Ian Stuart and David McCutcheon
International Journal of Operations & Production Management
1996, Vol. 16, No. 10, 5-22
1) Supplier alliances
- a) Dynamic relationships, so require dynamic governance
- b) Older partnerships develop wider involvement and produce better results
- c) Alliances can maintain some degree of control over external work
- d) Prerequisites for alliance formation:
- i) Similar strategic and organizational objectives
- ii) Similar values and philosophies
iii) The partner’s ownership of technical resources which can assist the other
- iv) A willingness to share information
- v) A belief that collaboration is mutually beneficial
- vi) A measurement system to share and assess the benefits
- e) 3 stages to developing cooperative relationships
- i) initializing
- ii) processing
iii) reconfiguration
2) Hypotheses
- a) Productivity gains attributed to the alliance relationship will improve over time
- b) Competitive advantage attributed to the alliance relationship will improve over time
- c) Productivity gains attributed to the relationship varies with the strength of the alliance
- d) Competitive advantage attributed to relationship varies with the strength of the alliance
3) Findings
- a) Only weak support for time’s effect on improving results
- i) They may improve, but not necessarily more so than normal buyer-supplier relationships
- b) The degree of alliance could be predicted by the purchasing philosophy
- c) The degree of alliance could predict the purchasing philosophy
4) Dynamic requirements for building alliances
- a) Trust is key
- b) Commitments increase through movement towards single-sourcing
- c) Information exchange is key
- i) Planning information
(1) Better information about demand helps the other part to plan better
- ii) Performance feedback
iii) Technological assistance
5) Key points
- a) Willingness to share important information is a primary basis of trust, without which the alliance is unlikely to succeed
- b) Performance feedback may increase commitment
- c) Long-run success is dependent on a two-way flow of information