INTRODUCTION
In this paper, we draw on exploratory, illustrative case studies of firms from Morocco, Tunisia, Gabon, and Senegal to explore how the African experience, especially of colonialism, changes theories about the process of internationalization. Our cases suggest that rather than following gradients of cultural and geographic proximity, or riding the coattails of MNE global value chains, firms from Francophone Africa expand first to France, following patterns of trade, social networks, transportation, education, and institutional design set during European colonialism. Specifically, these firms internationalize first to France (especially to Paris), to assemble resources and build legitimacy; they then use these resources and legitimacy to expand elsewhere, often back to neighboring countries in Africa. In other words, the internationalization trajectory for firms from Francophone Africa run through the old colonial center and from there out into the world. We call the pull of, and path through, the colonial center the ‘metropolitan effect’ or l'effet métropolitain and argue that it shapes the internationalization process for firms in post-colonial countries.
Frontier (Fujita & Mori, Reference Fujita and Mori1998) and emerging economies provide a useful context for examining the interaction between theory and context (Xu & Meyer, Reference Xu and Meyer2013) because cases from such economies illustrate managerial phenomena and contexts that differ substantially from the phenomena and contexts that spawned existing theory (Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra, & Manning, Reference Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra and Manning2017). Thus, the fact that so many African countries are mired in extreme poverty and plagued by institutional voids (Khanna & Palepu, Reference Khanna and Palepu2013) and underdeveloped business systems (Witt, de Castro, Amaeshi, Mahroum, Bohle, & Saez, Reference Witt, de Castro, Amaeshi, Mahroum, Bohle and Saez2018) means that the theoretical lenses developed for research of the European and American business environments and even the refinements developed for the emerging economies of Asia may not be entirely appropriate. Specifically, as argued by De Soto (Reference De Soto2000) and others, much of what makes capitalism work in advanced economies is the institutional infrastructure and the deep well of experience and routines that organizations and individuals draw upon. The lack of such institutions and routines in Africa make it a particularly fruitful context for testing the assumptions and boundary conditions of extant theory (George, Reference George2015).
Scholars have highlighted the importance of local context in international business (Meyer, Mudambi, & Narula, Reference Meyer, Mudambi and Narula2011), and the salient differences between the Western and Asian business contexts have now been studied in some detail (Khanna & Palepu, Reference Khanna and Palepu2013; Ramamurti, Reference Ramamurti2012). For its part, the African context shapes managerial choices because of limited access to capital and human resources, managerial and technological capability, and respect and legitimacy (Barnard, Reference Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra and Ramamurti2014; Barnard et al., Reference Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra and Manning2017; George, Corbishley, Khayesi, Haas, & Tihanyi, Reference George, Corbishley, Khayesi, Haas and Tihanyi2016). In particular, persistently weak institutions, political volatility, linguistic and ethnic diversity, vast diasporas, questions about African firm legitimacy, and the recent colonial legacy all conspire to test the applicability of existing international business theory (Barnard et al., Reference Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra and Manning2017: 482–484). The goal of this paper is to explore how the African context, and especially the colonial legacy, shape the internationalization process.
In the next section, we introduce our study setting and sketch the effects of colonialism on the institutions, migration patterns, education, and the like in Francophone African countries. We then dive into the literatures on internationalization trajectories (Johanson & Vahlne, Reference Johanson and Vahlne2009; Luo & Tung, Reference Luo and Tung2018; Mudambi, Reference Mudambi2008) and legitimacy (Kostova, Roth, & Dacin, Reference Kostova, Roth and Dacin2008; Scherer, Palazzo, & Seidl, Reference Scherer, Palazzo and Seidl2013) to articulate questions about how experience in the frontier economies of Africa shape internationalization processes. Subsequently, we describe our method and introduce six illustrative cases. We then compare the experience of these firms to theory, leading to the idea of l'effet métropolitain, that is, a legitimacy-building internationalization trajectory that follows network ties through the colonial center and out into the wider world. We conclude the paper by developing a research agenda for exploring the dimensions and testing the prevalence of the metropolitan effect.
THE EFFECT OF THE COLONIAL LEGACY ON FRANCOPHONE AFRICAN FIRMS
We chose to study the internationalization experience of Francophone African firms because they operate in challenging frontier and emerging economies (Mody, Reference Mody2004; S&P Global, 2017) that, together, comprise a population of almost 350 million (Table 1) and, as such, provide an interesting, non-trivial context in which to challenge the conceptual reach of extant theory.
Notes: [1] World Atlas, 2012.
[2] World Development Indicators, 2012. World Bank, Washington DC
In Africa, colonialism arrived relatively late, lasted into the more recent past, and had particularly strong effects as compared to other regions of the globe (Gann & Duignan, Reference Gann and Duignan1967). Colonial rule was typically implemented by transplanting the institutions of the metropolitan center into the conquered country (Dia, Reference Dia1996), and this was certainly true in Francophone Africa (Lee & Schultz, Reference Lee and Schultz2012). Here, we use the term ‘metropolitan’ in its more general meaning as ‘relating to, or constituting a mother country as distinguished from a colony’ (Merriam-Webster, 2018). Thus, the French Empire was composed of the metropolitan center (France) and its colonies scattered all around the globe.
