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Social Capital and its Impact on Born Transnational Firms [electronic resource] / by Martin Krikken.

By: Krikken, Martin [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: BestMasters: Publisher: Wiesbaden : Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden : Imprint: Springer Gabler, 2014Description: XV, 108 p. 4 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783658046156.Subject(s): Economics | Entrepreneurship | Economics/Management Science | EntrepreneurshipDDC classification: 658.421 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introducing the Born Transnational Firm as a Distinct Type of International Start-Up -- Corporate Flexibility and its Development in the Born Transnational Firm -- Social Capital and its Contribution to Corporate Flexibility of the Born Transnational Firm.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Recent literature on international entrepreneurship hints toward an increasing number of firms engaging in business activities across national borders from or near their inception. Employing the transnational organization model to cope with hypercompetitive markets, the so-called born transnational firms represent a rather new prototype of such rapidly internationalizing firms and appear to be prime candidates of integrating value-added processes in multiple countries in a timely manner. Martin Krikken aims at shedding light on the nature of this distinct and under-researched type of international start-up by assessing the impact of social capital on its corporate flexibility. He illuminates how born transnational firms utilize networks of relationships to increase their capacity to adapt to environmental change.   Contents Introducing the Born Transnational Firm as a Distinct Type of International Start-Up Corporate Flexibility and its Development in the Born Transnational Firm Social Capital and its Contribution to Corporate Flexibility of the Born Transnational Firm   Target Groups Researchers and students in the field of entrepreneurship Entrepreneurs interested in managing business activities across national borders   The Author Martin Krikken holds the position of a research assistant at the Chair in Small Business and Entrepreneurship (LEMEX) at the University of Bremen.
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Introducing the Born Transnational Firm as a Distinct Type of International Start-Up -- Corporate Flexibility and its Development in the Born Transnational Firm -- Social Capital and its Contribution to Corporate Flexibility of the Born Transnational Firm.

Recent literature on international entrepreneurship hints toward an increasing number of firms engaging in business activities across national borders from or near their inception. Employing the transnational organization model to cope with hypercompetitive markets, the so-called born transnational firms represent a rather new prototype of such rapidly internationalizing firms and appear to be prime candidates of integrating value-added processes in multiple countries in a timely manner. Martin Krikken aims at shedding light on the nature of this distinct and under-researched type of international start-up by assessing the impact of social capital on its corporate flexibility. He illuminates how born transnational firms utilize networks of relationships to increase their capacity to adapt to environmental change.   Contents Introducing the Born Transnational Firm as a Distinct Type of International Start-Up Corporate Flexibility and its Development in the Born Transnational Firm Social Capital and its Contribution to Corporate Flexibility of the Born Transnational Firm   Target Groups Researchers and students in the field of entrepreneurship Entrepreneurs interested in managing business activities across national borders   The Author Martin Krikken holds the position of a research assistant at the Chair in Small Business and Entrepreneurship (LEMEX) at the University of Bremen.

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