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Author(s)

Benjamin F. Jones

Daniel Campbell

Winner of the 2014 EFMD competition for best African Business case.

In the 1990s, two entrepreneurs made daring, early entries into mobile telecommunications in Sub-Saharan Africa, both seeing great market opportunities there. One firm, Adesemi, would ultimately go bankrupt. The other firm, Celtel, would ultimately succeed and make its founder, Mo Ibrahim, a star of the global business community. Why the difference in outcome? Emerging markets often present weak rule of law, bringing many challenges to business success from the demand for bribes to regulatory obstacles, hold-up problems, and even civil war. This case explores strategies that can limit these critical non-market risks in foreign direct investment and entrepreneurship. Students will step into the shoes of both companies by exploring their entry strategies, wrestling with the challenges they faced, and diagnosing the reasons why a shared insight about a new business opportunity turned out to be prescient and led to extremely different endpoints.

Date Published: 02/25/2014
Discipline: Entrepreneurship
Key Concepts: Board of Directors, Competitive Strategy, Cross-Cultural Relations, Entrepreneurial Finance, Entrepreneurship, Ethics, General Management, Global Strategy, Government Policy, Information Technology, International Business, Leadership, Politics, Reputation
Citations: Jones, Benjamin F., Daniel Campbell. Mobile Telecommunications: Two Entrepreneurs Enter Africa. 5-413-758 (KEL805).