French colonial rule was ‘erected on an ethnocentric assimilationist paradigm that refused to interpret culture as a dynamic process and, accordingly, to incorporate African cultural elements, preferring instead to dismiss, repudiate and systematically erase African identity’ (Thomas, Reference Thomas2007: 9). The goal was total assimilation of the colonized population through the creation of institutions (educational, administrative, legal, etc.) and systems (financial, infrastructures, etc.) that mirrored those in the home country. French institutions were recreated in African colonies through a specially trained cadre of local employees who were imbued with French culture and values (Osborn, Reference Osborn2003).
The institutional effects of colonialism have persisted. The transplanted institutions included significant elements of government and business systems as well as of physical infrastructure systems like roadways, railways, power systems, building codes, and the like. To this day, airline networks from Francophone African cities, including capital cities, are overwhelmingly linked to the world through the Paris hub (Zook & Brunn, Reference Zook and Brunn2005). In Francophone Africa, countries in Western and Central Africa were incorporated into CFA franc zones (in which local francs were guaranteed by the France) that remained in force for decades after formal independence (Stasavage, Reference Stasavage1997). This international financial system provided one mechanism through which colonial ties continued to shape international business operations (Mudambi, Reference Mudambi1998). Further, the administrative, legal, educational, and physical infrastructures of the postcolonial countries still mirror metropolitan France with a capital as the hub. Finally, the original cadre of employees trained to aid the French rulers have grown into a Francophone upper class that is still often educated in France and is comfortable moving back and forth from their home countries to France (Ekeh, Reference Ekeh1975).
Studies have shown that historical ties, including colonial ties, create a context that continues to shape MNE activity including trade patterns and FDI (Lundan & Jones, Reference Lundan and Jones2001; Makino & Tsang, Reference Makino and Tsang2011; Rangan & Drummond, Reference Rangan and Drummond2004). This colonial legacy serves as both a context of and starting point for our exploration of the internationalization trajectories of Francophone African firms. Further, in many ways the French colonial empire is representative of colonialism more generally, so that our analysis of these firms may have broader implications for firms from other former colonies.
Thus, in keeping with the notion that African experience may challenge theory developed in other contexts (George, Reference George2015), we ask: What does the experience of Francophone African firms tell us about how the colonial legacy affects the internationalization trajectories of such firms?
Internationalization Trajectories and Legitimacy
In this exploratory paper, we focus on the process of internationalization. The internationalization process is initiated by a variety of factors. Dunning (Reference Dunning1993) identified three primary factors – market-seeking, asset-seeking, and resource-seeking – as well as a number of secondary drivers, such as escape. Over the years, scholars have recast these as market reach, search, exploit, and escape (Cuerva-Cazurra, Narula, & Un, Reference Cuervo-Cazurra and Narula2015). Market reach refers to the quest for additional customers (Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss, & Zheng, Reference Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng2007; Moghaddam, Sethi, Weber, & Wu, Reference Moghaddam, Sethi, Weber and Wu2014). Search encompasses efforts to acquire access to crucial technologies, resources, and competencies that are not available in firms’ domestic environments (Awate, Larsen, & Mudambi, Reference Awate, Larsen and Mudambi2012). Exploit involves leveraging cost efficiencies to carry out low-knowledge, standardized activities with the explicit goal of acquiring the capabilities, connections, and resources to become global competitors (Kothari, Kotabe, & Murphy, Reference Kothari, Kotabe and Murphy2013; Mudambi, Reference Mudambi2008; Witt et al., Reference Witt, de Castro, Amaeshi, Mahroum, Bohle and Saez2018). Finally, escape describes flight from the uncertainty arising from weak institutions, poor or non-existent infrastructure, non-functional labor markets, and especially unpredictable, conflict-filled relationships with government (Barnard & Luiz, Reference Barnard and Luiz2018; Buckley et al., Reference Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng2007; Cuervo-Cazurra & Genc, Reference Cuervo-Cazurra and Genc2011).
Given the exigencies of doing business in a frontier economy, we would expect escape to play a large part in driving Francophone African firms to internationalize. Less clear is whether these same conditions might affect the internationalization processes chosen by these firms.
Internationalization trajectories
While there have been many attempts to articulate trajectories of internationalization, Johanson & Vahlne's internationalization process (Johanson & Vahlne, Reference Johanson and Vahlne1977, Reference Johanson and Vahlne2009), internationalization that follows MNE value chains, and Luo & Tung's springboard model (Luo & Tung, Reference Luo and Tung2018) stand out as particularly relevant to our study of the internationalization trajectories of Francophone Africa firms.
In their well-known process theory of internationalization, Johanson and Vahlne drew on the experience of Swedish firms to develop a learning model in which firms cross relatively short institutional, cultural, and geographic distances; gradually increase commitments as they learn to operate effectively in new contexts; and then use their new platform, experience, and resources to move onto the next market (Johanson & Vahlne, Reference Johanson and Vahlne1977, Reference Johanson and Vahlne2009). As the model has evolved, the roles of networks and relationships and ‘insidership’ have become more prominent than simple geography, and the challenges of institutional distance and ‘outsidership’ – that is, of not being used to a country's rules or belonging to a country's business networks – more pronounced than culture per se (Cantwell & Mudambi, Reference Cantwell and Mudambi2011). Still, the predicted internationalization trajectory is of gradually increasing scale, scope, and commitment, starting with host countries that are somehow proximate to the home country. Following the logic of this model, one might expect Francophone African firms to follow the language and institutional gradients defined by colonialism to internationalize first into neighboring Francophone countries.
A second well-known internationalization trajectory involves firm participation in the global value chains dominated by developed country MNEs. Firms join MNE value chains by offering similar quality at reduced cost, but as new arrivals in mature industries, firms may find or create innovations that enhance their ability to compete effectively with advanced economy companies tied to legacy equipment and practices (Awate, Larsen, & Mudambi, Reference Awate, Larsen and Mudambi2012; Lewin, Massini, & Peeters, Reference Lewin, Massini and Peeters2009; Ramamurti, Reference Ramamurti2012). In any case, by participating in an MNE's global value chain, emerging market firms can find ways to overcome the institutional, cultural, and business systems distances between their emerging, home market and target, host, markets (Beugelsdijk & Mudambi, Reference Beugelsdijk and Mudambi2013; Kumaraswamy et al., Reference Kumaraswamy, Mudambi, Saranga and Tripathy2012; Peng, Wang, & Jiang, Reference Peng, Wang and Jiang2008; Schotter, Mudambi, Doz, & Gaur, Reference Schotter, Mudambi, Doz and Gaur2017).
Opportunities to internationalize through participation in global value chains are highly correlated with financial connectivity between countries. For instance, the enormous FDI into China has been linked to the internationalization of Chinese firms (Boisot & Meyer, Reference Boisot and Meyer2008). The challenge for many African firms outside of South Africa is that without substantial MNE investment in a country, opportunities for local firms to leverage MNE value chains are few. While trade with and FDI in Africa is growing, it is still quite limited, and much of the FDI that is recorded is Chinese FDI in search of access to natural resources and served almost entirely by Chinese suppliers of services and labor, rather than local ones (Buckley et al., Reference Buckley, Clegg, Cross, Liu, Voss and Zheng2007; Shinn & Eisenman, Reference Shinn and Eisenman2012).[Footnote 1] This lack of connectivity leaves many African firms struggling to develop the capabilities, market knowledge, legitimacy, and opportunity required to participate effectively in global value chains (Stevens & Newenham-Kahindi, Reference Stevens and Newenham-Kahindi2017; Wang & Cuervo-Cazurra, Reference Wang and Cuervo-Cazurra2017).[Footnote 2]
Luo and Tung (Reference Luo and Tung2018) articulate a third internationalization trajectory in which well-endowed emerging market MNEs explode onto the global stage by aggressively and strategically acquiring critical assets from mature MNEs until they have assembled enough of a portfolio to compete with, or even surpass, their established competitors. This risky approach requires both long-term thinking and deep pockets, often facilitated by market and/or political support at home, as has often been the case for Chinese firms (Luo & Tung, Reference Luo and Tung2018). But the springboard trajectory of internationalization is limited to the most well-funded, sophisticated frontier and emerging market firms and does not adequately address the evolution of (smaller) MNEs or the ‘soft power deficits of many emerging market economies’ that can harm the legitimacy of even the most sophisticated frontier or emerging market firm (Luo & Tung, Reference Luo and Tung2018: 134).
Legitimacy
Whatever their internationalization trajectory, firms from frontier economies in general, and perhaps from Africa in particular, struggle to earn the legitimacy necessary to bridge institutional and cultural distances and operate effectively in host countries, especially in emerging and developed markets (Barnard, Reference Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra and Ramamurti2014). We understand legitimacy as the ‘generalized perception or assumption that the actions of an entity are desirable, proper, or appropriate within some socially constructed system of norms, values, beliefs, and definitions’ (Suchman, Reference Suchman1995: 574). Legitimacy has been shown to be required for firms to receive a socially sanctioned ‘license’ to operate in a new country (Bitektine, Reference Bitektine2011; Claasen & Roloff, Reference Claasen and Roloff2012; Scherer, Palazzo, & Seidl, Reference Scherer, Palazzo and Seidl2013). Especially when firms suffer ‘liabilities of origin’ through association with a frontier or emerging economy's suspect institutional environment (Pant & Ramachandran, Reference Pant and Ramachandran2012: 226), legitimacy must be continually earned and reaffirmed in an ongoing dialog between firms, stakeholders, and social actors (Suddaby & Greenwood, Reference Suddaby and Greenwood2005) – for example through investments in better products or services; lobbying; publicity; attempts to mobilize sociopolitical actors; and measurement and validation efforts (Darendeli & Hill, Reference Darendeli and Hill2016; Henisz, Dorobantu, & Nartey, Reference Henisz, Dorobantu and Nartey2014; Pant & Ramachandran, Reference Pant and Ramachandran2012). Effective internationalization requires effective intentional and sophisticated efforts to span boundaries and build legitimacy in host countries (Kostova et al., Reference Kostova, Roth and Dacin2008; Schotter et al., Reference Schotter, Mudambi, Doz and Gaur2017), leading to our second question: What does the experience of Francophone African firms tell us about how such firms overcome the legacy of colonialism to build the legitimacy necessary for the internationalization process to be effective?
