Boris Šuštar and Rozana Šuštar
To investigate the relationship between the size of a firm and the strategic choices it makes with regard to the level of internationalisation, product range and breadth of the…
Abstract
Purpose
To investigate the relationship between the size of a firm and the strategic choices it makes with regard to the level of internationalisation, product range and breadth of the customer base, in the context of a new Member State of the European Union: Slovenia.
Design/methodology/approach
Three hypotheses were tested by data collected by a self‐completion postal survey of almost one in five of all manufacturing exporters in the country, directed at general managers or executives involved in making strategic marketing decisions and calling for answers on Likert scales. The response rate was 24 percent.
Findings
There was a clear association between choice of internationalisation strategy and the size of Slovenian firms, which is generally small. That characteristic is a strong predictor of the number of products marketed abroad and the number of customers in export markets served.
Research limitations/implications
Further studies of other variables that may determine export behaviour would add to the utility of these findings for the development of export strategy for firms in developing economies.
Practical implications
As the new countries of the European Union enter new competitive environments, such findings as these are vital intelligence for their marketing planners.
Originality/value
Slovenia is self‐evidently a country of interest to international marketing academics and practitioners.