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What Is Internationalisation? A CEOโ€™s Guide to Global Expansion

What Is Internationalisation strategy? A CEOโ€™s Guide to Global Expansion - Maier Vidorno Altios
What Is Internationalisation strategy? A CEOโ€™s Guide to Global Expansion - Maier Vidorno Altios
Key Points

Enter new markets smoothly

In an increasingly fragmented world, internationalisation strategy has become a cornerstone of long-term growth for companies looking to stay competitive and resilient. Whether youโ€™re a CEO in Berlin, a founder in Paris, or a decision-maker in Mumbai, the question remains the same: How can your business successfully expand across borders?

Hereโ€™s a practical, experience-based view on what internationalisation really means โ€” and how to approach it.

Understanding Internationalisation: Vertical vs. Horizontal Growth

Companies typically grow in two ways:

  • Vertically, by innovating new technologies, adding product lines, or moving upstream or downstream in the supply chain.
  • Horizontally, by selling existing products or services to new international markets โ€” the essence of internationalisation.

While vertical growth is resource-intensive and often unpredictable, horizontal internationalisation offers a more direct path to revenue expansion โ€” if done right.

Two Proven Paths to Internationalise

1. Accelerated Growth via Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A)

This is the fastest route to international markets. Through mergers and acquisitions, companies can:
โ€ข Acquire established infrastructure
โ€ข Inherit a local sales network and client base
โ€ข Enter new geographies without building from scratch

However, M&A is capital-intensive. Acquiring a company with โ‚ฌ5โ€“10 million in revenue may require an investment of โ‚ฌ10โ€“20 million, based on revenue or profit multiples and market position.

2. Organic Growth: The Classic Approach

More sustainable and flexible, organic growth involves setting up your own operations abroad. Typically, it begins by:

  • Hiring local talent who understand the regional market
  • Equipping them with the tools they need โ€” laptops, phones, office infrastructure
  • Setting up a local legal entity (e.g. GmbH in Germany, Ltd in the UK, SAS in France)
  • Managing sales, delivery, and payment flow from client to headquarters
    For companies not ready to establish a legal presence, partner-based employment models (like incubation or payroll hosting) offer a lighter, risk-mitigated entry strategy.

Execution: From Planning to Performance

Every internationalisation strategy should begin with structured planning:

  • Which region: Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, or the Middle East?
  • Which country offers the best fit?
  • Do you build or buy your presence?
  • Whatโ€™s the budget and timeline?

Once your market is selected, the execution phase kicks in โ€” from recruitment and compliance to logistics and customer delivery. The final stage focuses on performance: tracking KPIs, aligning with business goals, and iterating when necessary.

Your Strategic Partner in Internationalisation

Internationalisation is not a one-off event โ€” itโ€™s a journey. From strategic planning to post-entry support, companies need the right advisory partner to:

  • Identify promising markets
  • Execute a market entry strategy efficiently
  • Optimise results with local insight

Whether youโ€™re buying a business or scaling up organically, partnering with experienced internationalisation experts ensures you avoid costly missteps.

Whether you’re looking to accelerate through M&A or build step-by-step with organic growth, the right approach depends on clarity, commitment, and the ability to adapt.

Looking to expand your business globally? Letโ€™s talk. Weโ€™re here to guide you every step of the way.

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/Ready to elevate your business to the global stage? Our white paper, Expansion 101 , is your comprehensive guide to international success. Learn practical strategies, essential market insights, and tips on navigating regulations and trade barriers.

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