METHOD: EXPLORATORY CASE STUDIES OF THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF FRANCOPHONE AFRICAN FIRMS
To build theory about how Francophone African firms internationalize, given the constraints of their origins in the frontier economies of Francophone Africa, we employ an exploratory, theory-building case study approach (Eisenhardt & Graebner, Reference Eisenhardt and Graebner2007; Yin, Reference Yin2002). Specifically, we describe and compare to theory the internationalization experience of six francophone African firms. To increase confidence that any pattern articulated reflects general conditions, not idiosyncratic ones, we purposely chose firms that were small and large, new and old, and anchored in different countries and industries. Because our goal was to induce new dimensions of internationalization theory from phenomena, we focused simply on the internationalization trajectory of each firm; the testing of the validity of the patterns identified awaits further research.
Data were collected through interviews with firm principals, supported by secondary documents. The interviews were conducted in French and promptly translated into English to facilitate discussion among the authors of themes and patterns seen in the data. As we explored the data, we attempted to organize it into tables and diagrams that expressed critical relationships. Such attempts at organization and visualization led to useful insights, including, for example, the idea of relationship upgrading as a mechanism for developing legitimacy. Finally, as we prepared this paper, we moved back and forth between theory, categories, visualizations, and the original data until we were able to articulate a series of insights that were at once consistent with the experience on the ground and useful for refining theory (Birkinshaw, Brannen, & Tung, Reference Birkinshaw, Brannen and Tung2011; Eisenhardt & Graebner, Reference Eisenhardt and Graebner2007).
Six Internationalization Stories from Francophone Africa
In the following section, we tell the internationalization stories of Outsourcia from Morocco; Favizone, Misfat Filtration, and Valomnia from Tunisia; Talent2Africa from Senegal; and BGFI Bank from Gabon. Combined, their experience suggests that Francophone African firms follow an internationalization trajectory in which firms follow network and historical ties to France to garner the resources, capabilities, and legitimacy necessary to move farther afield, including back to neighboring African countries.
Outsourcia is a relatively large, fast-growing business process outsourcing (BPO) and information technology outsourcing (ITO) provider that was established in Morocco in 2003 when the Moroccan principals bought out an international partner in a start-up call center. The company specialized in the management of the remote customer relationship and became a multi-service, multilingual, and multi-channel business (call centers, email management, chat solutions, telemarketing, and customer relationships on social networks). In 2004, Outsourcia had only 70 employees and a turnover of €0.6 million. Through a mixture of acquisition of domestic firms and organic growth, Outsourcia increased its revenues to €2.1 million in 2006, €4.1 million in 2008, and €19 million by 2010. In early 2010, Outsourica entered France by acquiring the French call center operator As-com. The acquired firm had sales of €3.6 million and had been in business since 1988. This was the first such international expansion by a Moroccan firm. Commentators in the French business press noted that Outsourcia was following the model of Indian and Chinese firms that entered Europe through acquisition to obtain knowledge assets (e.g., Awate et al., Reference Awate, Larsen and Mudambi2012).
To go to France…was natural, because the similarities are cultural, language, how to deal with business…and it was necessary, because I wanted to be aware of what is done in this sector in France and because we were dealing directly with customers in France.
In October 2011, Outsourcia opened its own bespoke office in Evreux in Normandy, in search of more stable institutional settings, improved technologies, increased capabilities, and increased sales. Also, in 2011, the firm acquired Alias Community, a digital enterprise focused on social media, anticipating a major industry trend: the customer relationship management on social networks. The firm's continued growth required it to open a second location by rehabilitating a site in Châtillon-en-Dunois in 2014.
Going to France, it is not for the capital because that can be obtained in Morocco. We went to France because I was already addressing the French market. The market issue is one of the reasons; the second reason is the credibility and legitimacy. The fact of going there made it possible to settle in a much more durable way in France.
Outsourcia grew at a sustained rate of 15% per annum, developing important French clients, such as Peugeot Citroen, Coface, Brand Alley, and Seloger, as well as global suppliers such as Avaya and Vocalcom. Outsourcia also made use of several prominent French business services, including Société Générale for banking and Mazars and Darrois Villey for accounting and legal services.
By 2015, Outsourcia's French operations had established it as a successful multinational player in the industry and were generating substantial financial resources. The firm leveraged the improved reputation and financial assets that it developed in France to enter locations in Africa, starting with Cameroon and Senegal, followed by Niger in 2015 and later by entering Madagascar with the acquisition of a majority stake in SCEMI SA, a company specializing in outsourcing services offshore that employed 650 staff.
We are in Morocco because we started in Morocco. It was imperative for us to go to France because of customers; if we want to address the Francophone market, it is mandatory. Third, we are in sub-Saharan Africa because we wanted access to new employment areas…and because we manage to produce 30–35% cheaper than in Morocco. So, today for my clients, I have onshore offer in France, half-offshore in Morocco and offshore in sub-Saharan Africa and soon in Mauritius or Madagascar.
