Journal of Business Models (2018), Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 44-48

44

Value, What Value? University Business Model in 
Pursuit of Advanced Internationalization  

Anita Juho1

Romeo V. Turcan2

1 University of Oulu, Finland; Babson College, US
2 Aalborg University, DK

Abstract

Through business model theoretical lenses, we explore challenges universities face in 
their pursuit of advanced internationalization into foreign markets. This is a concep-
tual paper. Based on theoretical and empirical insights we conjecture that advanced 
internationalization of universities is unethical, calling for a revision of business model 
theory to incorporate ethics.

Please cite this paper as: Juho A., Turcan R.V. (2018), Value, What Value? University Business Model in Pursuit of Advanced Internation-
alization, Journal of Business Models, Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 44-48

Keywords: Advanced Internationalization, University Autonomy, Business Model, Ethics

Introduction
Through business model theoretical lenses, we explore 
in this paper issues and challenges universities face in 
their pursuit of advanced internationalization into for-
eign markets. The context of this paper is defined by 
universities from developed countries entering devel-
oping or emerging countries via advanced international 
entry modes, such as joint ventures, acquisitions, green 
field or brown field investments. 

Fifteen-twenty years ago, universities from devel-
oped countries ‘jumped on the bandwagon’ of higher 
education internationalization and globalization. They 

entered developing and emerging countries by entering 
joint-venture agreements, acquiring existing facilities 
or building brand new campuses to deliver joint pro-
grammes at Bachelor and Master levels. This period is 
also characterised by massive withdrawal or de-inter-
nationalisation of these universities from the foreign 
markets they initially entered by closing down cam-
puses or exiting the joint-venture partnerships (Turcan 
and Gulieva, 2016a). 

In our paper we conjecture that one of the key reasons 
for exiting foreign markets is due to the incompatibility 



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between the business model university adopts to create, 
deliver, and capture  value (Massa et al., 2017)—in this 
context, academic value – within its national borders 
and the business model it adopts for the same purpose 
in the foreign target market. 

Approach
This is a theoretical paper. We draw on a number of 
sources of data to conceptualise issues and challenges 
universities face in their pursuit of advanced interna-
tionalization into foreign markets. First, we build on 
university autonomy, international business and busi-
ness model theories to conceptualise the phenomenon 
of interest. Second, we analyse publicly available data, 
anecdotal evidence where the phenomenon we study is 
explicitly observable. 

Empirical research of this phenomenon is virtually 
non-existent. Mainly, this is due to the fact that the 
academic autonomy in the developing foreign tar-
get markets is limited, involving “background, subtle, 
political and social pressures which may, nevertheless, 
exert a powerful influence” (Turcan et al. 2016),p.240). 
Even international scholars from developed countries 
are reluctant or cannot share their experience as “a 
measure of direct or effective censorship or recognition 
of the sensitivities of colleagues, institutions, and/or 
governments to what they might say” (Turcan et al., 
2016, 240). The following quotes from Turcan et al. 
(2016, p. 240) capture best these issues and challenges:

• “I can’t send you my contribution due to the formal 
organizational reasons”;

• “my [university] senior management informed me 
that they did not wish me to go ahead with the 
chapter I had proposed”;

• “the material was planned to be quite criti-
cal, but it can’t be approved by my [university] 
administration”;

• “I am being held up by the need for others to check 
what I send out and what I make public and/or 
keep private”;

• “there would have been nothing of any significance 
left”;

• “the rules in my [university] dramatically changed 
since I agreed to contribute, and now . . . it must be 
approved by the administration”;

• “I was strongly advised not to proceed”;
• “[the administration] may not be happy about 

everything I write becoming available in the public 
domain.”

Key Insights
The business model universities adopt within their 
national borders to create, deliver and capture aca-
demic – teaching, research, and knowledge dissemina-
tion – value rests on four pillars of academic freedom. 
These pillars are: organisational autonomy, financial 
autonomy, staffing autonomy, and academic auton-
omy (EUA, 2007). Organisational autonomy refers 
to a university’s freedom to decide on its own struc-
tures, contracts, election of decision-making bodies, 
and staff. Financial autonomy refers to a university’s 
freedom to acquire and allocate funding, decide on tui-
tion fees, and accumulate surplus. Staffing autonomy 
refers to a university’s freedom to recruit, set salaries, 
and promote its staff. Academic autonomy refers to a 
university’s freedom to decide on awarding degrees, 
curriculum and methods of teaching, as well as on 
areas, scope, aims, and methods of research. 

