Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching?
As the business world becomes more global many managers have spent significant time studying and working abroad. Does this overseas experience re-shape how managers think about the world? In this study we examined attribution patterns of Taiwanese managers who have studied and worked abroad. We foun...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1014542023-05-19T06:44:40Z Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? Friedman, Ray Liu, Wu Chi, Shu-Cheng Steve Hong, Ying-Yi Sung, Li-Kuo Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business As the business world becomes more global many managers have spent significant time studying and working abroad. Does this overseas experience re-shape how managers think about the world? In this study we examined attribution patterns of Taiwanese managers who have studied and worked abroad. We found that managers who have been abroad switch their cultural orientation as a result of being shown Western or Chinese cultural icons, but this effect only occurs for those high in bicultural identity integration (BII). We confirmed that this effect occurs when “environmental” priming is used, and also confirmed that this effect is found when examining pay allocation decisions (a typical managerial issue) in addition to attribution patterns. These results point to the benefits of hiring internationally experienced managers, but also suggest that international experience may not be enough—companies need to also assess managers’ BII to know if foreign experience will truly translate into culturally appropriate cognitive flexibility. 2013-10-24T07:11:49Z 2019-12-06T20:38:53Z 2013-10-24T07:11:49Z 2019-12-06T20:38:53Z 2011 2011 Journal Article Friedman, R., Liu, W., Chi, S. C. S., Hong, Y. Y., & Sung, L. K. (2011). Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? International journal of intercultural relations, 36(1), 130-139. 0147-1767 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/101454 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16781 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2011.03.002 en International journal of intercultural relations |
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DRNTU::Business Friedman, Ray Liu, Wu Chi, Shu-Cheng Steve Hong, Ying-Yi Sung, Li-Kuo Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
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As the business world becomes more global many managers have spent significant time studying and working abroad. Does this overseas experience re-shape how managers think about the world? In this study we examined attribution patterns of Taiwanese managers who have studied and worked abroad. We found that managers who have been abroad switch their cultural orientation as a result of being shown Western or Chinese cultural icons, but this effect only occurs for those high in bicultural identity integration (BII). We confirmed that this effect occurs when “environmental” priming is used, and also confirmed that this effect is found when examining pay allocation decisions (a typical managerial issue) in addition to attribution patterns. These results point to the benefits of hiring internationally experienced managers, but also suggest that international experience may not be enough—companies need to also assess managers’ BII to know if foreign experience will truly translate into culturally appropriate cognitive flexibility. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Friedman, Ray Liu, Wu Chi, Shu-Cheng Steve Hong, Ying-Yi Sung, Li-Kuo |
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Article |
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Friedman, Ray Liu, Wu Chi, Shu-Cheng Steve Hong, Ying-Yi Sung, Li-Kuo |
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Friedman, Ray |
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Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
title_short |
Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
title_full |
Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
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Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
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Cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
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cross-cultural management and bicultural identity integration : when does experience abroad lead to appropriate cultural switching? |
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2013 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/101454 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16781 |
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