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Buyer-seller relationships in the procurement of logistical services

Article Abstract:

This study presents a two-phase model of interfirm exchange in the logistical supply industry. The first phase uses transaction cost analysis to identify conditions leading to market-based transactions, unilateral agreements, and bilateral alliances. The second phase illustrates how formal controls and relational norms yield performance in market, unilateral, and bilateral governance systems. A test of the model with data from 189 logistical supply relationships suggests that bilateral alliances emerge through the interaction of user investments in the logistics supplier, supplier logistical services, and marketplace uncertainty. Bilateral alliances attain desired outcomes through participative management and flexibility. By contrast, market-based transactions yield desired outcomes through formalization and solidarity. Unilateral agreements gain performance through formalization, participation, information sharing, and solidarity. Implications for logistics management and theory are discussed. (Reprinted by permission of the publisher.)

Author: McNeilly, Kevin M., Dahlstrom, Robert, Speh, Thomas W.
Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc.
Publication Name: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0092-0703
Year: 1996
Logistic Services, Process, Physical Distribution, and Logistics Consulting Services, Management services, Logistics services, Services industry, Service industries, Logistics, Business logistics

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Remembering versus knowing: issues in buyers' processing of price information

Article Abstract:

A traditional assumption concerning how prices influence buyers' purchasing behaviors has been that buyers know the prices of the products and services that they consider for purchase. However, empirical research during the past four decades repeatedly has discovered that buyers often are not able to remember the prices of items they had recently purchased. One conclusion that has been drawn is that buyers often do not attend to price information in purchase decisions. The authors argue that this conclusion may be incorrect in that what consumers can explicitly remember is not always a good indicator of what they implicitly know. Price information not consciously remembered can still influence internal reference prices and product evaluations. In this article, the authors discuss the conceptual and methodological ramifications of the distinction between remembering and knowing to reassess and refine our understanding of how buyers process and use price information. (Reprinted by permission of the publisher.)

Author: Monroe, Kent B., Lee, Angela Y.
Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc.
Publication Name: Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0092-0703
Year: 1999
Pricing, Consumer behavior, Human information processing

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Subjects list: Research, Purchasing
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