These four pillars of academic freedom define a univer-
sity, its vision, its mission, what it stands for. Within the 
business model theory, the expected enduring question 
is whether a business model a university adopts within 
its national borders can be transferred as-is or adapted 
to a target, emerging foreign country in the pursuit 
of advanced internationalization. Wearing university 
autonomy theory lenses on top of business model the-
ory lenses we conjecture that neither is a viable option. 

Transferring own business model as-is to an emerging 
or developing target market might seem an easy option 
in which the process and practices will be repeated in a 
new context. Nonetheless, the main challenge is how 
to ensure organizational, financial, staffing and aca-
demic freedom in an environment that is fundamen-
tally different from the home environment? Concepts 
related to university’s core values such as diversity, 
transparency, integrity, collaboration, and excellence 
may have a different meaning in the home country 
than in the host country. Notably, the host country’s 
legislation may limit some organization structures at 
the university and on the other hand, the legislation 



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46

may force some additional elements to the curricu-
lum, contracts and decision-making processes. It is 
important to notice that implementation of univer-
sity advanced internationalization without people who 
carry the home organization’s “DNA” – hence core busi-
ness model - is impossible and the staff immobility is 
one of the key challenges (Turcan and Gulieva 2016a). 
For example, the authoritarian leadership style, that 
is relatively common in emerging countries, may not 
support the parent institutions values which might 
cause gap both in ethical practice and implementa-
tion of the core processes in terms of all four pillars. 
Cultural differences, such as high power distance, may 
create strong hierarchical structures that will make col-
laboration between faculty and administrative person-
nel challenging or collaboration between faculty and 
leadership team difficult. These challenges may lead 
to lack of support for faculty and be a threat to aca-
demic autonomy and integrity. Hence, if the “DNA” of a 
university cannot be ‘exported’, despite the reason, the 
implementation of the business model as-is, is impos-
sible. For example, in 2005 Warwick University declined 
a generous financial offer from Singapore Government 
to establish a campus there due to concerns over the 
state of human rights and academic freedom in Singa-
pore (Burton, 2005). 

Adapting own business model in the pursuit of 
advanced internationalisation would mean to operate 
changes in the original, home-based organisational, 
financial, staffing and/or academic settings to tailor 
them to the institutional university autonomy set-
tings in a target market; hence make changes to the 
university DNA. Separated from the pillars of academic 
freedom the localization of the curriculum as sug-
gested by Turcan and Gulieva (2016a) is important to 
create the value for the students and local industry, but 
the university should not compromise on key aspects 
of own academic autonomy, freedom, mission, and 
vision. Confusion about the level of control and depth 
of adaptation may lead to unethical outcomes such as 
discrimination, nepotism, corruption, inequality among 
the students, and low quality of teaching or motiva-
tional problems from the parent organization’s per-
spective. Adapting the business model challenges the 
hierarchy and the roles between the parent and daugh-
ter organization. Adapting the business model in terms 
of four pillars of academic freedom is too abstract to 

give clear guidelines for the adapted business model 
and therefore the implementation is impossible. If the 
host organization does not have a clear vision of how 
to adapt the culture, processes, and practices of the 
parent organization, the leadership may aim to gain 
short-term victories, such as pleasing students as cus-
tomers at the cost of the quality of academic perfor-
mance. This lowers the quality of the institution and 
leads again to commitment and motivational problems 
among the staff and students. What is the competitive 
advantage if the new international unit is merely like 
any local university rather than following the standards 
of the parent organization? Due to such conflicts with 
the four pillars of academic freedom in the new con-
text, adapting the business model is also impossible.