Misfat Filtration is a very well-established manufacturer that started its activities in Tunisia in 1979. After many years in the auto part distribution business, during which the company learned the needs of the auto part distributors it served, Misfat developed a manufacturing arm focused on motor vehicle filters (oil, fuel/diesel, air and cabin air filters) for light, commercial, and heavy-duty vehicles. After 30 years in business, Misfat became the leader within the Tunisian market and commenced a process of internationalization.
Misfat moved first to France (Crépy-en-Valois, Picardy) in 2009 by acquiring a well-known French company, Solaufil France, with its Mecafilter and Laurette brand, and its Spanish affiliate, Solaufil Iberica. The combination of Solaufil's business image, know-how, and relationships with French business services, such as the banks Credit Lyonnais and Société Générale and the accountancies Cecaudit International and Demon provided near instant legitimacy to Misfat in France and indeed, throughout Europe; these relationships also increased Misfat's access to capital dramatically.
Misfat quickly leveraged its newfound resources and legitimacy by building a manufacturing site and regional distribution center in Casablanca, Morocco in 2010. Since that time, Misfat has continued its rapid growth and international expansion by first opening a new subsidiary in Poland, and then inaugurating a regional distribution site based in Moscow in 2014. Within only seven years of its initial internationalization into France, Misfat has become a successful African multinational firm recognized for high-quality products and with well-known customers all over the world.
According to Amin ben Ayed, General Director of the Misfat Group,
This is the story of a Tunisian firm which was struggling to internationalize and managed to do so via the acquisition of a French firm. This is also the story of a French firm which could no longer thrive in a competitive international environment and adopted a competitive cost structure by collaborating with a Tunisian company. The result was the creation of wealth and employment on both shores of the Mediterranean’ (Ipemed, 2016).
Smaller firms – Favizone & Valomnia. Favizone launched in Tunis in 2014 to create an ecommerce platform for merchants and in early 2017 opened a subsidiary in France
for the commercial part….to begin testing the business process, pricing, commercial pre-testing of various distribution channels, and so on. We chose France because we were looking for a market, because the Tunisian market could not absorb the services of Favizone…[and] because the biggest challenge of a start-up is the first sale, the first marketing, so linguistic and cultural proximity helps a lot. I do not see any difference between a Tunisian or a French client, [but] if I have to manage an English client, I will be able but not have the same ease.
There were personal reasons as well. ‘I studied in Paris, I lived there for seven years. I have a good personal address book that I wish to exploit to succeed in the start-up. So France and Paris imposed themselves automatically; I did not even try to look elsewhere’. And finally, hopes for capital: ‘…the idea is to do the pre-test in France, validate the business plan assumptions, and get up funds to attack Europe and the rest of the world’.
Valomnia, a software firm with a sales-representative-tracking application, is somewhat more established, having started in 2012 and set up a subsidiary in France in 2016.
Why choose France? The relations between Tunisia and France are very close. I myself spent 11 years in France, studying and work, so I know very well the French ecosystem and have a good network. It was the cultural rapprochement that prompted me to go to France. That is the first point. The second point is that France is currently structuring the digital economy,…and there are many advantages especially in terms of R&D and, the most important for us, in raising funds.
Having gone to France, Valomnia has no plans to start subsidiaries in other Francophone countries in Africa; rather, they plan to use their platform in France to sell through partners:
If it were up to us, we would have stayed in Tunisia, but France represented an opening for us….the goal is not to go everywhere. We are in the digital sector, so we do not need local structures. It's enough to work with local partners. Our objective through the French subsidiary is to increase visibility…
BGFI Bank is the leading banking group of the central African economic and monetary community (Central African CFA franc zone). This Gabonese bank started its activities in Libreville in 1971, operating under the name of Bank of Paris and the Netherlands Gabon.
Twenty-five years later and as part of the bank efforts to expand its international operations, the bank rebranded itself as BGFI an acronym for its former name of ‘Banque Gabonaise et Française Internationale’, and started an aggressive internationalization expansion in Africa by moving first into Congo in 2000 and Equatorial Guinea in 2001. This expansion did not produce the hoped-for results, and the bank retreated. In time, it applied for and obtained in 2009, the approval of the Credit Institutions and Investment Firms Committee (CECEI) to operate in France as a financial company for the benefit of corporate clients. The choice to temporarily abandon the African adventure and to locate in France instead served a dual purpose. One purpose was to gain the legitimacy as trustworthy partner, and the second was to offer international investors direct access to investment opportunities in Africa and to serve African firms from France by providing them with greater access to international capital markets.
Only one year after opening its business in France, BGFI bank was able to leverage its status as a French bank and its access to capital to enter Francophone countries, such as Cameron, Benin, Congo, and Senegal, that are more geographically proximate to the home country of Gabon. BGFI continued to expand and is now more diversified and more global with presence in 11 countries (France and ten African countries).
Talent2Africa started in Senegal in 2015 to facilitate the hiring of qualified African employees for MNEs doing business throughout Francophone Africa. ‘In Africa, we have a multitude of small countries, in terms of size from an economic point of view, so…we decided to intervene on a wider radius, in geographic terms, and [target] all Francophone Africa, including the Maghreb and in particular Morocco’.
