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Evaluating the Internationalisation strategy: The case study of a SME in the UK chemical distribution industry. Dr. Niki Kyriakidou Senior Lecturer LBU Evripidis Lampadarios Associate Lecturer LBU – Business Manager EME. Outline. Why SMEs? Why UK Chemical distribution?
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Evaluating the Internationalisation strategy: The case study of a SME in the UK chemical distribution industry Dr. Niki Kyriakidou Senior Lecturer LBU Evripidis Lampadarios Associate Lecturer LBU – Business Manager EME
Outline • Why SMEs? • Why UK Chemical distribution? • Why internationalisation? • Why WSB as case study? • Research questions • Findings • Contribution and future research
Why SMEs? • Vehicle for invigorating the enterprise economy (Beaver and Carr, 2002; Dobbs and Hamilton, 2007; Holmes et al., 2010; Simpson et al., 2012; Unger et al., 2011) • Integral to contemporary economic and social regeneration (Harriganet al., 2011; Lussier and Halabi, 2010; Philip, 2011; Robson et al., 2009) • Promote economic growth and increase a country’s competitiveness and wealth (Amoroset al., 2013; Franco and Haase, 2010) • Essential for the establishment of a solid industrial base (Arandoet al., 2009; Dickson and Weaver, 2008; Harris and Gibson, 2006; Smallboneet al., 2010) • Key driver to innovation and R&D(Azimzadehet al., 2013; European Union, 2015; Halabi and Lussier, 2014; Robbins et al., 2000). • Above all…Employment generation (Dobbs and Hamilton, 2007; Galapova and McKie 2012; Raju et al., 2011; Smallbone and Wyer, 2000; Tilley and Tonge, 2003). Due to importance of small businesses to the stability and health of the society, an understanding of the factors contributory to their success is crucial (Blackburn and Kovalainen, 2009; Holmes et al., 2010; Halabi and Lussier, 2014; Philip, 2011; Raju et al., 2011).
Why UK Chemical distribution? • No contemporary academic and business research • Significant contributor to the UK economy and employment (turnover of GBP 4.43bn in 2014, 6.800 direct employees) • Mature and well-established practise • But still developing (growing at 5% per annum) • Subject to strong consolidation • Heavily supporting the chemical industry • High level of fragmentation (over 280 in UK) • Over 75% are SMEs… (BCG, 2013; CBA, 2015; CEFIC, 2014; Chemagility, 2012 and 2015; Districonsult, 2013; FECC, 2015; Hornke, 2013)
Why internationalisation? • Established as a success factor for SMEs (Dobbs and Hamilton, 2007; Bierly and Gallagher, 2007; Lee et al., 2012; Mudambiand Zahra, 2007; Pangarkar, 2008; Zhou et al., 2007) • European chemical distributors (BCG, 2013; Districonsult, 2013; FECC, 2013; Chemagility, 2008)but only one study by Hornke (2012) • Due to strong globalisation, expanding to other markets becomes critical to success (BCG, 2013; Chemagility, 2015; Eberhard, 2014) • No research aiming at evaluating the internationalisation process of SMEs in the specific industry and the skills / capabilities required for success.
Why WSB as case study? • Typical of the average SME in the UK CDI • Established 1880 • £15m turnover; 13 employees • based in North England • 80% UK 20% export but looking to expand • Operating in a wide and varied range of markets • Representing large chemical manufacturers in the UK • Trading under their own products and brands. • Face-to-face in-depth interviews with 5 senior managers with exporting responsibilities and the Managing Director
Research Questions…. • Identify the internationalization process in the context of the UK chemical distribution industry • Explore current practice in skills development • Identify the key competences of international managers.
Internationalisation process • There isn’t one theory to explain the internationalisation process of WSB. The Uppsala / stage and RBV appear to be more applicable …in line with Etemad and Wright (1999) that SME behaviour, as a holistic process, cannot be explained fully by any one existing theory and therefore insight must be drawn from various theoretical models.
Exploring managers’ skills and cultural awareness • No formal and written internationalisation strategy • No formal communication and processes established • The internationalisation process was ‘inherited’ through an acquisition and never developed properly • Attitude towards internationalisations is 90% reactive and 10% proactive • There is a strong focus in the UK market • There is no training and skills development programme in place • Training is informal, done on an ad-hoc basis. Managers identify their own needs and act accordingly • However, there is also utilisation of external resources such as UKTI, chamber of commerce and some external advice • No cultural awareness training; whatever elements are present are through the experience and long service of the managers….proves the point that WSB relies on the existing skills of its employees rather than developing them through a training programme
Key competences of international managers • Cultural awareness • Foreign market knowledge • Language skills • Negotiation • Communication However: consistent use of agents to alleviate all the above….
Contribution and future research This research: • addresses the gap in small business success in the UK chemical distribution industry • fulfils the need for more empirical studies • improves the understanding of the chemical distribution industry and of the small businesses operating in it. Future research: look at the whole UK and European industry / qualitative approach
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Thank you Any Questions?