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Tripod Peng, Wang And Jiang 2008 Argue Essay

Tripod Peng, Wang and Jiang (2008) argue the case that the institution-based view of international business strategy is the third leg of a strategy tripod that also includes the industry- and resource-based strategies. The authors believe that, in combination with those other views, that the institution-based view will "shed significant light on the most fundamental questions confronting international business."

The authors argue that the institution-based view makes up for gaps in the other two views. The industry-based view, for example, argues that the industry conditions are largely responsible for the success of industries. This view is based on Michael Porter's competitive forces that shape the attractiveness of an industry and therefore determine how firms compete (Porter, 2008). The resource-based view argues that strategy is largely determined by the organization's internal capabilities. Mahoney and Pandian (1992) notes that firm's distinctive competencies and heterogeneous capabilities are the key resources that drive successful strategy. Richard (2000) makes the further point that racial diversity is another key resource that can contribute to success. In particular diversity can contribute to the ability of a firm to compete in international markets where cultural differences can be a significant barrier.

Peng, who is involved in most studies about the institution-based view, positions this view not as a

At the heart of his case is that those views do not reflect "the formal and informal underpinning that provides the context of competition among industries." An underlying premise of his work is that the strategies firms use in different countries differ (Peng, 2009). This is not always the case -- Apple is among the firms that does not change its strategy from one country to the next -- but is the case in other instances. Coca-Cola owns its bottlers in China, for example, but not in the United States. Google's approach to China has been forced by government intervention to be drastically different than its approach to other nations.
Government is one of the institutions that can exert a significant influence. Other formal institutions include laws, regulations and rules; informal institutions include norms, cultures and ethics (Peng, Sun, Pinkham & Chen, 2009). These aspects of international business will be familiar to anybody who is studying the subject, or who takes part in international business on a daily basis. Some adjustments are tactical in nature, but others can be significantly different in terms of functional strategies. The Coca-Cola example shows how firms vary their degree of vertical and horizontal integration in different markets. In other cases, product positioning can vary, for example the way that Budweiser is positioned as an everyday value product in the United States but has a high-end premium product in many other countries around the world.

Peng's view is that the institution-based theory works as a complement to the other two -- the tripod analogy. Firms take all of the different factors into account when forming their…

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Works Cited:

Leung, K., Bhagat, R., Buchan, N., Erez, M. & Gibson, C. (2005). Culture and international business: Recent advances and their implications for future research. Journal of International Business Studies. Vol. 36 (2005) 357-378.

Mahoney, J. & Pandian, J. (1992) The resource-based view within the conversation of strategic management. Strategic Management Journal. Vol. 13 (1992) 363-380.

Peng, M. (2009). Towards an institution-based view of business strategy. Asia Pacific Journal of Management. Vol. 19 (2-3) 251-267.

Peng, M., Sun, L., Pinkham, B. & Chen, H. (2009). The institution-based view as a third leg for a strategy tripod. Academy of Management Perspectives. August, 2009.
Porter, M. (2008). The five competitive forces that shape strategy. Harvard Business Review. Retrieved November 27, 2012 from http://hbr.org/2008/01/the-five-competitive-forces-that-shape-strategy/ar/1
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Tripod Peng, Wang and Jiang 2004 Argue
Words: 633 Length: 2 Document Type: Essay

Tripod Peng, Wang and Jiang (2004) argue that the institutional perspective should join the resource-based view and the industry-based view of international business. The authors support this view with four different anecdotes that illustrate the importance of institutions in economic development, but also in the strategic choices that the businesses make. Intuitively, there is some logic to the views that the authors express. The firm's internal resources do not just interact with

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