But to do this, Talent2Africa went first to France because ‘most of the multinationals on the African continent belong to groups based in Europe, in Paris in particular. So this is where the decision to move closer to France was born because our customers are there…and because France is the gateway to all of Francophone Africa’. Of course, access to capital was also a draw and a shared language and having lived in Paris made it easier. Finally, there was ‘the [francophone] diaspora, which is our core target. In Europe, we think of Paris where we have more than two million members of the diaspora. If we were talking about Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, we would have gone to England…’. Indeed, ‘our main resources are a mixture of knowledge of and experience in the [target industries] and the relationships that we have in the African diaspora in France’.
INTERNATIONALIZATION PROCESS INSIGHTS FROM FRANCOPHONE FIRMS
The six firms interviewed all followed a similar trajectory: Internationalizing first to France, largely in search of markets, knowledge, and legitimacy. This pattern is partly consistent with existing theory, but also suggests two new insights: First, that the colonial metropole continues to exert a strong pull on frontier economy firms and, second, that part of the attraction is the opportunity to build the legitimacy necessary to overcome the ‘soft power deficits of many emerging market economies’ (Luo & Tung, Reference Luo and Tung2018: 134) by becoming successful in a developed market. The experience of the firms studied also highlights the role of networks, especially social networks, in the actual process of internationalization.
All Roads Still Lead through Paris: Francophone African Firm Internationalization Trajectories
Reading the accounts and studying the internationalization trajectories summarized in Table 2, it is striking that, with the exception of BGFI, each of the firms chose to internationalize to France first. Even BGFI, which first tried to expand into geographic and cultural neighbors, found success only when it retreated from Africa, entered and rebranded in France, and then re-entered Africa.
The firms studied gave many reasons for going to France, notably expanded market reach and search for capital, technology, and legitimacy.[Footnote 3] Outsourcia employed a springboard strategy (Luo & Tung, Reference Luo and Tung2018), buying a French firm with access to markets and legitimacy (e.g., reference customers), and then expanding elsewhere in Francophone Africa to exploit labor cost advantages. Misfat leveraged its experience in global value chains to upgrade steadily, and then internationalized by buying a French company with access to markets and legitimacy (in this case, well-known brands and highly respected bank and accounting partners), while continuing to exploit its cost advantages in Tunisia. Favizone and Valomnia chose France for access to markets and technology, while BGFI used France to bolster its legitimacy as a credible corporate partner and to establish itself as a conduit for capital flows in both directions between Africa and Europe. Finally, Talent2Africa chose France for its concentration of capital, customers with global reach, and diasporan labor pool, with its combination of language, cultural know-how, and low-cost.
In all cases, the firms studied could have chosen markets that shared a language and were geographically and culturally closer than France, and yet the firms studied still chose France. This choice challenges the classic Johanson and Vahlne model of internationalization process with its emphasis on geographic and cultural proximity, but is more consistent with their 2009 reformulation in which they emphasize the importance of networks and ‘insidership in relevant network(s)’ when bridging geographic, institutional, and cultural distances (Johanson & Vahlne, Reference Johanson and Vahlne2009: 1411). Indeed, while the firms studied cited customers, knowledge, and capital as reasons to go to France, several also added the important detail that their path into the business networks was built on foundations of familiarity and personal networks built during university days in France and/or through their social network within the diaspora; clearly, the individual manager and her social networks are critical to theorizing about internationalization (Cuervo-Cazzuro et al., Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Narula and Un2015).
In nearly all cases, there was an explicit recognition that France was special (see Table 3). The firms interviewed chose France for their first foray abroad because it offered so much in one place: France was linguistically and culturally and personally familiar; it was the bridge to the developed world's customers, technology, and capital; it was a one-stop shop for access to companies serving, and people from, all of the Francophone countries of Africa; and success in France conferred legitimacy as a firm capable of operating in developed economies. In short, more than a half a century after the end of colonialism, the old colonial center still promises – and delivers – the world to firms from Africa. This is l'effet métropolitain and is an important addition to the trajectory and motivations of internationalization for firms from countries shaped by colonialism.
The critical role of legitimacy
For most of the companies interviewed, there was the expectation, often realized, that success in France would confer a certain legitimacy that, in turn, would open doors for increased sales, additional resources, and entry into other countries (see Table 4). That is, the managers interviewed quite consciously pursued internationalization to France to prove their ability to compete in developed markets and so signal readiness and ability to compete anywhere. Such legitimacy was gained through sheer presence in France (Valomnia), the ownership of French brands (Misfat), ties with highly credible government and corporate partners (BGFI, Misfat, Talent2Africa), and proven success selling within the sophisticated and global French market (all firms studied). In short, to overcome the ‘liabilities of origin’ (Pant & Ramachandran, Reference Pant and Ramachandran2012) associated with originating from a frontier or emerging economy, the firms studied sought out legitimacy by expanding to France first, before internationalizing elsewhere. The irony is, of course, that as a colonizer, France played a decisive role in stunting the economic and institutional development of Francophone Africa. And yet, the metropole still exerts its centripetal force, pulling Francophone African firms back to France, in large part to prove their ability to flourish in a global, developed context – and so gain the legitimacy required to expand into other countries.
