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Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities

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Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities. / Aslam, H; Blome, Constantin; Roscoe, Samuel et al.
In: Supply Chain Management, Vol. 25, No. 4, 06.05.2020, p. 427-442.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Aslam, H, Blome, C, Roscoe, S & Azhar, TM 2020, 'Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities', Supply Chain Management, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 427-442. https://doi.org/10.1108/SCM-02-2019-0074

APA

Aslam, H., Blome, C., Roscoe, S., & Azhar, T. M. (2020). Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities. Supply Chain Management, 25(4), 427-442. https://doi.org/10.1108/SCM-02-2019-0074

Vancouver

Aslam H, Blome C, Roscoe S, Azhar TM. Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities. Supply Chain Management. 2020 May 6;25(4):427-442. Epub 2020 Mar 30. doi: 10.1108/SCM-02-2019-0074

Author

Aslam, H ; Blome, Constantin ; Roscoe, Samuel et al. / Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities. In: Supply Chain Management. 2020 ; Vol. 25, No. 4. pp. 427-442.

Bibtex

@article{f15c14f02bf94244b762dbce3a2c0ee1,
title = "Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities",
abstract = "Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities (DSCCs). The authors test entrepreneurial orientation (EO) and supply chain learning orientation (SCLO) as two antecedents of DSCCs. Design/methodology/approach: The paper uses structural equation modelling to test a hypothetical model. Data are gathered from a survey of 275 operations managers in Pakistan{\textquoteright}s turbulent manufacturing industry. Findings: The findings suggest that the weaker direct effects of EO, in comparison to the indirect effects, indicate that an SCLO mediates the relationship between EO and DSCCs. Research limitations/implications: It is widely accepted that firms do not compete with each other, instead, it is end-to-end supply chains that fight for market dominance. Many scholars use the dynamic capabilities view to understand supply chain level competition. However, the dynamic capabilities view is firm-centric in its examination of how companies transform internal resources to compete in the external environment. The theoretical contribution of this paper is a roadmap of how to build dynamic, supply-chain level and capabilities by determining the key antecedents. This paper explains that DSCCs emerge when buyers and suppliers share strategic orientations. Firms with an EO and the ability to learn with supply chain partners are well-positioned to develop DSCCs. This provides a new angle to theory testing by indicating that dynamic capabilities are enabled by an EO and an ability to learn with supply chain partners. Practical implications: Managers are given the building blocks of DSCCs, starting with fostering an entrepreneurially-oriented mindset in the company and then learning with supply chain partners. Entrepreneurially-oriented managers are encouraged to take risks and co-develop innovative ideas with suppliers during the supply chain learning process. Originality/value: This study is one of the earliest efforts to determine the strategic orientations that antecede the emergence of DSCCs.",
keywords = "Dynamic supply chain capabilities, Entrepreneurial orientation, Market sensing, Structural equation model, Supply chain adaptability, Supply chain agility, Supply chain learning orientation, Supply-chain management",
author = "H Aslam and Constantin Blome and Samuel Roscoe and Azhar, {T M}",
year = "2020",
month = may,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1108/SCM-02-2019-0074",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "427--442",
journal = "Supply Chain Management",
issn = "1359-8546",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Determining the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities

AU - Aslam, H

AU - Blome, Constantin

AU - Roscoe, Samuel

AU - Azhar, T M

PY - 2020/5/6

Y1 - 2020/5/6

N2 - Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities (DSCCs). The authors test entrepreneurial orientation (EO) and supply chain learning orientation (SCLO) as two antecedents of DSCCs. Design/methodology/approach: The paper uses structural equation modelling to test a hypothetical model. Data are gathered from a survey of 275 operations managers in Pakistan’s turbulent manufacturing industry. Findings: The findings suggest that the weaker direct effects of EO, in comparison to the indirect effects, indicate that an SCLO mediates the relationship between EO and DSCCs. Research limitations/implications: It is widely accepted that firms do not compete with each other, instead, it is end-to-end supply chains that fight for market dominance. Many scholars use the dynamic capabilities view to understand supply chain level competition. However, the dynamic capabilities view is firm-centric in its examination of how companies transform internal resources to compete in the external environment. The theoretical contribution of this paper is a roadmap of how to build dynamic, supply-chain level and capabilities by determining the key antecedents. This paper explains that DSCCs emerge when buyers and suppliers share strategic orientations. Firms with an EO and the ability to learn with supply chain partners are well-positioned to develop DSCCs. This provides a new angle to theory testing by indicating that dynamic capabilities are enabled by an EO and an ability to learn with supply chain partners. Practical implications: Managers are given the building blocks of DSCCs, starting with fostering an entrepreneurially-oriented mindset in the company and then learning with supply chain partners. Entrepreneurially-oriented managers are encouraged to take risks and co-develop innovative ideas with suppliers during the supply chain learning process. Originality/value: This study is one of the earliest efforts to determine the strategic orientations that antecede the emergence of DSCCs.

AB - Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the antecedents of dynamic supply chain capabilities (DSCCs). The authors test entrepreneurial orientation (EO) and supply chain learning orientation (SCLO) as two antecedents of DSCCs. Design/methodology/approach: The paper uses structural equation modelling to test a hypothetical model. Data are gathered from a survey of 275 operations managers in Pakistan’s turbulent manufacturing industry. Findings: The findings suggest that the weaker direct effects of EO, in comparison to the indirect effects, indicate that an SCLO mediates the relationship between EO and DSCCs. Research limitations/implications: It is widely accepted that firms do not compete with each other, instead, it is end-to-end supply chains that fight for market dominance. Many scholars use the dynamic capabilities view to understand supply chain level competition. However, the dynamic capabilities view is firm-centric in its examination of how companies transform internal resources to compete in the external environment. The theoretical contribution of this paper is a roadmap of how to build dynamic, supply-chain level and capabilities by determining the key antecedents. This paper explains that DSCCs emerge when buyers and suppliers share strategic orientations. Firms with an EO and the ability to learn with supply chain partners are well-positioned to develop DSCCs. This provides a new angle to theory testing by indicating that dynamic capabilities are enabled by an EO and an ability to learn with supply chain partners. Practical implications: Managers are given the building blocks of DSCCs, starting with fostering an entrepreneurially-oriented mindset in the company and then learning with supply chain partners. Entrepreneurially-oriented managers are encouraged to take risks and co-develop innovative ideas with suppliers during the supply chain learning process. Originality/value: This study is one of the earliest efforts to determine the strategic orientations that antecede the emergence of DSCCs.

KW - Dynamic supply chain capabilities

KW - Entrepreneurial orientation

KW - Market sensing

KW - Structural equation model

KW - Supply chain adaptability

KW - Supply chain agility

KW - Supply chain learning orientation

KW - Supply-chain management

U2 - 10.1108/SCM-02-2019-0074

DO - 10.1108/SCM-02-2019-0074

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 427

EP - 442

JO - Supply Chain Management

JF - Supply Chain Management

SN - 1359-8546

IS - 4

ER -