Global Sourcing (eBook)

An Analysis of the Implications for Organization Design
eBook Download: PDF
2009 | 2008
XVII, 132 Seiten
Betriebswirtschaftlicher Verlag Gabler
978-3-8349-8174-5 (ISBN)

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Global Sourcing - Gerhard Trautmann
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Gerhard Trautmann explains the relationship between global sourcing strategy and organization design.

Dr. Gerhard Trautmann promovierte bei Prof. Dr. Christopher Jahns am Supply Management Institute (SMI) der European Business School (EBS) in Oestrich-Winkel.

Dr. Gerhard Trautmann promovierte bei Prof. Dr. Christopher Jahns am Supply Management Institute (SMI) der European Business School (EBS) in Oestrich-Winkel.

Foreword 7
Acknowledgments 9
Table of Contents 11
List of Figures 13
List of Tables 14
List of Abbreviations 15
I. Introduction 16
II. Organizational Design Implications of Global Sourcing: A Multiple Case Study Analysis on the application of Control Mechanisms 25
1. Introduction 26
2. Conceptual background 28
2.1. Organizational design implications of global sourcing 28
2.2. International strategy typologies and control mechanisms 30
3. Research methodology 36
3.1. Theoretical sampling 37
3.2. Data collection 38
3.3. Research process 40
4. Data analysis 41
4.1. International strategy typologies 41
4.2. Category 1: Personal centralized control 44
4.3. Category 2: Bureaucratic formalized control 46
4.4. Category 3: Output control 47
4.5. Category 4: Control by socialization and networks 49
5. Discussion 51
5.1. Global sourcing typologies 51
5.2. Control mechanisms 52
5.3. Towards an information processing model for global sourcing 57
6. Limitations and suggestions for further research 58
III. Implementing Global Sourcing Through Purchasing Portfolio Management 60
1. Introduction 61
2. Conceptual background 64
2.1. Global purchasing synergy 64
2.2. Purchasing portfolio management 65
3. A purchasing portfolio approach for global sourcing 67
3.1. Step 1: Analysis of strategic importance 68
3.2. Step 2: Analysis of synergy potential 69
4. Research methodology 77
4.1. The case company 77
4.2. Data collection 79
5. Application of the purchasing portfolio model 81
5.1. Measurement and use 82
5.2. Classification of categories 82
6. Summary and Conclusions 88
6.1. Limitations 89
6.2. Suggestions for further research 90
6.3. Managerial Implications 91
IV. Elaborating the Information Processing Perspective in the Global Sourcing Context 93
1. Introduction 94
2. Conceptual background 96
2.1. Global sourcing organization 96
2.2. An information processing perspective 101
3. Research methodology 103
3.1 Research approach 103
3.2. Case selection 104
3.3. Data collection 106
3.4. Analysis process 107
4. Data analysis 109
4.1. Category characteristics and motives for global sourcing 109
4.2. Application of integration mechanisms for global sourcing 112
5. Theoretical explanations and discussion 115
5.1. Theoretical interpretation of case evidence 116
5.2. An information processing model in the global sourcing context 123
5.3. Managerial implications 126
6. Conclusion 126
Bibliography 128
Appendix 146

III. Implementing Global Sourcing Through Purchasing Portfolio Management (S. 45-46)

Abstract

Competing globally, an issue for companies is to adapt their organizational structures and governance in increasingly complex organizations. At the functional level of purchasing, companies turn to hybrid purchasing organizations in order to leverage global sourcing benefits. One of the key challenges in this context is to distinguish between categories to be integrated across sites and those remaining under the authority of each purchasing location in order to maximize purchasing synergies. The aim of the paper is to present a purchasing portfolio model that provides a comprehensive view of relevant global synergy dimensions.

Based on a literature review, a theoreticallygrounded purchasing portfolio model for global sourcing is developed, going beyond the well-established Kraljic matrix for classifying purchasing categories. The validity of the model is explored by means of a single in-depth case study. Complementing the extant literature, the theoretical contribution of the paper lies in not only addressing category selection criteria for exploiting economies of scale, but also for economies of information &, learning and economies of process.

Keywords: Global sourcing, purchasing synergy, organization design, portfolio mode, Case study

1. Introduction

Multinational companies can no longer compete as a collection of nationally independent subsidiaries, since competition is based on the ability of the firm to integrate its subsidiary activities across geographical locations (Porter, 1986, Ohmae 1989, Bartlett and Ghoshal, 1989, Nohria and Ghoshal, 1997, Kotabe and Murray, 2004). Since the seminal paper of Malnight (1995), which put forward that globalization occurs at the level of the function, international business research has increasingly set the focus on analyzing how global integration is attained for functions, such as R&,D, marketing or manufacturing (Nobel and Birkinshaw, 1998, Sheth and Parvatiyar, 2001, Kim et al., 2003, Xu et al., 2006).

To our best knowledge, international business scholars have not put the centre of attention on purchasing. Looking at research on internationalization in the purchasing context, interest from practice and academia in global sourcing, defined as the integration of purchasing requirements across worldwide locations (Monczka and Trent, 1991), has been rising constantly during the last years. While some scholars argue that global sourcing is critical for achieving competitive advantage (Alguire et al., 1994, Carter and Narasimhan, 1996, Quintens et al., 2006b), studies have also identified that global sourcing is gaining a more prominent role on the agenda of an increasing number of firms (Samli et al., 1998, Trent and Monczka, 2003).

The rationale to engage in global sourcing is based on two sources of competitive advantage: location-specific advantages, such as access to local supply and labour markets or new technologies and company-specific competencies, which are developed through the exploitation of global synergies, such as pooling of common requirements across sites (Arnold, 1997, Faes et al., 2000, Kotabe and Murray, 2004).

Erscheint lt. Verlag 14.2.2009
Reihe/Serie Einkauf, Logistik und Supply Chain Management
Vorwort Prof. Dr. Christopher Jahns
Zusatzinfo XVII, 132 S.
Verlagsort Wiesbaden
Sprache deutsch
Themenwelt Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Logistik / Produktion
Schlagworte hybrid purchasing • Logistik • MNCs • Portfolio Management • Supply Chain • Supply-chain-Management • Supply Chain Management
ISBN-10 3-8349-8174-5 / 3834981745
ISBN-13 978-3-8349-8174-5 / 9783834981745
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