A Transaction Cost Rationale for Private Branding and Its Implications for the Choice of Domestic vs Offshore Outsourcing

In this study, I take a transaction cost approach to explore the coincidence of private branding with offshore outsourcing - two retail trends that have attracted substantial attention but have never been analyzed concurrently. Retailers now play an increased role in marketing a product to shoppers,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of international business studies 2009-01, Vol.40 (1), p.156-175
1. Verfasser: Chen, Shih-Fen S.
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description In this study, I take a transaction cost approach to explore the coincidence of private branding with offshore outsourcing - two retail trends that have attracted substantial attention but have never been analyzed concurrently. Retailers now play an increased role in marketing a product to shoppers, although their marketing efforts are usually specific to the supplier who brands the product. This is called brand specificity, a special case of asset specificity that drives up the cost of conducting the manufacturer-retailer transaction, especially when the parties are located in different nations. With the right to brand a product being shifted from manufacturers to retailers, private branding can eliminate this problem of brand specificity that inflicts a transaction cost penalty on offshore outsourcing, which is why the two seemingly unrelated retail trends coexist. Data obtained from a national chain reveal that the retailer is more likely to brand a product that needs its marketing efforts, but less motivated to outsource the product offshore before putting a private brand on it. These results establish a transaction cost link between private branding and offshore outsourcing, from which important theoretical and practical implications can be drawn.
doi_str_mv 10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8400419
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source RePEc; SpringerNature Journals; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Brand image
Brand loyalty
Branding
Brands
Business and Management
Business Strategy/Leadership
Business studies
Consumers
Cooperation
Expenditures
House brands
International Business
International market
International trade
Investments
Management
Manufactured products
Marketing
Multinational enterprises
Organization
Outsourcing
Product management
Reputations
Retail stores
Retail trade
Retailing industry
Studies
Subcontracting
Suppliers
Transaction costs
Trends
title A Transaction Cost Rationale for Private Branding and Its Implications for the Choice of Domestic vs Offshore Outsourcing
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