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The role of services in flexible supply chains: an exploratory study

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The role of services in flexible supply chains: an exploratory study. / Stevenson, Mark.
In: International Journal of Agile Systems and Management, Vol. 6, No. 4, 2013, p. 307-323.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Stevenson, M 2013, 'The role of services in flexible supply chains: an exploratory study', International Journal of Agile Systems and Management, vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 307-323. https://doi.org/10.1504/IJASM.2013.058200

APA

Vancouver

Stevenson M. The role of services in flexible supply chains: an exploratory study. International Journal of Agile Systems and Management. 2013;6(4):307-323. doi: 10.1504/IJASM.2013.058200

Author

Stevenson, Mark. / The role of services in flexible supply chains : an exploratory study. In: International Journal of Agile Systems and Management. 2013 ; Vol. 6, No. 4. pp. 307-323.

Bibtex

@article{0cb0c9790844430193de8ac5443cb19d,
title = "The role of services in flexible supply chains: an exploratory study",
abstract = "Prior research into flexibility has largely focused on intra-organisational aspects of manufacturing flexibility or looked at the role of manufacturing companies in flexible supply chains it has generally failed to explicitly consider the role of services. This paper presents the results of an exploratory empirical study into service flexibility based on interviews conducted in six companies: a recruitment agency, a plant hire firm, two logistics providers, a procurement service, and a provider of supply chain software. Many of these services provide an important source of flexibility to supply chains. Five roles fulfilled by the services are identified as follows: to provide continuity, to allow for expansion, to provide expertise, to improve cost efficiency, and to reduce risk. In addition, it is found that the companies are able to play these roles through having internal flexibility (e.g. flexible resources and/or excess capacity) and by themselves supplementing this either through their membership of a parent organisation/group (group collaboration) or through external partners (e.g. subcontracting and horizontal collaboration). Future research could build on this contribution, e.g. by conducting an integrated study of a network of manufacturing and service firms, by conducting a quantitative survey to add generality to the findings, and by conducting longitudinal empirical work to observe how supply chains cope with change over time.",
keywords = "Flexibility, Services, Suply chain, Case study",
author = "Mark Stevenson",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1504/IJASM.2013.058200",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "307--323",
journal = "International Journal of Agile Systems and Management",
issn = "1741-9174",
publisher = "Inderscience Publishers",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The role of services in flexible supply chains

T2 - an exploratory study

AU - Stevenson, Mark

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Prior research into flexibility has largely focused on intra-organisational aspects of manufacturing flexibility or looked at the role of manufacturing companies in flexible supply chains it has generally failed to explicitly consider the role of services. This paper presents the results of an exploratory empirical study into service flexibility based on interviews conducted in six companies: a recruitment agency, a plant hire firm, two logistics providers, a procurement service, and a provider of supply chain software. Many of these services provide an important source of flexibility to supply chains. Five roles fulfilled by the services are identified as follows: to provide continuity, to allow for expansion, to provide expertise, to improve cost efficiency, and to reduce risk. In addition, it is found that the companies are able to play these roles through having internal flexibility (e.g. flexible resources and/or excess capacity) and by themselves supplementing this either through their membership of a parent organisation/group (group collaboration) or through external partners (e.g. subcontracting and horizontal collaboration). Future research could build on this contribution, e.g. by conducting an integrated study of a network of manufacturing and service firms, by conducting a quantitative survey to add generality to the findings, and by conducting longitudinal empirical work to observe how supply chains cope with change over time.

AB - Prior research into flexibility has largely focused on intra-organisational aspects of manufacturing flexibility or looked at the role of manufacturing companies in flexible supply chains it has generally failed to explicitly consider the role of services. This paper presents the results of an exploratory empirical study into service flexibility based on interviews conducted in six companies: a recruitment agency, a plant hire firm, two logistics providers, a procurement service, and a provider of supply chain software. Many of these services provide an important source of flexibility to supply chains. Five roles fulfilled by the services are identified as follows: to provide continuity, to allow for expansion, to provide expertise, to improve cost efficiency, and to reduce risk. In addition, it is found that the companies are able to play these roles through having internal flexibility (e.g. flexible resources and/or excess capacity) and by themselves supplementing this either through their membership of a parent organisation/group (group collaboration) or through external partners (e.g. subcontracting and horizontal collaboration). Future research could build on this contribution, e.g. by conducting an integrated study of a network of manufacturing and service firms, by conducting a quantitative survey to add generality to the findings, and by conducting longitudinal empirical work to observe how supply chains cope with change over time.

KW - Flexibility

KW - Services

KW - Suply chain

KW - Case study

U2 - 10.1504/IJASM.2013.058200

DO - 10.1504/IJASM.2013.058200

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 307

EP - 323

JO - International Journal of Agile Systems and Management

JF - International Journal of Agile Systems and Management

SN - 1741-9174

IS - 4

ER -