Understanding collaborative supply chain relationships through the application of the Williamson organisational failure framework
International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management
ISSN: 0960-0035
Article publication date: 1 April 2006
Abstract
Purpose
Within the supply chain the need for much closer, long‐term relationships is increasing due to supplier rationalisation and globalisation and more information about these interactions is required. The research specifically tested the well‐accepted Williamson's economic organisations failure framework as a theoretical model through which long‐term collaborative relationships can be viewed.
Design/methodology/approach
An exploratory research project was designed and carried out on a self‐selected census of 54 monopolistic relationships representing £575.8 m annual spend on equipment and associated services within the UK defence procurement organisation (a 10 per cent sample). Its aims were to understand the relationship dynamics within long‐term, sustained monopolies and to determine if generic success factors could be found to assist managers to break out of the essentially negative situation. A triangulated data capture approach was employed using both quantitative and qualitative methods from both the industry and MoD sides of each relationship and the research instruments concentrated on the five dimensions of the theoretical model with questions grounded in the literature.
Findings
The study demonstrated that the theoretical model could provide powerful insights into the research subject and especially revealed the important part played by co‐operation, co‐ordination and collaboration (C3 behaviour) in reducing the inherently negative effects of close proximity and limited choice relationships.
Research limitations/implications
The research has used a narrow view through a specific theoretical model lens to achieve a broad understanding of business relationships within a single, albeit large, organisation.
Practical implications
Managers can reduce sources of frustration that generate negative behaviours by taking joint actions. Central to achieving this is C3 behaviour where setting synchronised objectives, pursuing joint approaches to service and product delivery, lowering costs and risks and promoting measures to support the growth of trust appear to be the best ways of halting negative behaviour spirals.
Originality/value
The prime contribution of this exploratory research is the exposure of relationship dynamics within a large sample of long‐term, collaborative supply chain business dyads using an integrated application of Williamson's organisations failure framework.
Keywords
Citation
Wilding, R. and Humphries, A.S. (2006), "Understanding collaborative supply chain relationships through the application of the Williamson organisational failure framework", International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management, Vol. 36 No. 4, pp. 309-329. https://doi.org/10.1108/09600030610672064
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited