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Intercultural interactions in multinational subsidiaries: Employee accounts of “the dark side” and “the bright side” of intercultural contacts

Malgorzata Rozkwitalska (Faculty of Finance and Management, WSB University in Gdansk, Gdansk, Poland)
Michal Chmielecki (Faculty of Management, University of Social Sciences, Lodz, Poland)
Sylwia Przytula (Faculty of Management, Computer Science and Finance, Wroclaw University of Economics, Wroclaw, Poland)
Lukasz Sulkowski (Faculty of Management, University of Social Sciences, Lodz, Poland)
Beata Aleksandra Basinska (Faculty of Management and Economics, Gdansk University of Technology, Gdansk, Poland)

Baltic Journal of Management

ISSN: 1746-5265

Article publication date: 3 April 2017

1183

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to show how individuals perceive the quality of intercultural interactions at work in multinational subsidiaries and to address the question of what actually prevails in their accounts, i.e., “the dark side” or “the bright side.”

Design/methodology/approach

The authors report the findings from five subsidiaries located in Poland and interviews with 68 employees of these companies.

Findings

The “bright side” dominated the interviewees’ accounts. The phenomenon of high social identity complexity or common in-group identity can help explain the findings. The results also shed some new light on the associations between the context of subsidiaries and the perception of the quality of intercultural interactions.

Research limitations/implications

The paper contributes to the literature on cultural diversity and intercultural interactions in multinational subsidiaries. As the “bright side” of interactions was emphasized in the interviews, it particularly supports positive cross-cultural scholarship studies. Yet the explorative research does not allow for a broader generalization of the results.

Practical implications

Managers of multinational corporations (MNCs) should do the following: shape the context of MNCs to influence the dynamics of intercultural interactions and the way they are seen by their employees; emphasize common in-group identity to help their employees to adopt more favorable attitudes toward intercultural interactions; look for individuals with multicultural identity who display more positive approaches to intercultural contacts; place emphasis on recruiting individuals fluent in the MNC’s functional language; offer language training for the staff; and recruit employees with significant needs for development who will perceive more opportunities in intercultural contacts.

Social implications

The research demonstrates that the multicultural workplace of MNCs may be recognized by employees as activating the positive potential of the individuals and organizations that make up a society.

Originality/value

The accounts of intercultural interactions are analyzed to illuminate some significant foundations of how individuals perceive such interactions. The study provides a qualitative lens and highlights the positive approach to intercultural interactions. It may redress the imbalance in prior research and satisfy the need for positive cross-cultural scholarship.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors report the empirical findings from the first stage of the project financed by National Science Centre in Poland (the research Grant No. DEC-2013/09/B/HS4/00498, entitled “Cross-cultural interactions in foreign subsidiaries of multinational corporations – traditional and Positive Organizational Scholarship approaches”).

Citation

Rozkwitalska, M., Chmielecki, M., Przytula, S., Sulkowski, L. and Basinska, B.A. (2017), "Intercultural interactions in multinational subsidiaries: Employee accounts of “the dark side” and “the bright side” of intercultural contacts", Baltic Journal of Management, Vol. 12 No. 2, pp. 214-239. https://doi.org/10.1108/BJM-11-2015-0215

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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