This paper analyses how a firm chooses between direct ownership and licensing or franchising contracts in supplying distant markets. When contracts are incomplete we show that this choice must balance the moral hazard associated with appointing external agents against that associated with employing internal managers. We show that licensing contracts are preferred when the outside agent has limited opportunities for changing product technology or if there are few spillover effects from the licensee's market to the licensor's home market. Internalization is preferred when the advantages of the 357254201rm are knowledge-based and when reputational effects are strong.
Nowadays licensing practices have increased in importance and relevance driving the widespread diff...
In 1956, a group of trade associations representing publishers and independent advertising agencies...
Internalisation theory informs us about why and when multinational enterprises (MNEs) internalise fo...
Franchising has been widely used in many of the industries. Research on this issue has developed for...
In this paper, we endogenize the decision of a research laboratory that owns a patented process inno...
We present empirical evidence that cross industry diversification, geographic diversification, and f...
Empirical evidences show that technology licensing contracts differ significantly and may consist of...
In a recent ‘‘Point’’ in this journal, Forsgren and Holm (J Int Bus Stud, 2021. https://doi.org/10....
If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriat...
Internalization theory is usually applied at the firm level to analyse FDI, licensing and subcontrac...
The paper examines the network dynamics from franchising to licensing due to the increase of contrac...
Abstract &#; Drawing on insights from managerially-oriented literature, this article explores the r...
If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriat...
Globalization has underlined the need for firms to exploit technological capabilities on a global sc...
A central theoretical premise is that firms internalize transactions that are not suited for formal ...
Nowadays licensing practices have increased in importance and relevance driving the widespread diff...
In 1956, a group of trade associations representing publishers and independent advertising agencies...
Internalisation theory informs us about why and when multinational enterprises (MNEs) internalise fo...
Franchising has been widely used in many of the industries. Research on this issue has developed for...
In this paper, we endogenize the decision of a research laboratory that owns a patented process inno...
We present empirical evidence that cross industry diversification, geographic diversification, and f...
Empirical evidences show that technology licensing contracts differ significantly and may consist of...
In a recent ‘‘Point’’ in this journal, Forsgren and Holm (J Int Bus Stud, 2021. https://doi.org/10....
If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriat...
Internalization theory is usually applied at the firm level to analyse FDI, licensing and subcontrac...
The paper examines the network dynamics from franchising to licensing due to the increase of contrac...
Abstract &#; Drawing on insights from managerially-oriented literature, this article explores the r...
If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriat...
Globalization has underlined the need for firms to exploit technological capabilities on a global sc...
A central theoretical premise is that firms internalize transactions that are not suited for formal ...
Nowadays licensing practices have increased in importance and relevance driving the widespread diff...
In 1956, a group of trade associations representing publishers and independent advertising agencies...
Internalisation theory informs us about why and when multinational enterprises (MNEs) internalise fo...