Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1002418 International Business Review 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Organizational outcomes of CEO narcissism have not been analyzed in the context of international business.•The study analyzes potential relationships between narcissistic tendencies of CEOs and their internationalization decisions.•CEOs with a high degree of narcissism tend to intensify business activities abroad in general.•The expected relationship between CEO narcissism and business activities in “high-risk” markets cannot be identified.

Internationalization decisions represent major objects of international business research; in this context, the respective role of decision-makers, i.e., strategic actors has been under study for now nearly 50 years. However, some important individual characteristics of strategic actors, which seem to influence individual decision-making in a significant way, have been – in contrast to general management research – widely disregarded. Among those characteristics, narcissism plays a decisive role. Trying to provide a first attempt to fill this research gap our paper aims at theorizing on as well as empirically analyzing potential relationships between narcissistic tendencies of CEOs and their internationalization decisions. The empirical study of major German manufacturing firms over the period 2004–2013 shows that CEOs with a high degree of narcissism tend to intensify business activities abroad in general while the expected effect on intensified activities in markets with a high psychic distance cannot be identified. These research results help to better understand the drivers of firms’ internationalization, stress the importance of recognizing managerial decision-making in the context of analyzing business activities abroad, and improve the prediction of CEOs’ decision-making behavior in general.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
Authors
, , ,