THE METROPOLITAN EFFECT: TOWARDS A PROCESS MODEL OF INTERNATIONALIZATION OF FIRMS IN POSTCOLONIAL FRONTIER ECONOMIES
This is an exploratory, conceptual paper based on the internationalization experience of six firms from Francophone Africa. Our study takes advantage of the extreme conditions common to the frontier economies of Africa and of newly observed phenomena such as the overwhelming preference for France as the first step in internationalizing to test and extend existing theory (George, Reference George2015; Barnard et al., Reference Barnard, Cuervo-Cazurra and Manning2017). Our results are largely consistent with existing theories of internationalization trajectories and motivations (Buckley, Reference Buckley2018), but add important dimensions to them.
In other words, l'effet metropolitain can co-exist with or form the basis for other trajectories. In the colonial context, it reflects the underlying logic of the trajectory. Thus, while l'effet metropolitain ensures the central role of France, the internationalization process can take different forms, e.g., Outsourcia is a case of springboarding, while Misfat an example of GVC-driven internationalization. However, in the all the cases, the colonial metropole offers an extremely attractive first step in internationalization for firms from post-colonial frontier economies. The search for legitimacy is a critical addition to the upgrade motivation for internationalizing (Cuervo-Cazzura et al., Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Narula and Un2015). Further, in making the move to the colonial center, social networks seem to complement business networks in increasing ‘insidership’ by spanning cultural, geographical, and institutional gaps (Cantwell & Mudambi, Reference Cantwell and Mudambi2011; Johanson & Vahlne, Reference Johanson and Vahlne2009).
Drawn as they are from an exploratory study, each of these insights warrants further theoretical elaboration and empirical testing.
The Colonial Metropole Offers and Extremely Attractive First Step in Internationalization for Firms from Post-Colonial Frontier Economies
The firms interviewed all chose to internationalize first to France because it offered markets, capital, knowledge, legitimacy, all in a familiar setting. Old colonial ties, including shared language, shared institutions, shared culture, direct transportation links, diasporas, cross-border multinationals and more, seem to provide a direct connection from frontier and emerging to developed markets. While there exists some evidence that firms in former colonies trade more than expected with the colonial metropole (Makino & Tsang, Reference Makino and Tsang2011), there is a need for more specific research into the role of colonial ties in shaping internationalization trajectories, and into the mechanisms – whether hard such as transportation links or soft such as culture or social networks – that influence the interplay between firms from former colonies and the colonizing country.
Looking beyond the first step of internationalization, it might be productive to explore whether and how the colonial legacy affects subsequent steps. For example, none of the firms interviewed talked explicitly about joining global value chains, although Misfat Filtration clearly built upon their experience in the automotive value chain and BGFI specifically sought to join the global finance network before relaunching into Africa. But even if they learned from participation in global value chains, neither Misfat nor BGFI followed the chain around the developed world: Rather, both went to France and then to Africa, and in Misfat's case, on to Poland and Russia. Their trajectories, along with those of Outsourcia and Talent2Africa (to France and then to Africa), suggest the possibility of a ‘boomerang’ effect, such that firms internationalize first to the colonial center and then follow social, linguistic, and institutional gradients back to countries that were themselves colonies under the same regime, rather than following more conventional value chain-based or proximity-based trajectories.
Gaining Legitimacy is a Critical Component of Upgrading Capabilities during the Internationalization Process
The search for legitimacy, and the credible signaling of legitimacy based on a claim to a ‘second home’ in an advanced economy, seem to be both important, and as yet underappreciated, steps in the internationalization process. Such legitimacy is important because a firm's ability to earn and maintain legitimacy and so a ‘license to stay’ (Boddewyn, Reference Boddewyn1995) has been shown to be a threshold condition for firm success in a host country and also a source of credibility as the firm strives to enter new countries (Kostova et al., Reference Kostova, Roth and Dacin2008). There is ample opportunity to explore how firms from frontier and emerging markets might best earn legitimacy, for example, through active advocacy (Pant & Ramachandran, Reference Pant and Ramachandran2012) or conscious choice of legitimacy-generating products and services (Darendeli & Hill, Reference Darendeli and Hill2016), and also signal legitimacy, for example, by association with credible countries or customers. And of course, it is important to test whether earned and signaled legitimacy actually increase the speed and/or success of internationalization efforts.
