Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach

Purpose: In this paper, a practical framework is presented for the successful integration of buyers and contract organizations based on the Critical Incident Technique (CIT). Methodology: The initial pool of situations was developed inductively according to qualitative data provided by ten experts...

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Main Authors: Valentina Marinkovic, Ina Heine, Andrijana Milosevic Georgiev, Robert H. Schmitt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OmniaScience 2020-09-01
Series:Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/3085
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spelling doaj-40013c91f90647b388745e6c8c4dc8dd2020-11-25T02:19:30ZengOmniaScienceJournal of Industrial Engineering and Management2013-84232013-09532020-09-0113349551310.3926/jiem.3085610Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approachValentina Marinkovic0Ina Heine1Andrijana Milosevic Georgiev2Robert H. Schmitt3University of BelgradeRWTH Aachen UniversityUniversity of BelgradeRWTH Aachen UniversityPurpose: In this paper, a practical framework is presented for the successful integration of buyers and contract organizations based on the Critical Incident Technique (CIT). Methodology: The initial pool of situations was developed inductively according to qualitative data provided by ten experts in the field of outsourcing in pharmaceutical supply chain. Another group of experts evaluated these situations with regard to their degree of realism as well as relevance and allocated them to the five constructs (1) employee competence, (2) management commitment, (3) communication between organizations, (4) organizational culture, and (5) regulatory framework. Findings: The findings of the study show that communication appears to be the most frequent reason while regulatory framework seems to be the last frequent reason for critical incidents during outsourcing. Contract giver and service provide show diverging perceptions about the situations’ degree of realism and relevance. Analysis of the interrater agreement shows that the allocation to a single construct is a challenge due to the critical incidents’ complexity and multidimensionality. Originality: The critical incidents database and the presented framework serve as preventive behavioral-based quality management for the pharmaceutical supply chain.http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/3085critical incident technique, oursourcing, quality management, risk analysis, supply chain management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valentina Marinkovic
Ina Heine
Andrijana Milosevic Georgiev
Robert H. Schmitt
spellingShingle Valentina Marinkovic
Ina Heine
Andrijana Milosevic Georgiev
Robert H. Schmitt
Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach
Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
critical incident technique, oursourcing, quality management, risk analysis, supply chain management
author_facet Valentina Marinkovic
Ina Heine
Andrijana Milosevic Georgiev
Robert H. Schmitt
author_sort Valentina Marinkovic
title Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach
title_short Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach
title_full Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach
title_fullStr Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach
title_full_unstemmed Critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: A mixed-methods approach
title_sort critical incidents of outsourcing processes in pharmaceutical supply chain: a mixed-methods approach
publisher OmniaScience
series Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
issn 2013-8423
2013-0953
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Purpose: In this paper, a practical framework is presented for the successful integration of buyers and contract organizations based on the Critical Incident Technique (CIT). Methodology: The initial pool of situations was developed inductively according to qualitative data provided by ten experts in the field of outsourcing in pharmaceutical supply chain. Another group of experts evaluated these situations with regard to their degree of realism as well as relevance and allocated them to the five constructs (1) employee competence, (2) management commitment, (3) communication between organizations, (4) organizational culture, and (5) regulatory framework. Findings: The findings of the study show that communication appears to be the most frequent reason while regulatory framework seems to be the last frequent reason for critical incidents during outsourcing. Contract giver and service provide show diverging perceptions about the situations’ degree of realism and relevance. Analysis of the interrater agreement shows that the allocation to a single construct is a challenge due to the critical incidents’ complexity and multidimensionality. Originality: The critical incidents database and the presented framework serve as preventive behavioral-based quality management for the pharmaceutical supply chain.
topic critical incident technique, oursourcing, quality management, risk analysis, supply chain management
url http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/3085
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