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Purpose -The purpose of this paper is to identify and describe the drivers of trading company strategy that explain trading company success in international business.Design/methodology/approach -The strategy tripod that results from combining the industry-, resource-and institution-based views, each of which proposes specific drivers of strategic success, was used as the framework for investigating, in a longitudinal perspective, the drivers of the strategy of a trading company and its success in emerging economies.Data were collected using in-depth interviews, document analysis and non-participant observation and analyzed using content analysis techniques.Findings -Rather than a single driver, we found that strategic choices were driven at times by the demands of industrial competitiveness, at times by firm resources and capabilities, and at times by institutional conditions.There was evidence neither of a linear chronological order for these drivers, nor of driver obsolescence.On the contrary, findings suggest that drivers are cumulative and interactive.Changes in organizational resources and capabilities or in competitive or institutional environments can force review and re-thinking of strategic objectives.Research limitation -Generalization is affected by the fact that the study focuses on the experience of one individual trading company.Originality/value -The paper is of value in showing the drivers of trading company strategy and the determinants of trading company success in emerging economies using a longitudinal perspective rather than the more usual sectional perspective.In addition, the study is original in simultaneously investigating all three legs of the strategy tripod and providing empirical evidence about how the respective drivers interact over time.
Gunasekaran et al. (Thu,) studied this question.