JSCM Video: Narratives in Supplier Negotiations

In this month’s video, we look at how the ability to influence the other party during negotiations improves performance outcomes.

Subscriber: Log Out

Editor’s note: This video is collaboration between the Journal of Supply Chain Managementand Supply Chain Management Review. Each month, we bring SCMR readers a video interview from the pages of JSCM.

There’s an old saying that it takes two to tango. That is certainly the case when it comes to buyer-supplier negotiations, where both parties shape the relational and contractual dimensions of their collaboration. The ability o influence the other party during negotiations is therefore vital to improve performance outcomes.

In this month’s video from JOSCM, authors Lutz Kaufman Moritz Schreiner and Felix Reimann discuss their research entitled Narratives in Supplier Negotiations – The Interplay of Narrative Design Elements, Structural Power, and Outcomes.

In a two-part study, they took a configurational approach to investigate how buyers can use narratives in different power situations to influence suppliers and improve their relational and economic negotiation results. In their first study, they conducted narrative writing workshops to identify typical design elements of such narratives. In the second, they employed fuzzy set Qualitative Comparative Analysis to determine how different configurations of these design elements influence narratives’ effectiveness in different power situations. For the field of supply chain management, they develop theory by introducing narratives as an additional means of influence in buyer-supplier negotiations and by examining the interplay between narrative design elements, structural power and negotiation outcomes that are specific to the buyer-supplier relationship.

Be sure to click on the video.

You can click here to access the article in full.

SC
MR

Latest Podcast
Talking Supply Chain: Doomsday never arrives for Baltimore bridge collapse impacts
The collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key bridge brought doomsday headlines for the supply chain. But the reality has been something less…
Listen in

About the Author

Bob Trebilcock, MMH Executive Editor and SCMR contributor
Bob Trebilcock's Bio Photo

Bob Trebilcock is the editorial director for Modern Materials Handling and an editorial advisor to Supply Chain Management Review. He has covered materials handling, technology, logistics, and supply chain topics for nearly 40 years. He is a graduate of Bowling Green State University. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at 603-852-8976.

View Bob's author profile.

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.
Subscribe today and get full access to all of Supply Chain Management Review’s exclusive content, email newsletters, premium resources and in-depth, comprehensive feature articles written by the industry's top experts on the subjects that matter most to supply chain professionals.
×

Search

Search

Sourcing & Procurement

Inventory Management Risk Management Global Trade Ports & Shipping

Business Management

Supply Chain TMS WMS 3PL Government & Regulation Sustainability Finance

Software & Technology

Artificial Intelligence Automation Cloud IoT Robotics Software

The Academy

Executive Education Associations Institutions Universities & Colleges

Resources

Podcasts Webcasts Companies Visionaries White Papers Special Reports Premiums Magazine Archive

Subscribe

SCMR Magazine Newsletters Magazine Archives Customer Service