The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?

Monitoring and contract renegotiation are two common solutions for addressing information asymmetry and uncertainty between a client and a vendor of software outsourcing services. Monitoring is mostly applied in time-and-materials contracts, as a basis for inspecting and reimbursing the vendor’s eff...

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Main Authors: HUANG, He, HU, Minhui, KAUFFMAN, Robert J., XU, Hongyan
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2021
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/9543
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/10543/viewcontent/Power_of_renegotiation_av.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-105432024-11-15T07:23:25Z The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements? HUANG, He HU, Minhui KAUFFMAN, Robert J. XU, Hongyan Monitoring and contract renegotiation are two common solutions for addressing information asymmetry and uncertainty between a client and a vendor of software outsourcing services. Monitoring is mostly applied in time-and-materials contracts, as a basis for inspecting and reimbursing the vendor’s efforts in system development. Renegotiation, by contrast, is deployed in fixed-price and time-and-materials contracts to mitigate the loss of surplus from uncertainty after system development. We investigate the interaction between monitoring and renegotiation and examine the corresponding contract choice problem. We find that the client benefits from renegotiation based on two effects: an uncertainty-resolution effect and a post-development incentive effect, which incentivizes the vendor to exert additional effort in system development. Monitoring does not resolve uncertainty, although it does encourage the vendor to exert additional effort, a pre-development incentive effect. Our analysis shows that the choice of renegotiation or monitoring depends on the interactions of the above effects, which are moderated by the renegotiation cost, monitoring cost, and bargaining power in renegotiation. When renegotiation cost is low: if the client has high bargaining power and low monitoring cost, monitoring and renegotiation are complements and both are selected; otherwise, the two instruments are substitutes and contract renegotiation is preferred. When renegotiation cost is high: monitoring substitutes for renegotiation and the client only chooses monitoring if the cost to do it is low; or else neither is used. Overall, this research shows that four appropriate contract strategies should be used under somewhat different circumstances. We further analyze the impacts of some other key aspects of software outsourcing and extend the base model to address two alternative situations to show the robustness of our findings. The results apply to a range of software reliability growth models, including when machine learning or cloud computing are used. 2021-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/9543 info:doi/10.1287/isre.2021.1026 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/10543/viewcontent/Power_of_renegotiation_av.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Software outsourcing software reliability monitoring renegotiation incentives incomplete contract Databases and Information Systems Management Information Systems
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Software outsourcing
software reliability
monitoring
renegotiation
incentives
incomplete contract
Databases and Information Systems
Management Information Systems
spellingShingle Software outsourcing
software reliability
monitoring
renegotiation
incentives
incomplete contract
Databases and Information Systems
Management Information Systems
HUANG, He
HU, Minhui
KAUFFMAN, Robert J.
XU, Hongyan
The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?
description Monitoring and contract renegotiation are two common solutions for addressing information asymmetry and uncertainty between a client and a vendor of software outsourcing services. Monitoring is mostly applied in time-and-materials contracts, as a basis for inspecting and reimbursing the vendor’s efforts in system development. Renegotiation, by contrast, is deployed in fixed-price and time-and-materials contracts to mitigate the loss of surplus from uncertainty after system development. We investigate the interaction between monitoring and renegotiation and examine the corresponding contract choice problem. We find that the client benefits from renegotiation based on two effects: an uncertainty-resolution effect and a post-development incentive effect, which incentivizes the vendor to exert additional effort in system development. Monitoring does not resolve uncertainty, although it does encourage the vendor to exert additional effort, a pre-development incentive effect. Our analysis shows that the choice of renegotiation or monitoring depends on the interactions of the above effects, which are moderated by the renegotiation cost, monitoring cost, and bargaining power in renegotiation. When renegotiation cost is low: if the client has high bargaining power and low monitoring cost, monitoring and renegotiation are complements and both are selected; otherwise, the two instruments are substitutes and contract renegotiation is preferred. When renegotiation cost is high: monitoring substitutes for renegotiation and the client only chooses monitoring if the cost to do it is low; or else neither is used. Overall, this research shows that four appropriate contract strategies should be used under somewhat different circumstances. We further analyze the impacts of some other key aspects of software outsourcing and extend the base model to address two alternative situations to show the robustness of our findings. The results apply to a range of software reliability growth models, including when machine learning or cloud computing are used.
format text
author HUANG, He
HU, Minhui
KAUFFMAN, Robert J.
XU, Hongyan
author_facet HUANG, He
HU, Minhui
KAUFFMAN, Robert J.
XU, Hongyan
author_sort HUANG, He
title The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?
title_short The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?
title_full The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?
title_fullStr The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?
title_full_unstemmed The power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: Substitutes or complements?
title_sort power of renegotiation and monitoring in software outsourcing: substitutes or complements?
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2021
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/9543
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/10543/viewcontent/Power_of_renegotiation_av.pdf
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