Information Technology, Incentives, and the Optimal Number of Suppliers
Buyers are transfonning their relationships with suppliers. For example, instead of playing off dozens or even hundreds of competing suppliers against one another, many finns are finding it more profitable to work closely with only a small number of "partners." In this paper we explore som...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of management information systems 1993-10, Vol.10 (2), p.37-53 |
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description | Buyers are transfonning their relationships with suppliers. For example, instead of playing off dozens or even hundreds of competing suppliers against one another, many finns are finding it more profitable to work closely with only a small number of "partners." In this paper we explore some causes and consequences of this transfonnation. We apply the economic theory of incomplete contracts to detetmine the optimal strategy for a buyer. We find that the buyer finn will often maximize profits by limiting its options and reducing its own bargaining power. This may seem paradoxical in an age of cheap communications costs and aggressive competition. However, unlike earlier models that focused on coordination costs, we focus on the critical importance of providing incentives for suppliers. Our results spring from the need to make it worthwhile for suppliers to invest in "noncontractibles" such as innovation, responsiveness, and information sharing. Such incentives will often be stronger when the number of competing suppliers is small. The findings of the theoretical models appear to be consistent with observations from empirical research which highlight the key role of information technology in enabling this transformation. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1080/07421222.1993.11517999 |
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Yannis ; Brynjolfsson, Erik</creator><creatorcontrib>Bakos, J. Yannis ; Brynjolfsson, Erik</creatorcontrib><description>Buyers are transfonning their relationships with suppliers. For example, instead of playing off dozens or even hundreds of competing suppliers against one another, many finns are finding it more profitable to work closely with only a small number of "partners." In this paper we explore some causes and consequences of this transfonnation. We apply the economic theory of incomplete contracts to detetmine the optimal strategy for a buyer. We find that the buyer finn will often maximize profits by limiting its options and reducing its own bargaining power. This may seem paradoxical in an age of cheap communications costs and aggressive competition. However, unlike earlier models that focused on coordination costs, we focus on the critical importance of providing incentives for suppliers. Our results spring from the need to make it worthwhile for suppliers to invest in "noncontractibles" such as innovation, responsiveness, and information sharing. Such incentives will often be stronger when the number of competing suppliers is small. The findings of the theoretical models appear to be consistent with observations from empirical research which highlight the key role of information technology in enabling this transformation.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0742-1222</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1557-928X</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1080/07421222.1993.11517999</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Armonk, N.Y: Routledge</publisher><subject>Aircraft industry ; Bargaining power ; buyer-supplier relationships ; Cost efficiency ; Cost incentives ; Costs ; Economic costs ; Economic models ; Economic theory ; Hypotheses ; Incentives ; incomplete contracts ; Information sharing ; Information storage and retrieval systems ; Information systems ; Information technology ; intercorporate coordination ; interorganizational systems ; Marginal costs ; Outsourcing ; Purchasing ; Special Section: Strategic and Competitive Information Systems ; Studies ; Suppliers ; Technological innovation ; Tradeoffs</subject><ispartof>Journal of management information systems, 1993-10, Vol.10 (2), p.37-53</ispartof><rights>1993 by M. 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Yannis</au><au>Brynjolfsson, Erik</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Information Technology, Incentives, and the Optimal Number of Suppliers</atitle><jtitle>Journal of management information systems</jtitle><date>1993-10-01</date><risdate>1993</risdate><volume>10</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>37</spage><epage>53</epage><pages>37-53</pages><issn>0742-1222</issn><eissn>1557-928X</eissn><abstract>Buyers are transfonning their relationships with suppliers. For example, instead of playing off dozens or even hundreds of competing suppliers against one another, many finns are finding it more profitable to work closely with only a small number of "partners." In this paper we explore some causes and consequences of this transfonnation. We apply the economic theory of incomplete contracts to detetmine the optimal strategy for a buyer. We find that the buyer finn will often maximize profits by limiting its options and reducing its own bargaining power. This may seem paradoxical in an age of cheap communications costs and aggressive competition. However, unlike earlier models that focused on coordination costs, we focus on the critical importance of providing incentives for suppliers. Our results spring from the need to make it worthwhile for suppliers to invest in "noncontractibles" such as innovation, responsiveness, and information sharing. Such incentives will often be stronger when the number of competing suppliers is small. The findings of the theoretical models appear to be consistent with observations from empirical research which highlight the key role of information technology in enabling this transformation.</abstract><cop>Armonk, N.Y</cop><pub>Routledge</pub><doi>10.1080/07421222.1993.11517999</doi><tpages>17</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Aircraft industry Bargaining power buyer-supplier relationships Cost efficiency Cost incentives Costs Economic costs Economic models Economic theory Hypotheses Incentives incomplete contracts Information sharing Information storage and retrieval systems Information systems Information technology intercorporate coordination interorganizational systems Marginal costs Outsourcing Purchasing Special Section: Strategic and Competitive Information Systems Studies Suppliers Technological innovation Tradeoffs |
title | Information Technology, Incentives, and the Optimal Number of Suppliers |
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