Selection and Preparation for Foreign Assignments 105
awareness and orientation programmes
before they go overseas, although
profound culture shock, compounded by
the inability to recognize it, to come
to terms with it and to make the necessary cultural adaptations, has been
identified as a major cause of the failure of many overseas assignments.
Expatriate failure can be defined as the premature
return home before
the period of the assignment is completed. It should be emphasized that
expatriation is for many a major life change that puts individuals at risk of
psychological difficulties. Three significant life events are involved:
changing
culture, changing jobs and changing accommodation. International assign-
ment failures usually result more from an employee’s or the family’s failure
to adjust to the new culture than from any business issues. Tung (1998)
cites
the following reasons for expatriate failure:
The manager’s inability to adapt to a different physical or cultural envi-
ronment.
The inability of the manager’s spouse/family to adapt to a different
physical or cultural environment.
The manager’s personality or emotional immaturity.
The manager’s inability to cope with the responsibilities
presented by
overseas work.
The manager’s lack of motivation to work overseas.
In 1993, the Shell Expatriate Survey ‘Outlook’ found that the major areas of
concern related to the problems associated with moving overseas on assign-
ment were:
children’s education
and separation of families;
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