Prof. Anne-Wil Harzing, University of Melbourne
© Copyright 1997 Anne-Wil Harzing. All rights reserved.
Document link: http://www.harzing.com/musings.htm
In this epilogue I would like to give some personal recommendations that could help to improve the quality of (international) management research. The first four recommendations are related to issues that I feel would have greatly facilitated my own research, had they been arranged in the way I suggest.
When I completed my 4-year masters degree in Economics, Business Administration and International Management, the standard period reserved for writing a masters thesis at my university (Maastricht University) was six weeks, a period anyone will agree is too short to do any empirical research. My master’s thesis therefore consisted of a literature review concerning the influence of national culture on organisational change and my PhD project was my first experience ever with doing empirical research. My masters thesis, on the other hand, was my first real experience in conducting a literature study. Some years ago, the standard period has been extended to 13 weeks and many of the students I supervise in writing their masters thesis conduct their own piece of research, however small. After completion, every single one of them tells me how much they learnt from their mistakes (not in the least of course because I make them write an epilogue about this). In most of my courses, I now have students writing papers in which they have to practice in formulating research questions, and have to search for additional literature themselves. Although I am happy to note that this type of academic skills training becomes more and more important at my university, I know only too well that it asks a lot from teaching staff. I would therefore like to plead for a continued attention to this type of teaching activities. Having had more practice in research skills during my masters study, would have definitively facilitated my PhD research.
During my studies, statistics courses were something to take, pass, and forget as soon as possible. Personally, I never saw any relationship between the statistics courses I took, and those funny tables and figures in the academic articles we had to read. I usually skipped those parts of the article, as did nearly all of my costudents. Only when doing my own research, I realised that you could actually do something with the things I forgot from my statistics course, and started to appreciate the statistics in the articles I read. But again, since practice makes perfect, I would have been happy to experience this at an earlier stage. In my work for three different Dutch universities,I noticed that in this respect things have not changed much since I graduated: most students still hate statistics and consider it as something not of this world. Therefore, I now pay specific attention to the statistics in some of the articles we discuss in my own courses. And although most students continue to hate statistics, some of them even become enthusiastic about it. I would therefore like to plead for an integration of statistics in at least some of the courses at universities, so that students stop thinking about statistics as something to be scared of.
Although practising with small-scale (domestic) empirical research and statistics during a masters study, might make the life of a PhD student easier, doing larger scale international research introduces some additional problems, as identified in Chapter 3 of this dissertation. In my opinion too few of the existing PhD programs pay attention to these specific problems. This is not surprising, since many professors teaching at these programs might not have experience in doing international research themselves. In my contacts with other doctoral students, I have encountered a lot that felt they were all alone at their university/department in paying attention to international issues. I would therefore recommend setting up a yearly workshop/seminar for doctoral students, that introduces them in the basic problems of doing international research. Ideally, this should be conducted by one of the international professional organisations such as AIB (Academy of International Business) or EIBA (European International Business Academy). These yearly workshops would also be ideal opportunities for doctoral students to form the international networks that are so vital in doing international research. Although I recently started a Young Academics Email Network (a discussion group of some 25 young academics from all over the world, working in the field of international management), I soon noticed that face-to-face contacts are vital in keeping such a network alive. Since not all students will be able to attend such workshops, the recently published “Handbook for International Management Research” (Punnett & Shenkar, 1996), could be supplemented with a handbook/textbook that discusses more practical issues in international management research.
Although workshops that would give students a basic idea of the problems associated with international research might be very valuable, sometimes you learn more from good (or even bad) examples. Unfortunately, most researchers are not very open about their research process, and are very unlikely to highlight any mistakes they made or deceptions they encountered. This can give junior researchers a very unrealistic picture of doing (international) research. At the 22nd EIBA conference in Stockholm (1996), I presented a paper: “How to survive international mail surveys: an inside story”. I have never had more enthusiastic reactions to a paper! Everyone I spoke to about it commented that more people should write papers like that, so why don’t we just do it? In general, why don’t we give the same openness about our research process as we do about our results? I have tried to be as open and explicit as possible about the considerations and choices made in this dissertation. As a further example - and because I was always curious about this when reading other people’s dissertations - Figure E-1 reproduces the timeline of my own research project. A final issue other doctoral students might be curious about is the cost of the project. Out-of-pocket costs for the total project were about ƒ13,000. The bulk of this consisted of printing and mailing the questionnaires and the company report. These costs were advanced by Maastricht University, but most of them were recuperated by selling specific company reports and by using the knowledge gathered in the project to write professional articles and give lectures.

In addition to these four issues, that would have made my life as a doctoral researcher easier, I have three specific recommendations that follow mainly from my experiences in the literature study:
Harzing, A.W.K. (1995a) “The persistent myth of high expatriate failure rates”, The International Journal of Human Resource Management, vol. 6, May, pp. 457-475.
Harzing, A.W.K. (1995b) “Research Note: an International Bibliography”, European Journal of Industrial Relations, vol 1 (3), pp. 405-412.
Borg, M.; Harzing, A.W.K. (1996) “Karrierepfade und Effektivität internationaler Führungskräfte - Profile und Erfolgspotentiale”, in: Macharzina, K.; Wolf, J. (Hrsg.), Handbuch Internationales Führungskräfte-Management, Stuttgart: RAABE Verlag, pp. 267-278.
Harzing, A.W.K., Hofstede, G. (1996): Planned change in organizations: the influence of national culture, in Bacharach, S.B., Bamberger, P.A., Erez, M.: Research in the Sociology of Organizations: Cross-cultural analysis of organizations, vol. 14, pp. 297-340, Greenwich: JAI Press.
Harzing, A.W.K. (1996a): Environment, Strategy, Structure, Control Mechanisms, and Human Resource Management, Company report of doctoral research project, Maastricht: University of Limburg.
Harzing, A.W.K. (1996b): How to survive international mail surveys: an inside story, Innovation and International Business, Proceedings of the 22nd EIBA conference, vol. 1, pp. 313-339, Stockholm: Stockholm School of Economics, IIB.
Harzing, A.W.K. (1997a): Research note: about the paucity of empirical research in IHRM: A test of Downes framework of staffing foreign subsidiaries, Journal of International Management, vol. 3 no. 2, pp. 153-167.
Harzing, A.W.K. (1997b): Response rates in international mail surveys: Results of a 22 country study, International Business Review, vol. 6 no. 6, pp. 641-665.
Harzing, A.W.K. (1998): MNC staffing policies for the CEO position in foreign subsidiaries: the results of an innovative research method, in: Brewster, C., Harris, H.: International HRM: Contemporary issues in Europe, London: Routledge. [The article listed as under review at MIR in Figure E-1].
Hillman, F., Rudolph, H. (1996): Jenseits des brain drain, WZB Discussion Paper no. FS I 96-103.
Punnett, B.J., Shenkar, O. (1996): Handbook for international management research, Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
Tzeng, R. (1995): International Labor Migration through Multinational Enterprises, International Migration Review, vol. 29 no. 1, pp. 139-145.
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