TY - JOUR
T1 - How does information technology shape supply-chain structure? Evidence on the number of suppliers
AU - Dedrick, Jason
AU - Xu, Sean
AU - Zhu, Kevin
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments: The data used in this research were generated from a larger-scale project, which was jointly supported by the carEEr award made to kevin Zhu at the university of california, San Diego (NSF IIS#0654400) and by the globalization and E-commerce project made to the center for research on Information Technology and Organizations (crITO) at the university of california, Irvine (NSF no. 0085852). The authors are grateful for the financial support of the u.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). Sean Xin Xu acknowledges financial support from the hong kong rgc competitive Earmarked research grant (project no. 645507). an earlier, shorter version of this paper was presented at the Forty-First annual hawaii International conference on System Sciences. The authors gratefully acknowledge the comments of the track cochairs, reviewers, and conference participants; the Special Issue editors and two anonymous reviewers for this journal; and seminar participants at crITO. any opinions, findings, or recommendations expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - This research investigates the relationship between a manufacturer's use of information technology (IT) (particularly electronic procurement) and the number of suppliers in its supply chain. Will a manufacturer use more or fewer suppliers due to the increasing use of IT? Based on data from a sample of 150 U. S. manufacturers, we find no direct relationship between e-procurement and number of suppliers at the aggregate level. However, when we distinguish the type of goods purchased, we find that the use of electronic procurement is associated with buying from more suppliers for custom goods but from fewer suppliers for standard (or commodity) goods. It is possible that for commodity goods, an efficiently functioning transparent market ensures that a few suppliers are sufficient, whereas for custom goods the need for protection from opportunistic vendor holdup leads to the use of more suppliers. Further, the positive relationship between number of suppliers and electronic procurement for custom goods is negatively moderated by deeper buyer-supplier system integration. This implies that such integration can help buyers obtain better "fit" for their customized requirements, an alternative to increasing fit by employing more suppliers as proposed in the extant literature.
AB - This research investigates the relationship between a manufacturer's use of information technology (IT) (particularly electronic procurement) and the number of suppliers in its supply chain. Will a manufacturer use more or fewer suppliers due to the increasing use of IT? Based on data from a sample of 150 U. S. manufacturers, we find no direct relationship between e-procurement and number of suppliers at the aggregate level. However, when we distinguish the type of goods purchased, we find that the use of electronic procurement is associated with buying from more suppliers for custom goods but from fewer suppliers for standard (or commodity) goods. It is possible that for commodity goods, an efficiently functioning transparent market ensures that a few suppliers are sufficient, whereas for custom goods the need for protection from opportunistic vendor holdup leads to the use of more suppliers. Further, the positive relationship between number of suppliers and electronic procurement for custom goods is negatively moderated by deeper buyer-supplier system integration. This implies that such integration can help buyers obtain better "fit" for their customized requirements, an alternative to increasing fit by employing more suppliers as proposed in the extant literature.
KW - Electronic procurement
KW - Information technology
KW - Interfirm coordination
KW - Number of suppliers
KW - Supply-chain structure
KW - Systems integration
KW - Transaction costs economics
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U2 - 10.2753/MIS0742-1222250203
DO - 10.2753/MIS0742-1222250203
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:66549110657
SN - 0742-1222
VL - 25
SP - 41
EP - 72
JO - Journal of Management Information Systems
JF - Journal of Management Information Systems
IS - 2
ER -