Universities may have another option to consider. In its 
pursuit of advanced internationalisation to developing 
countries, a university may design a completely new 
business model in cooperation with its foreign partner 
– a new business model that has no resemblance or 
association with the university home-based business 
model. To our knowledge, such empirical reality has 
not been observed or documented yet. Nonetheless, 
this option will be based on a compromise between 
two different, incompatible, conflicting institutional 
university autonomy settings raising concerns of indi-
vidual and university-wide autonomy as well as con-
cerns about the sustainability of university advanced 
internationalization efforts. As discussed above, such 
compromise is not a viable option. 

Discussion and Conclusions
The above theoretical as well as empirical, though 
anecdotal, insights led us to conjecture that advanced 
internationalization of universities is unethical. Emerg-
ing economies with growing middle class and growing 
young population may look like a low hanging fruit for 
universities seeking growth from overseas, but imple-
mentation of a university business model in pursuit of 
advanced internationalization is challenging. Universi-
ties that do adopt foreign direct investment mode of 
internationalisation and realize – though post-interna-
tionalisation – the ethical dilemma they face decide to 
divest or de-internationalize their international opera-
tions and return home to create, deliver and capture 
the value within the national borders employing the 



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47

traditional, proven business model. However, with-
drawing the international operations is easier said 
than done. Having invested in a high risk, high cost 
and high commitment entry mode, de-international-
izing or divesting from an international market is an 
arduous decision to make. Due to project, psychologi-
cal, social and organizational factors that respective 
universities are exposed to, these universities tend 
to escalate their commitment to the failing course of 
action (Drummond, 1994). These escalation situations 
include repeated decision making in the face of nega-
tive feedback about prior resource allocations, uncer-
tainty surrounding the likelihood of goal attainment, 
and choice about whether to continue (Brockner, 1992). 
In other words, universities continue investing and 
committing resources to their advanced international 
business model despite negative feedback that ema-
nates from its external and internal environments and 
stakeholders. 

Investing in and developing a university campus, branch, 
or joint venture is a long process as instilling a univer-
sity-autonomy-based organization culture takes time 
- especially if the original home country’s culture and 
institutions differ substantially from the host country’s 
culture. From managerial point of view, our conjecture 
acts as a warning for those universities that wish to pur-
sue advance internationalisation business model into 
developing countries. As current noise from the field 
suggests, neither our conjecture nor the above insights 
will however refrain universities from developed coun-
tries to continue ‘jumping and riding the bandwagon’ 
of advanced internationalization into the emerging, 
developing countries. In this case, our theoretical and 
empirical insights could offer number pointers to con-
sider before deciding to pursue advanced internationali-
sation as well as to aid decision makers in designing an 
advanced internationalisation business model. 

For example, since an advanced entry into a foreign 
market with substantially different, divergent univer-
sity autonomy settings will demand from the start to 
adapt, making changes to the original university busi-
ness model, the internationalizing university will need 
to put in place internal risk and crises management 
policies and respective operating procedures. These 
should be functional before foreign direct investment 
negotiations commence. During and as part of the 
negotiation process, the internationalizing university 
shall insist on developing and agreeing on short-to-
medium term aims, objectives, road maps and respec-
tive action plans all aimed at achieving joint university 
autonomy settings that are internationally accepted 
(see e.g., Estermann and Nokkala, 2009). Proper due 
diligence, feasibility study and evaluation processes 
centred on the four pillars of university autonomy will 
provide a deeper understanding of the target institu-
tional context. Even though careful planning is para-
mount, the implementation is the key denominator 
between success and failure of the university interna-
tionalization process.   

These, ‘jumping-and-riding-the-bandwagon advanced 
internationalization of universities,’ as well as other 
recent trends “in politics (the rise of populism and 
nationalism in the EU, Brexit, and the election of the 
USA President), science and technology (GM crops, 
nuclear energy, fracking, global warming, artificial 
intelligence), health (eating disorders, immunization, 
resistance to antibiotics), and society (mass migration, 
extremism, and terrorism) – most of the time with 
negative signs and negative social impact” (Turcan, 
2018) – demand a revision of business model theory to 
include ethical concerns as well as of respective busi-
ness model design strategies, tools and mechanisms 
to accommodate such ethical concerns in the process 
of business model design and innovation.



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