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*CALL FOR PAPERS: JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT*

*Special Issue on the Role and the Use of the Internet in
Shaping and Advancing International Management*

Submission Deadline: (*June 30, 2017*)

Special Issue Editors: Saeed Samiee and Brian C. Chabowski

The University of Tulsa

Since the public introduction of the Internet some 25 years ago, it has 
become ubiquitous in how people and organizations function and related 
activities are managed. Today, the Internet is at the center of 
virtually all business, government, and many personal activities, and is 
increasingly being used in new ways, such as managing places of business 
(e.g., 24/7 gym facilities), objects (e.g., equipment and machinery; 
home appliances). Although the Internet's penetration and general use 
across countries vary considerably, by virtue of necessity, it is used 
by firms practically everywhere in one form or another.

Researchers have embraced the use of the Internet in business 
activities, especially with respect to its use in e-commerce and 
marketing, resulting in a growing body of scholarship in these domains. 
Common international themes of interest among researchers include 
electronic supply chain management, e-commerce, exporting, and the 
internationalization of firms. Among early conceptual contributions to 
this line of research are Hamill (1997) and Samiee (1998) who provide 
conceptual frameworks for the role of the Internet in exporting 
activities of the firm. These efforts were complemented and extended 
with empirical contributions by Bennett (1997) and Hamill and Gregory 
(1997). Internationalization has also received a fair amount of 
attention with much of the focus directed at small- and/or medium-sized 
firms.Davis and Harveston (2000), for example, investigated the impact 
of Internet usage and technology involvement on internationalization in 
family businesses. Other contributions to internationalization of small 
and/or medium enterprises (SMEs) include Lituchy and Rail (2000), Moini 
and Tesar (2005), Morgan-Thomas and Bridgewater (2004), Mostafa, 
Wheeler, and Jones (2005), and Petersen, Welch, and Liesch (2002).

Though the common belief in the 1990s regarding the power of the 
Internet was to make firms global overnight, evidence seems to indicate 
that the Internet has been less impactful in internationalizing firms. 
Still, it can complement the internationalization activities of firms, 
including those of Internet-based firms. For example, Kotha, Rindova, 
and Rothaermel (2001) reported on the internationalization of U.S.based 
Internet firms and found that intangible assets can be developed during 
their internationalization process.

The use of the Internet for performing management functions seems to be 
uneven. Some areas of management, such as human resource functions, have 
fully embraced and leveraged the Internet. However, the impact of the 
Internet on some important aspects management, for example, strategy and 
strategic planning, has received little attention. Since global market 
intelligence is a critical step in strategy development, have 
international firms' strategies benefitted from the Internet so far as 
their planning processes are concerned? Have MNCs embarked on automating 
routine and time consuming components of strategic planning? Has the 
Internet shortened the planning cycle, the implementation, or control of 
various plans? Do some MNCs invest in proprietary software or processes 
to accommodate aspects of their strategy? Similar questions can be 
extended to narrower aspects of firms' global operations. For example, 
do global strategies evolve differently with the advent of the Internet? 
How has the Internet influenced human resource management strategies in 
large global firms versus SMEs with a local or regional focus?Does 
Internet use in management vary across countries and cultures? Does it 
differ across emerging and developed markets?Which conditions would most 
likely explain these types of differences?How has the adoption of the 
Internet altered the competitive landscape?To what extent have 
interactive processes changed both within and outside the firm among 
employees, managers, and stakeholders?Furthermore, how do the cultural 
imperatives in management interact with increased use of the Internet by 
firms?At the operational level, do legal and political forces limit 
efficient global leveraging of the Internet?

The goal of this special issue is to motivate research that explores and 
uncovers the influence of the Internet across a wide range of management 
activities, including strategy and planning at the firm level. 
Manuscripts addressing ways in which the Internet influences and shapes 
international management functions, particularly where the primary 
purpose is one of achieving a competitive advantage (as opposed cost 
reduction as the primary reason for deploying the Internet), are 
especially welcome. The role of the Internet in the internationalization 
of small and medium-sized firms as well as the extent to which they 
would not have been able to internationalize in the absence of the 
Internet are also research issues of interest for this Special Issue.

