Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships

In this multi-method study, we extend and complement extant research on relationship commitment through rigorous field research and an in-depth cross-functional review to develop a model of the antecedents of vendor firmsÆ commitment to underperforming customer relationships. The conceptual model in...

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Main Authors: Bharadwaj, Sundar G., Narayandas, Das
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2005
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2428
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/3427/viewcontent/badrelationshipssmuverpdf.pdf
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Institution: Singapore Management University
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-34272018-07-09T07:55:47Z Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships Bharadwaj, Sundar G. Narayandas, Das In this multi-method study, we extend and complement extant research on relationship commitment through rigorous field research and an in-depth cross-functional review to develop a model of the antecedents of vendor firmsÆ commitment to underperforming customer relationships. The conceptual model incorporates relationship-, performance-, organizational-, and investment-related factors as antecedents to vendor commitment. We then test the model with two survey-based studies, and compare and contrast the impact of these various antecedents across 382 underperforming and above-average performance customer relationships. The results indicate that continuity of relationship personnel, relationship age, performance stability, nature of performance change, visibility of the relationship, senior management involvement, orientation towards customer retention and risk, co-development, efficaciousness of the investment and resource commitment explain vendor firmsÆ commitment to under-performing relationships. In contrast, customer reputation, asset specificity along with relationship age, customer retention orientation and resource commitment are related to vendor firmsÆ commitment to above-average performance customer relationships. Further, using a conjoint type approach, we identify and rank-order (in terms of effectiveness) a set of remedial actions that vendor firms take to turnaround an underperforming customer relationship. Specifically, reframing the joint goals of the relationship, reevaluating internal processes, improving communications with the customer, developing better performance measurement systems, changing sales force compensation to be based on profitability and changing the relationship personnel are strategies for turning around underperforming customer relationships. 2005-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2428 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/3427/viewcontent/badrelationshipssmuverpdf.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Organizational Behavior and Theory
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Organizational Behavior and Theory
spellingShingle Organizational Behavior and Theory
Bharadwaj, Sundar G.
Narayandas, Das
Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships
description In this multi-method study, we extend and complement extant research on relationship commitment through rigorous field research and an in-depth cross-functional review to develop a model of the antecedents of vendor firmsÆ commitment to underperforming customer relationships. The conceptual model incorporates relationship-, performance-, organizational-, and investment-related factors as antecedents to vendor commitment. We then test the model with two survey-based studies, and compare and contrast the impact of these various antecedents across 382 underperforming and above-average performance customer relationships. The results indicate that continuity of relationship personnel, relationship age, performance stability, nature of performance change, visibility of the relationship, senior management involvement, orientation towards customer retention and risk, co-development, efficaciousness of the investment and resource commitment explain vendor firmsÆ commitment to under-performing relationships. In contrast, customer reputation, asset specificity along with relationship age, customer retention orientation and resource commitment are related to vendor firmsÆ commitment to above-average performance customer relationships. Further, using a conjoint type approach, we identify and rank-order (in terms of effectiveness) a set of remedial actions that vendor firms take to turnaround an underperforming customer relationship. Specifically, reframing the joint goals of the relationship, reevaluating internal processes, improving communications with the customer, developing better performance measurement systems, changing sales force compensation to be based on profitability and changing the relationship personnel are strategies for turning around underperforming customer relationships.
format text
author Bharadwaj, Sundar G.
Narayandas, Das
author_facet Bharadwaj, Sundar G.
Narayandas, Das
author_sort Bharadwaj, Sundar G.
title Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships
title_short Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships
title_full Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships
title_fullStr Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships
title_full_unstemmed Theory and Evidence on the Liability of Relationship Commitment: Towards an Understanding of Why Vendor Firms Persist in Underperforming Customer Relationships
title_sort theory and evidence on the liability of relationship commitment: towards an understanding of why vendor firms persist in underperforming customer relationships
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2005
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2428
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/3427/viewcontent/badrelationshipssmuverpdf.pdf
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