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Alliance management capability: the roles of alliance control and strength of ties

Olivier Mamavi (ICD Business School, Paris, France)
Olivier Meier (Université Paris Est – IRG, Paris, France)
Romain Zerbib (ICD Business School, Paris, France)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 16 November 2015

1393

Abstract

Purpose

Strategic alliances have a low success rate despite the profusion of literature on this topic in the last 20 years. To understand the factors that determine performance of partnership relations, the purpose of this paper is to study the roles of control and the strength of interorganizational ties in businesses ability to manage strategic alliances.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors have examined 10,377 partnership relations formed as part of strategic alliances to analyze the capacity of a business to manage its alliances. The authors built a structural equations model (PLS) based on observation of 4,242 alliances.

Findings

This research identifies two determinants of the success of alliance management. First, the impact of weak ties and strong ties is identical when the business does not control the alliance. Second, weak ties are a more effective means than strong ties when a business controls the alliance.

Originality/value

The main contribution of this study thus lies in our analysis of interorganizational relations and of their tangible impact on strategic trade-offs. The field of public procurement is particularly well-suited to evaluating this phenomenon, given the subtlety of alliances at play.

Keywords

Citation

Mamavi, O., Meier, O. and Zerbib, R. (2015), "Alliance management capability: the roles of alliance control and strength of ties", Management Decision, Vol. 53 No. 10, pp. 2250-2267. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-04-2015-0123

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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