We encourage submission of both conceptual and empirical papers. All 
papers should incorporate a solid theoretical and/or conceptual 
component, including those aimed at augmenting or modifying current 
theories and models. Case studies that offer in-depth insights as to how 
firms have or are using the Internet to achieve international and 
internationalization goals are also welcome. In general, all papers 
oriented toward an international management theme that leverage the 
Internet are encouraged for submission.

*Submission information*

The deadline for manuscript submission is *June 30, 2017*. Manuscripts 
should be prepared in accordance with Journal of International 
Management’s Style Guide for 
Authors:http://www.elsevier.com/journals/journal-of-international-management/1075-4253/guide-for-authors, 


and submitted through the Journal’s submission website.

To ensure that all manuscripts are correctly identified for 
consideration for this Special Issue, it is important that authors 
select ‘SI: Internet and International Management’ when they reach the 
“Article Type” step in the submission process.

Please direct any questions regarding the Special Issue to: Saeed Samiee

([log in to unmask]) and Brian C. Chabowski 
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**

*References*

Bennett, R. (1997). Export marketing and the internet: Experiences of 
web site use and perceptions of export barriers among UK businesses. 
/International Marketing Review/, /14/(5), 324-344.

Davis, P. S., & Harveston, P. D. (2000). Internationalization and 
organizational growth: The impact of Internet usage and technology 
involvement among entrepreneur-led family businesses. /Family Business 
Review/, /13/(2), 107-120.

Hamill, J. (1997). The Internet and international marketing. 
/International Marketing Review/, /14/(5), 300-323.

Hamill, J., & Gregory, K. (1997). Internet marketing in the 
internationalisation of UK SMEs. /Journal of Marketing Management/, 
/13/(1-3), 9-28.

Kotha, S., Rindova, V. P., & Rothaermel, F. T. (2001). Assets and 
actions: Firm-specific factors in the internationalization of US 
Internet firms. /Journal of International Business Studies/, /32/(4), 
769-791.

Lituchy, T. R., & Rail, A. (2000). Bed and breakfasts, small inns, and 
the Internet: The impact of technology on the globalization of small 
businesses. /Journal of International Marketing/, /8/(2), 86-97.

Moini, H., & Tesar, G. (2005). The internet and internationalization of 
smaller manufacturing enterprises. /Journal of Global Marketing/, 
/18/(3-4), 79-94.

Morgan-Thomas, A., & Bridgewater, S. (2004). Internet and exporting: 
Determinants of success in virtual export channels. /International 
Marketing Review/, /21/(4/5), 393-408.

Mostafa, R. H., Wheeler, C., & Jones, M. V. (2005). Entrepreneurial 
orientation, commitment to the Internet and export performance in small 
and medium sized exporting firms. /Journal of Iinternational 
Entrepreneurship/, /3/(4), 291-302.

Petersen, B., Welch, L. S., & Liesch, P. W. (2002). The Internet and 
foreign market expansion by firms. /Management International Review/, 
207-221.

Samiee, S. (1998). Exporting and the Internet: A conceptual perspective. 
/International Marketing Review/, /15/(5), 413-426.

**

About the Guest Editors

*Saeed Samiee*is the Collins Professor of Marketing and International 
Business at The University of Tulsa. His research is focused on 
marketing-related facets of international business. He has published on 
a range marketing issues, including the application of the Internet in 
international marketing, exporting, and brand-related issues and his 
publications have appeared in such journals as the Journal of Marketing, 
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Strategic Management 
Journal, and Journal of International Business Studies. He is an 
incoming marketing editor for the Journal of International Business 
Studies and serves as an Associate Editor for international marketing 
for the Decision Sciences Journal.

*Brian R. Chabowsk*i is an Associate Professor of Marketing at the 
University of Tulsa. He has published research in the Journal of 
International Business Studies, Journal of International Marketing, 
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and other academic 
journals. In addition, he is on the editorial review board for the 
Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of the Academy of 
Marketing Science, Journal of Business Research, and other outlets. His 
research interests include technology and international business, the 
interdisciplinarity of international business, and international 
marketing strategy.



-- 
Masaaki "Mike" Kotabe
The Washburn Chair Professor of International Business and Marketing
President, Academy of International Business;
Editor, Journal of International Management
Temple University
The Fox School of Business
1801 Liacouras Walk
559 Alter Hall (006-14)
Philadelphia, PA 19122-6083
U.S.A.
Ph.  215-204-7704
Fax. 215-204-8029




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