Abstract
PurposeThis paper aims to study how multinational enterprises (MNEs) can best integrate legitimacy concerns into their new product-launching strategy to successfully introduce high-value hi-tech innovations in emerging countries.Design/methodology/approachTheoretical constructs on the role and process of legitimacy construction for the introduction of a new product are built upon the existing literature. Then they are validated and refined through the formulation and analysis of case studies of the launch of genetically modified cotton seeds by Monsanto in India and a HIV/AIDS drug cocktail by Merck in Brazil.FindingsLegitimacy construction can serve MNEs to face challenges successfully while launching high-value hi-tech products in emerging countries. Challenges to MNEs are likely to be founded on a combination of four types of uncertainties: technological, commercial, organizational and societal. Expected challengers are public agencies and actors representing civil society. An MNE can prepare itself through legitimacy construction along three dimensions: redesign of technology, revision of marketing strategy and non-market investments. To implement the aforesaid, MNEs can engage in outreach in the form of strategic patience, market transaction, business collaboration, compromise and/or confrontation with diverse carefully chosen stakeholders.Research limitations/implicationsThe authors limited ourselves to tracing only the formal interactions of MNEs, while it is well-known that many informal and backdoor activities can also accompany their growth in emerging economies.Practical implicationsLegitimacy construction can help MNEs face challenges successfully while launching high-value hi-tech products in emerging countries. This calls for an evaluation of the systemic uncertainties followed by the formulation of a strategy for legitimacy construction and implementation through outreach to diverse systemic actors. Strategic patience can yield positive returns. Market transactions can serve as economic anchors. Collaboration can be pursued with parties who can share the costs of legitimization construction and/or reduce technological and marketing uncertainties. Confrontation should be the last choice. Compromise is the most probable but not the only outreach strategy possible after a confrontation.Social implicationsLegitimacy implies product acceptance not only from the targeted consumer but also other societal stakeholders concerned with the safety and equity of the consumption in the emerging country, especially when regulations are not well-defined and/or implemented. The two kinds of societal stakeholders which are likely to monitor MNEs are public agencies and civil society groups. Public agencies will be concerned about the quantity, quality, technology or price of the innovation to be introduced. Civil society and NGOs may help the MNE act as citizen watchdogs for the environment and vulnerable communities.Originality/valueTheoretical constructs have been developed in this paper on the sources of challenges in new product introduction, the types of challengers and the components of the firm’s legitimacy construction strategy and its implementation through an outreach strategy.
Highlights
New product introduction in emerging countries poses special challenges for foreign multinational enterprises (MNEs)
Market transactions can serve as economic anchors
How can MNEs prepare to satisfy the diverse values and aspirations of different stakeholders when commercializing high-value hi-tech products in emerging countries? By way of an answer, the present paper explored the premise that to ensure maximal returns from launching such products in emerging countries, MNEs should invest in legitimacy construction
Summary
New product introduction in emerging countries poses special challenges for foreign multinational enterprises (MNEs). While there is a growing literature on the returns to legitimacy investment, in terms of long-term growth prospects (Ahlstrom et al, 2008) if and when the systemic conditions are propitious (Bucheli and Sommer, 2014), its role in new product introduction remains understudied. This could be because of the implicit assumption that any new product and associated technology to be introduced in a target region has already earned its legitimacy, if it serves unsatisfied needs or demand. To contribute to closing this gap, the focus of this paper is the role and construction of legitimacy in MNE strategies for launching high-value hi-tech innovations in emerging countries
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