Abstract
Subsidiary managers' decisions to pursue initiatives for innovative product introductions in their host markets provide opportunities for rent creation, but also bear risks for the multinational corporation (MNC). However, we lack insights into which factors drive such decisions. Grounded in behavioral agency theory, our study investigates which factors at the individual level, the corporate level, and the subsidiary's implementation context increase subsidiary managers' likelihood of initiative pursuit. We propose that an individual manager's capability and the MNC's entrepreneurial orientation serve as reference points in a specific implementation context. Based on a stated-choice experiment with 799 respondents, results show that subsidiary managers' likelihood to pursue an innovation initiative varies depending on the context, and the choice of implementation mode activates subsidiary managers' gain frames. Our findings advance theory by providing granularity on the situational complexity across multiple methodological levels that instigate subsidiary managers' initiative pursuit.