Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination
We study the role of different contract types in coordinating the joint product improvement effort of a client and a customer support center. The customer support center's costly efforts at joint product improvement include transcribing and analyzing customer feedback, analyzing market trends,...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-61012022-09-06T05:45:23Z Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination BHATTACHARYA, Shantanu GUPTA, Alok HASIJA, Sameer We study the role of different contract types in coordinating the joint product improvement effort of a client and a customer support center. The customer support center's costly efforts at joint product improvement include transcribing and analyzing customer feedback, analyzing market trends, and investing in product design. Yet this cooperative role must be adequately incentivized by the client, since it could lead to fewer service requests and hence lower revenues for the customer support center. We model this problem as a sequential game with double-sided moral hazard in a principal-agent framework (in which the client is the principal). We follow the contracting literature in modeling the effort of the customer support center, which is the first mover, as either unobservable or observable; in either case, the efforts are unverifiable and so cannot be contracted on directly. We show that it is optimal for the client to offer the customer support center a linear gain-share contract when efforts are unobservable, even though it can yield only the second-best solution for the client. We also show that the cost-plus contracts widely used in practice do not obtain the optimal solution. However, we demonstrate that if efforts are observable then a gain-share and cost-plus options-based contract is optimal and will also yield the first-best solution. Our research provides a systematic theoretical framework that accounts for the prevalence of gain-share contracts in the IT industry's joint improvement efforts, and it provides guiding principles for understanding the increased role for customer support centers in product improvement. 2014-03-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/5102 info:doi/10.1287/isre.2013.0504 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/6101/viewcontent/isre_2E2013_2E0504__1_.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 IT outsourcing gain-share contract cost-plus contract joint product improvement double-sided moral hazard Contracts Operations and Supply Chain Management Technology and Innovation |
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IT outsourcing gain-share contract cost-plus contract joint product improvement double-sided moral hazard Contracts Operations and Supply Chain Management Technology and Innovation BHATTACHARYA, Shantanu GUPTA, Alok HASIJA, Sameer Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
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We study the role of different contract types in coordinating the joint product improvement effort of a client and a customer support center. The customer support center's costly efforts at joint product improvement include transcribing and analyzing customer feedback, analyzing market trends, and investing in product design. Yet this cooperative role must be adequately incentivized by the client, since it could lead to fewer service requests and hence lower revenues for the customer support center. We model this problem as a sequential game with double-sided moral hazard in a principal-agent framework (in which the client is the principal). We follow the contracting literature in modeling the effort of the customer support center, which is the first mover, as either unobservable or observable; in either case, the efforts are unverifiable and so cannot be contracted on directly. We show that it is optimal for the client to offer the customer support center a linear gain-share contract when efforts are unobservable, even though it can yield only the second-best solution for the client. We also show that the cost-plus contracts widely used in practice do not obtain the optimal solution. However, we demonstrate that if efforts are observable then a gain-share and cost-plus options-based contract is optimal and will also yield the first-best solution. Our research provides a systematic theoretical framework that accounts for the prevalence of gain-share contracts in the IT industry's joint improvement efforts, and it provides guiding principles for understanding the increased role for customer support centers in product improvement. |
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BHATTACHARYA, Shantanu GUPTA, Alok HASIJA, Sameer |
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BHATTACHARYA, Shantanu GUPTA, Alok HASIJA, Sameer |
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BHATTACHARYA, Shantanu |
title |
Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
title_short |
Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
title_full |
Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
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Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
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Joint product improvement by client and customer support center: The role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
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joint product improvement by client and customer support center: the role of gain-share contracts in coordination |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2014 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/5102 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/6101/viewcontent/isre_2E2013_2E0504__1_.pdf |
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