Competitor actions, customer integration, and supply chain responsiveness: A contingency–capability-based view

Conventional wisdom suggests that market forces such as competitor aggressiveness and competitor innovativeness induce supply chain responsiveness. However, this assertion does not only lack empirical evidence but also the mechanisms that explain the supply chain responsiveness effects of market for...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of inter-organizational relationships (Print) Vol. 28; no. 1-2; pp. 35 - 49
Main Authors Ataburo, Henry, Anin, Emmanuel Kwabena, Ampong, Getrude Effah, Muntaka, Abdul Samed
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia Taylor & Francis LLC 03.04.2022
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Summary:Conventional wisdom suggests that market forces such as competitor aggressiveness and competitor innovativeness induce supply chain responsiveness. However, this assertion does not only lack empirical evidence but also the mechanisms that explain the supply chain responsiveness effects of market forces are under-theorized. Drawing on the contingency–capability perspective, this research develops and tests the argument that customer integration is a critical boundary-spanning capability that translates competitor aggressiveness and innovativeness into enhanced supply chain responsiveness. Empirical results based on survey data from 117 firms in Ghana reveal that both market forces are not directly related to supply chain responsiveness. Additional results, however, show that customer integration mediates the competitor aggressiveness and innovativeness-supply chain responsiveness relationships. In contributing to the limited knowledge of the determinants of responsive supply chains, this article shows that external environmental factors are essential but might be insufficient for accounting for the heterogeneity in supply chain responsiveness.
ISSN:2694-3980
2694-3999
DOI:10.1080/26943980.2022.2100859