Listen "Stereotypes as Strategic Assets (Schmid & Froese, 2025) | FT50 JOM"
Episode Synopsis
English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:13:55Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:30:35German Podcast Starts at 00:43:30ReferenceSchmid, J. S., & Froese, F. J. (2025). Stereotypes as Strategic Assets: How Expatriates Navigate Discrimination to Build Advantage. Journal of Management, 1-26. https://doi.org/10.1177/01492063251389880Youtube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherConnect over linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️—the place where big ideas leave the footnotes and step into the spotlight.Today’s episode dives into a paper that flips a familiar script:“Stereotypes as Strategic Assets: How Expatriates Navigate Discrimination to Build Advantage”by Julia Sophie Schmid and Fabian Jintae Froese 🌍🧠This isn’t from just any journal—it’s from the Journal of Management 🏛️, a prestigious, field-defining outlet proudly ranked on the FT50 journal list 🏆. When research lands here, it’s not background noise—it’s the stuff that shapes how scholars think, how firms act, and how careers move. Published online on 05 December 2025 by SAGE Publications, this article asks a daring question: what if foreignness—usually framed as a liability—can be turned into a strategic advantage?The authors interview 102 German expatriates working in China, Korea, and Japan 🇨🇳🇰🇷🇯🇵. Instead of treating stereotyping and discrimination as purely negative, they zoom in on a more uncomfortable, more intriguing reality: sometimes, stereotypes create a “foreigner bonus” 💡. That can mean immediate trust, privileged access to decision-makers, and doors that open not in spite of being a foreigner, but because of it.But this isn’t a passive story. Expatriates are not just standing there, being stereotyped; they’re performing, managing impressions, and using foreignness as a tool. Through the lens of self-categorization theory and impression management, the paper uncovers three strategic roles that expats step into:🎭 The trustworthy actor – playing up reliability, professionalism, and fairness.📣 The powerful messenger – using the “Western expert” image to amplify their voice.🙃 The cultural clueless foreigner – “not quite getting it” to soften expectations or avoid blame.These aren’t just survival tactics; they’re deliberate performances that bring individual and organizational benefits, often encouraged by local colleagues and superiors. In doing so, the paper reframes foreignness as something situational, relational, and strategically performable—a resource that can be turned on, tuned, and sometimes traded upon.If research like this sparks your thinking—where FT50-level theory meets messy, real-world practice—make sure to subscribe to “Revise and Resubmit” on Spotify 🎧 and hit subscribe on our YouTube channel “Weekend Researcher” 📺. You can also find this show on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast, so wherever you tune in, your next dose of top-tier research is just a tap away.A big thank you to the authors, Julia Sophie Schmid and Fabian Jintae Froese, and to the publisher, SAGE Publications, for bringing this provocative and important work into the scholarly conversation and onto this podcast 🙏.So as you listen, here’s the question to keep in mind:🤔 When you look at how “foreignness” or “otherness” works in your own organization or context, are you only seeing the costs—or are there hidden, strategic advantages being quietly performed, exploited, or overlooked right in front of you?
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