Interfirm Relationships in the Supply Chain: The Small Supplier’s View

The need for global market presence, the complexity of new product development, and the emphasis on core competence are making alliances among firms more important, and recent evidence suggests that these issues are affecting small suppliers as well as the large firms that are their customers. This...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIndustrial marketing management Vol. 26; no. 6; pp. 475 - 486
Main Authors Kasouf, Chickery J., Celuch, Kevin G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Elsevier Inc 01.11.1997
Elsevier Sequoia S.A
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Summary:The need for global market presence, the complexity of new product development, and the emphasis on core competence are making alliances among firms more important, and recent evidence suggests that these issues are affecting small suppliers as well as the large firms that are their customers. This paper studied the relationship orientation (i.e., the perceived importance, of interfirm relations) in a fragmented supplier industry whose single largest customer group is automotive OEMs. The primary objective of the research was the identification of factors that discriminate between firms with high and low relationship orientations. The study found four factors describing benefits and barriers associated with interfirm relationships, and found that firms with a high relationship orientation were smaller and more optimistic about the industry’s ability to support a greater number of firms in the future, and perceived faster technology change than firms with a low relationship orientation.
ISSN:0019-8501
1873-2062
DOI:10.1016/S0019-8501(97)00023-0