Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2xdlg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-19T13:27:10.348Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Management Characteristics, Attitudes and the Decision to Export

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

Norman E. Philp
Affiliation:
School of Business, Charles Sturt University, Albury NSW 2640
Rumintha Wickramasekera
Affiliation:
School of Business, Charles Sturt University, Albury NSW 2640

Abstract

The incessant trend towards the internationalisation of the marketplace will continue to dominate the agendas of managers of Australia's manufacturing establishments as they approach the next millennium. Empirical studies of the determinants of the firm's export marketing behaviour have been quite prolific and internationally comprehensive (Aaby and Slater 1989) and the characteristics and attitudes of the firm's main decision makers are often posed as important explanatory variables. The current study also examines the significance of managerial characteristics, commitment and attitudes towards exporting behaviour, by concentrating on a sample of firms drawn from a single industry (food and beverage processors) and with similar size and locational characteristics (small-medium firms located in regional Victoria).

A logistic regression model with a binary dependent variable (ie current exporter vs non-exporter) and, initially, 19 independent variables was formulated and estimated. An optimal model utilising only six of the most significant, management-related variables was able to predict the probability of a firm being an exporter with an accuracy of over 90% . The importance of management's willingness to commit both its mind and its firm's resources to the export endeavour and its recognition of the importance of price competitiveness were significant discriminators of active export behaviour. Exporting managers were also found more likely to be tertiary educated and foreign language fluent but not necessarily any younger than their non-exporting counterparts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aaby, NE and Slater, SF (1989) ‘Management Influence on Export Performance: A Review of the Empirical LiteratureInternational Marketing Review 6(4) pp 722CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, O (1993) ‘On the Internationalization Process of Firms: A Critical AnalysisJournal of International Business Studies Second Quarter pp 209231CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, NJ and Wilkinson, IF (1985) ‘Export Stimulation: A Segmentation Study of the Exporting Problems of Australian Manufacturing FirmsEuropean journal of Marketing 19(2) pp 5371CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bilkey, WJ (1978) ‘An Attempted Integration of the Literature on the Export Behaviour of FirmsJournal of International Business Studies 9 (Spring-Summer) pp 3346CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavusgil, ST and Naor, J (1987) ‘Firm and Management Characteristics as Discriminators of Export Marketing ActivityJournal of Business Research 15 pp 221235CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hosmer, DW and Lemeshow, S (1989) Applied Repression Analysis New York: WileyGoogle Scholar
Karpin Report (1995) ‘Industry Task Force on Leadership and Management SkillsEnterprising Nation: Renewing Australia's Managers to Meet the Challenges of the Asia-Pacific Century Canberra: AGPSGoogle Scholar
Leonidou, LC (1995) ‘Export Stimulation Research: Review Evaluation, IntegrationInternational Business Review Vol 4 No 2 pp 133156CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKinsey and Company (1994) Lead Local Compete Global: Unlocking the Growth Potential of Australia's Regions, Office of Regional Development, Department of Housing and Regional DevelopmentGoogle Scholar
Norusis, MJ/SPSS (1993) SPSS for Windows, Release 6.0 SPSS Inc: New YorkGoogle Scholar