Expanding the unit of analysis from firms to supply networks
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10917Date
2016-09-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Hammervoll, TrondAbstract
Purpose: There is strong interest in new supply chain management
(SCM) constructs as contemporary academic writers call for more theory and more
multidisciplinary research. There is, however, little guidance on how to develop relevant
SCM constructs, and one problem is that current SCM research addresses
different units of analysis, ranging from transactions to entire supply networks. The
choice of unit of analysis has implications for the relevance of SCM-research, and the
purpose of this article is to increase researchers and practitioners’ awareness of this
issue.
Approach: Conceptual analysis of current SCM research with special emphasis
on SCM constructs, their variability assumptions, and the explanatory purpose of
research.
Findings: Suggestions on how to develop appropriate SCM constructs at the supply
network level. Propositions apt at guiding further study are suggested.
Implications: To improve the relevance of SCM-research it is time for studying supply
network characteristics, and this requires developing new constructs taking the
supply network as the unit of analysis. In practise, one opportunity for SCM-research
is to develop new constructs or adopt constructs from related fields taking firm networks
as the unit of analysis, and collect data on supply network characteristics from
key-informants.
Originality/value of paper: This article addresses two gaps in the SCM literature:
(a) the failure to consider the entire supply network as the unit of analysis, and (b)
the lack of guidance in SCM-literature on how to expand the unit of analysis from
one firm to the entire supply network.
Keywords: supply chain management, supply networks, unit of analysis, industrial
marketing, business marketing
Description
Published version available at: http://doi.org/10.1080/1051712X.2016.1215738