Abstract

PurposeThe aim of the paper is to identify the determinants of the marketing and managerial knowledge transfer from a foreign subsidiary located in a post-transition country to its headquarters established in a developed country.Design/methodology/approachThe authors combined the critical literature studies and empirical research, where the method of Computer-assisted Telephone Interview (CATI) was applied. The empirical data was gathered from 231 manufacturing foreign subsidiaries established in Poland (as one of the post-transition economy). To test the hypotheses logistic regression was applied.FindingsThe knowledge accumulated in the foreign subsidiary, the amount and level of novelty of innovation in the foreign subsidiary and its strategic autonomy is crucial for the occurrence of the reverse knowledge transfer. However, the more powerful the foreign subsidiary is, the less eager it is to transfer marketing and managerial knowledge to the headquarters.Research limitations/implicationsThe study is concentrated just on the manufacturing sector in the Polish economy. The results are based on the opinions and perception of managers, but they represent the corporate perspective (not their individual ones).Practical implicationsThe study provokes asking the question about the proper level of strategic autonomy of a foreign subsidiary. The implication related to the autonomy is much about the proper strategy for human resources management. The obtained results indicate that the intensity of innovation in a foreign subsidiary “translates” to the outflow of knowledge from a foreign subsidiary to its headquarters. Thus, encourages headquarters to let their subsidiaries innovate still monitoring their power.Social implicationsFSs are entities more or less embedded in the host markets, thus their strength and sustainable existence is important for their stakeholders, in particular – internal entities such as employees and external entities such as suppliers, and other cooperating organisations and institutions in the host market. The contribution of FSs to the innovation performance and knowledge pool of external partners is determined much by their absorptive capacity. Thus, the results obtained indirectly point to the importance of external agents ability to absorb and exploit the knowledge.Originality/valueThe originality of the paper concerns three issues. Firstly, the previous studies are mainly focused on either developed or emerging markets and as a result, the peculiarity of post-transition economies, like Poland has been neglected. Secondly, the determinants of reverse knowledge transfer are presented from the corporate perspective. Thirdly, authors focus on marketing and management knowledge distributed from a foreign subsidiary to its headquarter.

Highlights

  • Nowadays the key motivation for foreign direct investment is strategic assets-seeking, and knowledge-seeking, among others

  • Our study demonstrates that the involvement of a Foreign subsidiaries (FSs) in the Value-creating activities (VCA) is not statistically important from the perspective of reverse knowledge transfer (RKT)

  • Emphasizing the main contribution of this research and paper it should be noted, firstly, a presentation of the RKTs determinants from the corporate perspective, secondly, the companies taking part in the research are located in the post-transition country (Poland)

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Summary

Introduction

Nowadays the key motivation for foreign direct investment is strategic assets-seeking, and knowledge-seeking, among others. FSs are often providers of knowledge that is valuable and unique, from the perspective of the parent company (Eden, 2009; Michailova and Mustaffa, 2012; Dabic and Kiessling, 2019; Jimenez-Jimenez et al, 2008; Vlajcic et al, 2019a, b) This knowledge residing in FSs often becomes a primary source of strength for the whole MNE (Chung, 2014; Eden, 2009; Frost and Zhou, 2005; Makela et al, 2009; Blomkvist, 2012; Nair et al, 2015; Schotter and Bontis, 2009; Tseng, 2015; Wang et al, 2019) and parent companies are interested in the transfer of knowledge and expertise back to themselves. Referring to key drivers of the knowledge transfer (Minbaeva et al, 2014) underline skills and motivation

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