Customer portfolio planning in a business network context
Customer portfolio planning in a business network context
In an increasingly globalised business environment, it is no longer adequate to analyse and develop supplier-customer relationship portfolios without consideration of a firm's network relationships. While research in business relationships has examined resource allocation and strategy development in the context of a dyadic relationship, portfolios and network relationships, little is known about the network effects of a focal firm's relationships on its performance particularly from both supplier and customer evaluations. The present study attempts to fill this gap by developing a customer portfolio framework that includes four levels of business relationships, and integrates a resource-based view and industry determinants of competitive advantage. The proposed framework is applied and analysed using data of UK-based food service companies. The main results show that a focal relationship performance is influenced by both industry and resource-based advantages in a business network context. The results also suggest that a focal firm can better enhance its competitive position with the knowledge of network effects and interdependence of strategic actions in a business network context.
567-587
Eng, Teck-Yong
349165eb-272c-4a7a-93b4-e2416ed4a537
July 2008
Eng, Teck-Yong
349165eb-272c-4a7a-93b4-e2416ed4a537
Eng, Teck-Yong
(2008)
Customer portfolio planning in a business network context.
Journal of Marketing Management, 24 (5-6), .
(doi:10.1362/026725708X325995).
Abstract
In an increasingly globalised business environment, it is no longer adequate to analyse and develop supplier-customer relationship portfolios without consideration of a firm's network relationships. While research in business relationships has examined resource allocation and strategy development in the context of a dyadic relationship, portfolios and network relationships, little is known about the network effects of a focal firm's relationships on its performance particularly from both supplier and customer evaluations. The present study attempts to fill this gap by developing a customer portfolio framework that includes four levels of business relationships, and integrates a resource-based view and industry determinants of competitive advantage. The proposed framework is applied and analysed using data of UK-based food service companies. The main results show that a focal relationship performance is influenced by both industry and resource-based advantages in a business network context. The results also suggest that a focal firm can better enhance its competitive position with the knowledge of network effects and interdependence of strategic actions in a business network context.
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Published date: July 2008
Organisations:
Centre for Digital, Interactive & Data Driven Marketing
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Local EPrints ID: 391531
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/391531
ISSN: 0019-8501
PURE UUID: 96ec75ee-bfa3-4fec-b432-f27b421c7b76
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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2016 13:46
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 23:30
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Author:
Teck-Yong Eng
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