, 2016;Lafuente et al, 2017). This result must be taken with caution, however, since our data contains few cases of the MMNE establishing partnerships with domestic KIBS.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationssupporting
confidence: 61%
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“…In addition, our evidence corroborates the predictions that cross-border service partnerships and captive service offshoring are strategic options that provide greater innovation outcomes than internal provision of services, whereas domestic partnerships do not seem to be associated with an innovation premium. This finding is important, as it upholds the literature emphasizing proximity to foreign clients (Jones & Wren, 2016;Peeters et al, 2015) and international knowledge sharing (Hansen et al, 2005;Hoetker, 2005), rather than the literature highlighting proximity between production and suppliers underlying economic geography debates (Jacobs et al, 2016;Lafuente et al, 2017). This result must be taken with caution, however, since our data contains few cases of the MMNE establishing partnerships with domestic KIBS.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationssupporting
confidence: 61%
“…Contrary to the internationalization rationale of traditional manufacturing firms based on lower production costs, servitized firms with clients overseas may need physical representation abroad to establish service provision geographically close to existent (or new) customers (Jones & Wren, 2016;Vendrell-Herrero, Gomes, Mellahi, & Child, 2017). This is important, as recent research has established that firms selling services abroad can save considerable costs by locating the service function in the client's country (Ghauri, Wang, Elg, & Rosendo-Ríos, 2016;Peeters, Dehon, & Garcia-Prieto, 2015). We thus expect that captive service offshoring will produce higher levels of product-service innovation than domestic internal provision of services.…”
Section: Hypothesis 1a Manufacturers Implementing Services Through Dmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fragmenting the business process has the opposite effect. It increases complexity and coordination costs (Contractor et al, 2010), especially when cognitive distance between the domestic and offshore country is high (Bertrand & Mol, 2013;Peeters, Dehon, & Garcia-Prieto, 2015). Reasons include the difficulty to decompose tasks and specify the best division of labor (Gulati & Singh, 1998), and the greater need for interaction and communication across sites (Kumar et al, 2009).…”
Section: Organizational Design To Protect Proprietary Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But there is wide evidence that firms tend to rush into sourcing decisions without deep understanding of the real benefits but also the true costs and risks of the particular country and model they have chosen (see for instance Peeters et al, 2015;Hennart & Slangen, 2014;Stringfellow et al, 2008). That is a cause of the well-known hidden cost problem .…”
Section: Moderating Effect: Country-and Outsourcingspecific Experiencementioning
confidence: 99%
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