Abstract
In this chapter, I provide an overview of firm-level results from a comparative case study conducted in two large, mature emerging market multinational enterprises (Firm A and Firm B). I aim to identify the international staffing approaches these firms employ in response to the challenges presented to them by the emerging market context and establish why they approach international staffing in a particular way, what types of international employee mobilities they choose to use, and how they manage managerial international assignments. I first present the characteristics of the two sample firms. I then present the international staffing approaches used in these firms for top managerial posts across their networks as well as the shifts in these approaches during the 2012–2017 period for which detailed data on individual managers’ international transfers is available in the firms’ annual reports (see Sect.
6.1). I continue the chapter with a discourse analysis that provides insights into firm-level rationalisations of the international staffing strategies and practices by emerging market firms (see Sect.
6.2). An outline of the types of international employee mobilities that such firms employ (according to duration, purpose, direction, location, and category of host entity) follows (see Sect.
6.3). The chapter ends with a presentation of the main challenges related to managing managerial international assignments and the organisational responses to them (see Sect.
6.4).