An empirical investigation of net-enabled business value
成果类型:
Review
署名作者:
Barua, A; Konana, P; Whinston, AB; Yin, F
署名单位:
University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; University of Connecticut
刊物名称:
MIS QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0276-7783
发表日期:
2004
页码:
585-620
关键词:
ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE
information-technology
supply chain
customer satisfaction
IMPACT
capabilities
integration
inventory
determinants
PRODUCTIVITY
摘要:
Many traditional organizations have undertaken major initiatives to leverage the Internet to transform how they coordinate value activities with customers, suppliers, and other business partners with the objective of improving firm performance. This paper addresses processes through which business value is created through such Internet-enabled value chain activities. Relying on the resource-based view of the firm, we propose a model positing that a firm's abilities to coordinate and exploit firm resources (processes, information technology, and readiness of customers and suppliers) create online informational capabilities (a higher order resource) which then leads to improved operational and financial performance. The outcome of a firm's online informational capabilities is reflected in superior operational performance through customer and supplier-side digitization efforts, which reflect the extent to which transactions and external interactions occur electronically. We also hypothesize that increased customer and supplier-side digitization leads to better financial performance. The model is tested with data from over 1,000 firms in the manufacturing, retail, and wholesale sectors. The analysis suggests that while most firms are lagging in their supplier-side initiatives relative to the customer-side, supplier-side digitization has a strong positive impact on customer-side digitization, which, in turn, leads to better financial performance. Further, both customer and supplier readiness to engage in digital interactions are shown to be as important as a firm's internal digitization initiatives, implying that a firm's transformation-related decisions should include its customers' and suppliers' resources and incentives.