An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships

The purpose of this research was to study customer-supplier relationships, and particularly their partnerships, to help managers and practitioners successfully design, develop, implement and deploy tools and joint practices for their upstream systems. To achieve this purpose, a total of 1,811 (pote...

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Main Author: Jung, Seungho
Other Authors: Industrial and Systems Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40384
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11397-141754/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-403842020-09-29T05:31:28Z An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships Jung, Seungho Industrial and Systems Engineering Van Aken, Eileen M. Clark, L. Altyn Downey, Gary L. Hacker, Stephen K. Huang, Philip Y. Sink, D. Scott Kleiner, Brian M. customer-supplier relationships joint action shared results The purpose of this research was to study customer-supplier relationships, and particularly their partnerships, to help managers and practitioners successfully design, develop, implement and deploy tools and joint practices for their upstream systems. To achieve this purpose, a total of 1,811 (potential mailed survey questionnaire respondents) and 7 (structured interviewees) managers who are responsible for purchasing, sales/ marketing, quality-related, and production- or operations-related functions of U.S. private manufacturing companies in SIC 35, 36, and 37 were used to collect qualitative and quantitative data. Using 172 usable mailed survey questionnaire responses (response rate: 9.78%) and qualitative data from the structured interviews, the following major findings were derived: * Four tools/joint practices most frequently used in customer-supplier relationships were supplier certification/verification, joint problem-solving teams, quality audits, and Just-In-Time production and delivery, * Five tools/joint practices that have been used most effectively were ISO 9000 and/or QS 9000 and/or Baldrige criteria, quality audit, JIT production/delivery, joint planning, and joint problem-solving teams, * Five tools/joint practices that have been most internalized were ISO 9000 and/or QS 9000 and/or Baldrige criteria, quality audit, JIT production/delivery, joint problem-solving teams, and supplier or customer performance measurement systems, * Overall perceived organizational performance improvement was 25% (30% quality improvement, 21% cost reduction, and 26% cycle time reduction). In addition to these findings, eight hypothesized relationships were tested using two independent variables (joint use of specific tools and joint use of practices) and four dependent variables (informed partners, role integrity, conflict resolution, and mutuality). The results showed that customer and supplier companies do not share the same experience with respect to the relationships between the two independent variables and conflict resolution. Using these findings, a set of practices was proposed as a means for further improving specific organizational performance dimensions and providing a mechanism to better share the consequences of joint action. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:23:17Z 2014-03-14T21:23:17Z 1997-11-20 1997-11-20 1998-12-05 1997-12-05 Dissertation etd-11397-141754 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40384 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11397-141754/ ETD.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic customer-supplier relationships
joint action
shared results
spellingShingle customer-supplier relationships
joint action
shared results
Jung, Seungho
An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships
description The purpose of this research was to study customer-supplier relationships, and particularly their partnerships, to help managers and practitioners successfully design, develop, implement and deploy tools and joint practices for their upstream systems. To achieve this purpose, a total of 1,811 (potential mailed survey questionnaire respondents) and 7 (structured interviewees) managers who are responsible for purchasing, sales/ marketing, quality-related, and production- or operations-related functions of U.S. private manufacturing companies in SIC 35, 36, and 37 were used to collect qualitative and quantitative data. Using 172 usable mailed survey questionnaire responses (response rate: 9.78%) and qualitative data from the structured interviews, the following major findings were derived: * Four tools/joint practices most frequently used in customer-supplier relationships were supplier certification/verification, joint problem-solving teams, quality audits, and Just-In-Time production and delivery, * Five tools/joint practices that have been used most effectively were ISO 9000 and/or QS 9000 and/or Baldrige criteria, quality audit, JIT production/delivery, joint planning, and joint problem-solving teams, * Five tools/joint practices that have been most internalized were ISO 9000 and/or QS 9000 and/or Baldrige criteria, quality audit, JIT production/delivery, joint problem-solving teams, and supplier or customer performance measurement systems, * Overall perceived organizational performance improvement was 25% (30% quality improvement, 21% cost reduction, and 26% cycle time reduction). In addition to these findings, eight hypothesized relationships were tested using two independent variables (joint use of specific tools and joint use of practices) and four dependent variables (informed partners, role integrity, conflict resolution, and mutuality). The results showed that customer and supplier companies do not share the same experience with respect to the relationships between the two independent variables and conflict resolution. Using these findings, a set of practices was proposed as a means for further improving specific organizational performance dimensions and providing a mechanism to better share the consequences of joint action. === Ph. D.
author2 Industrial and Systems Engineering
author_facet Industrial and Systems Engineering
Jung, Seungho
author Jung, Seungho
author_sort Jung, Seungho
title An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships
title_short An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships
title_full An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships
title_fullStr An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships
title_full_unstemmed An Empirical Investigation of Tools and Joint Practices Used in Managing Customer-Supplier Relationships
title_sort empirical investigation of tools and joint practices used in managing customer-supplier relationships
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40384
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11397-141754/
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