Nonmarket strategy and legitimacy in institutionally voided environments: the case of Jumia, an African e-commerce giant
Nonmarket strategy and legitimacy in institutionally voided environments: the case of Jumia, an African e-commerce giant
This paper examines how a newly established multinational enterprise (MNE) leverages nonmarket strategy (NMS) to deal with legitimacy problems posed by institutional voids in institutionally challenging contexts to gain legitimacy. Using a rich dataset from in-depth interviews, observations, and archival data on Jumia, an African e-commerce giant, we identify three types of institutional void (i.e., infrastructural, regulatory and legal, and cognitive cultural voids) that hinder the implementation of the e-commerce business model. We further unpack the MNE's specific NMS to validate, consolidate, and diffuse the new business model to gain legitimacy accordingly. Importantly, we theorize how MNEs, under various conditions of unstable institutional structures and mechanisms, employ NMS to achieve three kinds of legitimacy in the process—i.e., cognitive, regulative and normative legitimacies. Altogether, we integrate three prominent streams of literature in IB—NMS, institutional voids, and legitimacy literature—to build a theory on how MNEs deploy NMS to establish legitimacy in response to environmental uncertainty to validate their activities and consolidate trust by gaining political and regulatory support.
Legitimacy, Nonmarket strategy, institutional voids, Institutional voids
Peprah, Augustine Awuah
bae898c9-95d3-4010-966a-f06785f645fb
Atarah, Bede Akorige
7292ab15-ff59-4452-a479-de078c37a36a
Kumodzie-Dussey, Makafui Kwame
11ad986a-b47e-4719-b266-9aafe013f293
5 August 2023
Peprah, Augustine Awuah
bae898c9-95d3-4010-966a-f06785f645fb
Atarah, Bede Akorige
7292ab15-ff59-4452-a479-de078c37a36a
Kumodzie-Dussey, Makafui Kwame
11ad986a-b47e-4719-b266-9aafe013f293
Peprah, Augustine Awuah, Atarah, Bede Akorige and Kumodzie-Dussey, Makafui Kwame
(2023)
Nonmarket strategy and legitimacy in institutionally voided environments: the case of Jumia, an African e-commerce giant.
International Business Review, [102169].
(doi:10.1016/j.ibusrev.2023.102169).
Abstract
This paper examines how a newly established multinational enterprise (MNE) leverages nonmarket strategy (NMS) to deal with legitimacy problems posed by institutional voids in institutionally challenging contexts to gain legitimacy. Using a rich dataset from in-depth interviews, observations, and archival data on Jumia, an African e-commerce giant, we identify three types of institutional void (i.e., infrastructural, regulatory and legal, and cognitive cultural voids) that hinder the implementation of the e-commerce business model. We further unpack the MNE's specific NMS to validate, consolidate, and diffuse the new business model to gain legitimacy accordingly. Importantly, we theorize how MNEs, under various conditions of unstable institutional structures and mechanisms, employ NMS to achieve three kinds of legitimacy in the process—i.e., cognitive, regulative and normative legitimacies. Altogether, we integrate three prominent streams of literature in IB—NMS, institutional voids, and legitimacy literature—to build a theory on how MNEs deploy NMS to establish legitimacy in response to environmental uncertainty to validate their activities and consolidate trust by gaining political and regulatory support.
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NMS_Legitimacy_Institutional_voids_final_with_authors_details
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 July 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 August 2023
Published date: 5 August 2023
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors
Keywords:
Legitimacy, Nonmarket strategy, institutional voids, Institutional voids
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 480504
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480504
ISSN: 0969-5931
PURE UUID: 22340859-881e-44e7-a0f8-c51cf6314fa7
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Date deposited: 03 Aug 2023 17:17
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Contributors
Author:
Augustine Awuah Peprah
Author:
Bede Akorige Atarah
Author:
Makafui Kwame Kumodzie-Dussey
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