Unfolding Evolutionary Growth Within a Subsidiary: The Case of a Sales Subsidiary in the Middle East
Abstract
Subsidiaries are important entities in multinational corporations and are typically established
with predetermined business responsibilities. A subsidiary responds to actors in the internal
network (e.g., HQs and other subsidiaries) as well as actors in the external network (e.g.,
customers) within the local environment. Over time, subsidiaries take on new business
responsibilities as a result of their own agendas.
Activities conducted to fulfill business responsibilities are part of a subsidiary’s internal
processes. These internal processes are dependent on resources that are bundled into
capabilities, which are thereafter leveraged toward actors. How these internal processes
develop as a subsidiary evolutionarily grows through the creation and development of capabilities over time has received limited research attention. Therefore, the purpose of the
study is to increase our understanding of how the internal processes of an evolutionarily
growing subsidiary unfold. The evolutionary growth of a subsidiary requires continuous
resource management to enable the creation and development of capabilities. Capabilities refer
to a set of complex patterned activities that, through the act of carrying out these activities,
allow for enhanced value to be developed. Thus, the study investigates how resources are
managed and how capabilities are created and developed as a subsidiary evolutionarily grows.
In order to pursue a study that unfolds the internal processes of an evolutionarily growing
subsidiary, a punctuated longitudinal case study was conducted at a sales subsidiary in the
Middle East. Interviews were conducted at HQs, at the subsidiary, and with distributors and
customers, which constituted various elements of the subsidiary’s external and internal
network.
The findings from this study reveal how an evolutionarily growing subsidiary develops
managerial and operational capabilities that, when combined, establish a proactive approach to
the subsidiary’s business responsibilities. The proactive approach functions as a
countermeasure to the influence of external and internal actors on the subsidiary’s business
responsibilities. Furthermore, the development of a proactive approach determines how
activities undertaken in the subsidiary result in the means to address uncertainty rather than
merely being aware of uncertainty.
The contributions to the subsidiary evolutionary literature include how and what capabilities
are formed (managerial and operational). The creation and development of capabilities also
contribute to how a subsidiary’s influence in and interdependence on the internal and external
networks increases. Finally, this study contributes to the subsidiary evolutionary literature and the resource management literature through the creation of a model that portrays how a subsidiary as a business unit evolutionarily grows by emphasizing its internal processes, which are constituted by the interdependent structuring, bundling, and leveraging of managerial and operational capabilities.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Handelshögskolan
Institution
Department of Business Administration ; Företagsekonomiska institutionen
Disputation
Onsdagen den 18 mars 2015, kl 13.15, i Volvo-salen, Handelshögskolan, Vasagatan 1, Göteborg
Date of defence
2015-03-18
johan.jakobsson@handels.gu.se
Date
2015-02-24Author
Jakobsson, Johan
Keywords
Evolutionary Growth
Capabilities
Multinational Corporation
Resource Management
Subsidiary
Subsidiary Charter
Subsidiary Evolution
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9340-8
978-91-628-9341-5
Language
eng
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Subsidiary Evolution in the Digital Service Industry. A multiple comparative case study of subsidiaries in a service-based MNC within the knowledge intensive business service sector
Edgren, Viktor; Sternhufvud, Camilla (2018-08-28) -
How to Manage Subsidiaries’ Local Sales Activities During the External Crises? A Case Study of Headquarters Control and Subsidiaries Autonomy in Chinese MNC Under the Covid-19 Pandemic Context
Ren, Zeyu; Chen, Ruoxi (2022-07-05)The relationship between MNC headquarters and subsidiaries has always been the focus in the field of international business. For MNCs, how to manage and coordinate the relationship between headquarters and subsidiaries, ... -
How the institutional, relational and leadership factors affect the implementation of sustainable business practice within MNCs HQ in a developed country and Subsidiary in a developing country? A case study on Volvo Trucks Located in Sweden (HQ) and Malaysia (Subsidiary)
Sujatha, Krishnapriya; Eljack, Mubarak (2022-02-11)Companies are in the transformation process from the classical or linear way of conducting business to a more sustainable model. This is necessitated by the growing societal awareness to protect the environment and ...