Glocalisation and Readiness for Open Innovation: The Role of Institutional Support in Transitional Economies

Studies on institutional support for the internationalisation of firms from transitional economies are inconclusive. This research contributes to the studies of institutional support in cases of firms with complementary innovation – internationalisation strategies. Mixed method research is used to s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCentral European business review Vol. 11; no. 4; pp. 25 - 46
Main Author Bašić, Maja
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Prague Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze - Fakulta podnikohospodářská 01.01.2022
University of Economics, Prague - Faculty of Business Administration
University of Economics, Faculty of Business Administration
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Summary:Studies on institutional support for the internationalisation of firms from transitional economies are inconclusive. This research contributes to the studies of institutional support in cases of firms with complementary innovation – internationalisation strategies. Mixed method research is used to support quantitative structural modelling. It uses qualitative interview data in combination with quantitative data gathered by a survey questionnaire on a sample of 88 telecommunications firms from the Croatia economy the year after it joined the European Union (2014). SmartPLS model is used to analyse data obtained through a questionnaire survey. The results show that institutions can assist firms in recombining their processes when they offer concrete product development support and, to a lesser extent, marketing support. The recombination of firms’ processes, i.e. its ability to openly innovate, leads to significantly better globalised-localised (glocal) financial and marketing performance, which results are robust. The results are inconclusive in the case of glocal growth performance. The structural model assessed the effect of readiness for open innovation on glocal growth as positive and insignificant, while the robustness check found it to be positive and significant.Implications for Central European audience: The value of this study is twofold. Firstly, it provides support and direction according to which institutional support could be directed to strengthen the internationalisation effort of the incumbent industry from transitional Central European economy that has transformed from the socialist to a market economy and undergone a process of joining the European Union. Secondly, it shows managers weak spots in institutional support and enables them to mitigate them quicker by finding similar support either outside of the firm on international markets or by employing highly qualified individuals.
ISSN:1805-4862
1805-4854
1805-4862
DOI:10.18267/j.cebr.302