An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem

The trends in grocery retailing have shifted the power base from suppliers to retailers. Retailers can delist supplier products and provide substantial benefits like issuing large orders and extending retail space for suppliers because of their market dominance and controllership of the assets perti...

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Main Author: Yap, Derek Tzse Ming
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25359/
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author Yap, Derek Tzse Ming
author_facet Yap, Derek Tzse Ming
author_sort Yap, Derek Tzse Ming
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The trends in grocery retailing have shifted the power base from suppliers to retailers. Retailers can delist supplier products and provide substantial benefits like issuing large orders and extending retail space for suppliers because of their market dominance and controllership of the assets pertinent to the relationship. Subsequently this dependency has created opportunities for retailers to holdup suppliers and squeeze substantial financial concessions out of suppliers. That said the copious evidence show many of these retailer and supplier relationships are highly cooperative and collaborative instead of being riddled with conflict. Multidiscipline scholarly research explains trust as the basis for retailer and supplier to continue the relationship. Retailers and suppliers are motivated to cooperate because there are plenty of opportunities to reciprocate and to balance losses in the near future. On the contrary, our analysis reveals that the basis the motivations for continuing a relationship is based on a calculative process and not a relational process. The key findings from the case studies are participants recognize trust as an important antecedent for parties to start a relationship but are dependent on the perceived reward, expert and coercive power in deciding whether to continue the relationship or not. This has alluded to the importance for retailers and suppliers to strategize investments in building the most relevant power or powers pertinent to the relationship. In effect, suppliers should look at making strategic behaviors that build the reward power and expert power of retailers along with their own coercive power.
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spelling nottingham-253592018-02-16T11:35:53Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25359/ An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem Yap, Derek Tzse Ming The trends in grocery retailing have shifted the power base from suppliers to retailers. Retailers can delist supplier products and provide substantial benefits like issuing large orders and extending retail space for suppliers because of their market dominance and controllership of the assets pertinent to the relationship. Subsequently this dependency has created opportunities for retailers to holdup suppliers and squeeze substantial financial concessions out of suppliers. That said the copious evidence show many of these retailer and supplier relationships are highly cooperative and collaborative instead of being riddled with conflict. Multidiscipline scholarly research explains trust as the basis for retailer and supplier to continue the relationship. Retailers and suppliers are motivated to cooperate because there are plenty of opportunities to reciprocate and to balance losses in the near future. On the contrary, our analysis reveals that the basis the motivations for continuing a relationship is based on a calculative process and not a relational process. The key findings from the case studies are participants recognize trust as an important antecedent for parties to start a relationship but are dependent on the perceived reward, expert and coercive power in deciding whether to continue the relationship or not. This has alluded to the importance for retailers and suppliers to strategize investments in building the most relevant power or powers pertinent to the relationship. In effect, suppliers should look at making strategic behaviors that build the reward power and expert power of retailers along with their own coercive power. 2011 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25359/1/DEREKTZSEMINGYAP.pdf Yap, Derek Tzse Ming (2011) An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Yap, Derek Tzse Ming
An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
title An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
title_full An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
title_fullStr An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
title_full_unstemmed An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
title_short An explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
title_sort explanatory study of motivation for maintaining buyer-seller relationships in the presence of the holdup problem
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25359/