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How expat-preneurs make decisions - the role of intuition

Author

Listed:
  • Nicole A. Yeung
  • Marta Sinclair

Abstract

Expatriate entrepreneurs (expat-preneurs) are a group of unique people who voluntarily move countries and benefit from entrepreneurial activities. Despite the growing volume of literature dedicated to conceptualising expat-preneurs, little attention has been dedicated to understanding their decision-making patterns. The purpose of this paper is to establish a preliminary view of how expat-preneurs make decisions with a particular emphasis on intuitive decision-making. The exploratory case study used an inductive approach by analysing qualitative interview data from expat-preneurs working in Hong Kong. The findings demonstrated that expat-preneurs frequently use intuition, sometimes in combination with analytical decision-making and revealed more fine-grained insights into how both styles interact. Specifically, data identified that expat-preneurial decision-making processes are predicated on contextual factors such as time dichotomy, decision-making maturity, decision magnitude, intuitive sensing and external stimulus. This study is the first attempt to explore expat-preneurial decision-making processes at the intersection of entrepreneurship, international entrepreneurship and intuition decision-making literature. Based on the findings, the occurrence of 'slow' and 'fast' intuition was identified and their relationships with expert and creative intuition were examined. As a result, it is proposed that entrepreneurial intuition is regarded as a form of professional context rather than a type of intuition.

Suggested Citation

  • Nicole A. Yeung & Marta Sinclair, 2025. "How expat-preneurs make decisions - the role of intuition," International Journal of Management and Decision Making, Inderscience Enterprises Ltd, vol. 24(3), pages 288-314.
  • Handle: RePEc:ids:ijmdma:v:24:y:2025:i:3:p:288-314
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