Social Networks Seem to Complement Business Networks in Guiding Internationalization Trajectories
The firms in our study chose France as the first place to internationalize in part because the shared language and colonial heritage ensured that the former colonial center felt remarkably familiar – as reflected in the old adage that ‘Morocco is a tree with roots in Africa and its trunk and branches in Europe’. That is, the perception of commonalities often proves more important than more objective measures of distance or of border effects (Beugelsdijk & Mudambi, Reference Beugelsdijk and Mudambi2013; Williams & Grégoire, Reference Williams and Grégoire2013), and many of the respondents commented specifically on the influence of familiarity and social networks developed during university in making the choice to internationalize to France. This insight complements recent emphasis on the role of business networks in enabling internationalization (Vahlne & Johanson, Reference Vahlne and Johanson2017) and, as in the Talent2Africa interview, highlights the role of the Francophone African diaspora in facilitating business in France. In both emerging and frontier economies, culturally competent, boundary-spanning individuals play an essential, entrepreneurial role in making internationalization happen (Sarasvathy et al., Reference Sarasvathy, Kumar, York and Bhagavatula2014) by crossing institutional and cultural distances, searching out opportunities and resources, building relationships in new countries, and facilitating learning (Saxenian, Reference Saxenian2005, Reference Saxenian2007; Vahlne & Johanson, Reference Vahlne and Johanson2017).
Such individuals have been shown to embody flows of capabilities, knowledge, and resources that enable internationalization (Kuznetsov, Reference Kuznetsov2006; Schotter & Abdelzaher, Reference Schotter and Abdelzaher2013; Schotter et al., Reference Schotter, Mudambi, Doz and Gaur2017), while providing the insider connections into an economy and society that are necessary for building inroads into new markets (Riddle, Hrivnak, & Nielsen, Reference Riddle, Hrivnak and Nielsen2010). As promising as the role of diasporas in internationalization may be (Kuznetsov, Reference Kuznetsov2006), actually connecting the business and social networks of African and developed countries can be quite challenging, even for boundary-spanning individuals (Mayer, Harima, & Freiling, Reference Mayer, Harima and Freiling2015), whose willingness and ability to connect depends on their feelings for their countries of origin and residence (Barnard & Pendock, Reference Barnard and Pendock2013); business and knowledge types and strength of specific interpersonal ties (Levin & Barnard, Reference Levin and Barnard2013); and serendipity (Lorenzen & Mudambi, Reference Lorenzen and Mudambi2013).
There is opportunity to combine the research on the role of diasporas in internationalization with the details about the role of the Francophone African diaspora in facilitating flows of information and resources both to explain the lingering lure of the colonial metropole and to develop a more robust understanding of networks and insidership in internationalization. Further, it is also possible that diasporas may serve to create hierarchical links that act in a very similar manner to colonial links. For instance, the hierarchical knowledge connectivity between the Indian diaspora in Silicon Valley and the home country (India) may operate in a manner similar to that between the various African diasporas in France and their respective (former colonial) home countries.
Towards a Process Model of Internationalization of Firms from Postcolonial Frontier Economies
Although much research remains to be done into each of the insights suggested in this paper, the combination of insights suggest a nascent process model of postcolonial internationalization consisting of three steps: 1) The development of resources and competitive advantage in the home country; 2) internationalization to the colonial metropole to expand markets, assemble resources, develop capabilities, and especially build legitimacy; and 3) further expansion, often back into Africa to neighboring countries, enroute to becoming a global competitor.
We argue that the experience of Francophone Africa is particularly relevant to study the metropolitan effect. French colonial rule was ‘erected on an ethnocentric assimilationist paradigm that refused to interpret culture as a dynamic process and, accordingly, to incorporate African cultural elements, preferring instead to dismiss, repudiate, and systematically erase African identity’ (Thomas, Reference Thomas2007: 9). This implied a model of totally assimilating the native population through the establishment of institutions (educational, administrative, legal, etc.) and systems (financial, infrastructures, etc.) that mirrored those in the home country. This contrasted sharply with the approach of the British colonial administrators who thought ‘it was their task to conserve what was good in indigenous institutions and assist them to develop on their own lines’ (Crowder, Reference Crowder1964: 198). The contrasting approaches of the two leading colonial powers expressed themselves in distinctly different administrative structures. The assimilative approach of the French was largely implemented through a system of direct rule, while the British largely used a system of indirect rule (Whittlesey, Reference Whittlesey1937). Lesser colonial powers like the Netherlands (e.g., in Indonesia) and Belgium (e.g., in the Congo), as well as colonial powers whose influence declined much earlier like Spain and Portugal (e.g., in Latin America) provide further opportunities to study the influence of context on the metropolitan effect.
Developing and testing this model would be useful both as an aid to understanding frontier economy firm choices but also as a guide to policy. Given the business and institutional voids associated with the frontier economy environments, including the lack of connectivity to global value chains, it may take more than having special resources or competitive advantages for ambitious African firms to succeed in the international arena. The key to success may well be the resources and capabilities, especially legitimacy, gained from leveraging the well-worn paths of education, migration, and even physical infrastructure to succeed in the former colonial power. In turn, these resources and legitimacy can then be leveraged to support internationalization into other countries, including both neighbors in Africa and emerging and developed countries across the globe.
Finally, the scale and impact of the metropolitan effect is likely to vary substantially across former colonial powers. As we have argued, the evidence suggests that the effects are particularly strong and wide-ranging in the case of Francophone Africa. However, a very large percentage of current emerging and frontier economies are associated with one or other metropolitan center, either through old colonial ties or links generated through various economic and geopolitical spheres of influence. This suggests that the metropolitan effect is likely to apply and provide valuable insights into internationalization of firms from a wide range of country contexts.