Successful buyer/seller relationships have become recognised as essential for firms to remain competitive in the marketplace. Today's business climate encourages firms to not just compete on product or service attributes, but also on their ability to differentiate themselves from other firms. Supply chains provide firms this point of differentiation ensuring firms better competitive positioning as a result of being able to leverage themselves on the strengths of the supply chain, not just on the individual strengths of the firm. However, to maintain an effective role as a participant in a supply chain, firms must be able to develop and maintain cooperative relationships with other firms. In order to develop these relationships, firms need t...
In today’s turbulent business environment, firms are becoming increasingly interdependent and are no...
Purpose: The paper aims to employ transaction cost theory and social exchange theory to compare how ...
It is now widely recognized that supply chains, not individual organisations, are responsible for th...
Successful buyer / seller relationships have become recognised as essential for firms to remain comp...
Today's business climate encourages firms to not just compete on product or service attributes, but ...
In a competitive market, a firm's ability to compete is strongly linked to its business-to-business ...
In a competitive market, a firm's ability to compete is strongly linked to its business-to-business ...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
The past years have illustrated a shift in focus from transactional to relational exchange. In suppl...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
Organisations are increasingly looking beyond their organisational boundaries to evaluate how resour...
Organisations are increasingly looking beyond their organisational boundaries to evaluate how resour...
In today’s turbulent business environment, firms are becoming increasingly interdependent and are no...
In today’s turbulent business environment, firms are becoming increasingly interdependent and are no...
Purpose: The paper aims to employ transaction cost theory and social exchange theory to compare how ...
It is now widely recognized that supply chains, not individual organisations, are responsible for th...
Successful buyer / seller relationships have become recognised as essential for firms to remain comp...
Today's business climate encourages firms to not just compete on product or service attributes, but ...
In a competitive market, a firm's ability to compete is strongly linked to its business-to-business ...
In a competitive market, a firm's ability to compete is strongly linked to its business-to-business ...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
The past years have illustrated a shift in focus from transactional to relational exchange. In suppl...
Purpose - This paper studies buyer–supplier relationships (BSRs) by taking a routine-based approach ...
Organisations are increasingly looking beyond their organisational boundaries to evaluate how resour...
Organisations are increasingly looking beyond their organisational boundaries to evaluate how resour...
In today’s turbulent business environment, firms are becoming increasingly interdependent and are no...
In today’s turbulent business environment, firms are becoming increasingly interdependent and are no...
Purpose: The paper aims to employ transaction cost theory and social exchange theory to compare how ...
It is now widely recognized that supply chains, not individual organisations, are responsible for th...