2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.im.2015.06.008
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Leveraging IT resources, embeddedness, and dependence: A supplier's perspective on appropriating benefits with powerful buyers

Abstract: The relationships between suppliers and buyers are often characterised by power differentials and dependence at the same time. This leads to the ability of a powerful buyer to benefit more from the relationship than the supplier. We examine how a supplier can strengthen its use of relation-specific IT with embeddedness to appropriate its share of relational benefits. We developed and tested a model of supplier relation-specific IT use, embeddedness, and buyer dependence on supplier. The results showed that emb… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
(243 reference statements)
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“…Firstly, advanced and fast IT devices and professional software (or systems), as I predicted, could improve the joint-actions by improving the communication and coordination between firms. Such a finding is similar to Lee and Scott [37] and Chang et al [3], both of which suggest that IT infrastructure resources could improve joint-actions between two parties. Similarly, I find that advanced and fast IT infrastructure resources could enhance both the design of the explicit clauses and the contingent clauses by improving the communication and coordination between firms on the green supply chain.…”
Section: Main Findingssupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…Firstly, advanced and fast IT devices and professional software (or systems), as I predicted, could improve the joint-actions by improving the communication and coordination between firms. Such a finding is similar to Lee and Scott [37] and Chang et al [3], both of which suggest that IT infrastructure resources could improve joint-actions between two parties. Similarly, I find that advanced and fast IT infrastructure resources could enhance both the design of the explicit clauses and the contingent clauses by improving the communication and coordination between firms on the green supply chain.…”
Section: Main Findingssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…This implies that, during joint-actions (i.e., relational governance in this study), the firm would have higher communication and coordination efficiency, and the data and information needed for joint-actions would be easier to access or more abundant. Therefore, based on the high-level communication and coordination, and abundant and well-prepared data and information, the joint-actions between two firms would be more efficient and effective [3,37]. On the other hand, during the design of explicit and contingent contract clauses, highly efficient and effective communication and coordination can create more time and energy for firms to exchange ideas, discuss duties and rights of each party, and consider as many contingencies, situations, and circumstance as possible.…”
Section: The Direct Effects Of It Infrastructure Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Information technology (IT) is a critical organizational resource in cultivating strategically important interfirm relationships (Lee & Scott, 2015). While there is no unanimously agreed-upon definition, IT resources typically include two interrelated elements:…”
Section: Information Technology (It) Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…IT-enabled integration with a strategically important partner (e.g., key supplier) can turn their complementary knowledge and skills into valuable, causally ambiguous, and hard-to-imitate interfirm resources and routines. Consistent with this view, researchers have advocated investigating how IT resources can be deployed to integrate with other resources in an interorganizational setting, which ultimately affects firm performance (Jean et al, 2010;Lee & Scott, 2015;Ryssel et al, 2004).…”
Section: Information Technology (It) Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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