Abstract

To be sustainable and growing amongst uncertain environments and intensive global competition, supply-chain network leaders have established supply-chain management systems (SCMS) to leverage the resources and knowledge of their partners to achieve greater supply-chain capabilities (SCC) to respond to market changes and complexity. Although several studies have investigated the benefits to network leaders from these systems in various industries, little attention has been paid to the delivery of substantial benefits and advantages to its partners. Based on information technology (IT) applications and SCC literature, this paper proposes a model relating partners use of SCMS to benefits. Data from 168 partners using an SCMS implemented by a leading bicycle supply chain in Taiwan to test the hypotheses that SCC and operational performance has a mediating role linking SCMS use in order to affect a partner’s performance. The results indicate that SCMS implementation has a significant impact on SCC, which in turn create a significant positive effect on operational (sustainable) performance, ultimately leading to improved growth rate and profitability in partners. Another interesting finding of the research is that SCMS cannot directly affect financial performance. In addition, from sustainable performance aspects, it is revealed that IT enables supply chain management (SCM) to achieve environmental value through information sharing (up and down), process integration (vertical and horizontal) and automation (i.e., planning, operation and control). This finding highlights the importance for maximizing benefits and sustainability for the whole supply-chain partners, the IT implementation must be integrated with the sustainable development goals and inserted in the eco-operation supply-chain platform process. The results also contribute to the debate in prior studies by disclosing why so many partners could not find to gain benefit from these IT implementations. Furthermore, this study represents the first attempt to examine how partners benefit from IT use in SCC for traditional industry.

Highlights

  • Few firms currently possess all the skills and resources necessary to produce complex products entirely in-house

  • By adopting a sustainable supply-chain perspective based on information technology (IT) applications and supply-chain capability literature, this paper proposes a model relating partners’ use of Supply-chain management systems (SCMS) to enhance their supply-chain capabilities in terms of information exchange, coordination, integration as well as supply-chain responsiveness, and sustainable operation performance, with in turn bring benefits to firms

  • The results indicate that SCMS implementation has a significant impact on Supply-chain capability (SCC), which in turn creates a significant positive effect on operational performance, leading to improved growth rate and profitability in partners

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Summary

Introduction

Few firms currently possess all the skills and resources necessary to produce complex products entirely in-house. Supply-chain management (SCM), which is primarily focused on managing relationships with suppliers and customers for providing and delivering the best product and service at a reasonable price [1], has become the dominant vehicle in business operation. Supply-chain capability (SCC) is defined as “the ability of an organization to identify, use, and assimilate both internal and external resources and information to facilitate entire supply-chain activities” [2]. While from an innovation goal viewpoint, Liao and Kuo [3] defined SCC as “coordinating and collaborating with upstream, midstream, and downstream supply-chain partners to create and realize overall value innovation.”. While from an innovation goal viewpoint, Liao and Kuo [3] defined SCC as “coordinating and collaborating with upstream, midstream, and downstream supply-chain partners to create and realize overall value innovation.” Considering that different capabilities support different values, Lynch et al [4] further divided SCCs into two categories, demand-driven value-added capabilities and supply-driven process capability

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