Information Systems Research
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INFORMATION SYSTEMS RESEARCH
Vol. 18, No. 3, September 2007, pp. 320-339
DOI: 10.1287/isre.1070.0133
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IS Application Capabilities and Relational Value in Interfirm Partnerships

Nilesh Saraf, Christoph Schlueter Langdon, Sanjay Gosain

Faculty of Business Administration, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6
Center for Telecom Management, University of Southern California, 444 South Flower Street, Los Angeles, California 90089
Capital Group Companies, Inc., 16370 Barranca Parkway, Irvine, California 92618

nsaraf{at}sfu.ca
clangdon{at}marshall.usc.edu
gosain{at}gmail.com

This study examines how capabilities of information systems (IS) applications deployed in the context of interfirm relationships contribute to business performance. We propose that these capabilities augment the relational value that a firm derives from its business partners—channel partners and customer enterprises—in the context of the distribution channel. Two cospecialized relational assets are considered as key to realization of relational value—knowledge sharing and process coupling. Hypotheses linking two IS capabilities (IS flexibility and IS integration) to the relational asset dimensions, and ultimately to firm performance, are proposed. The research model is tested based on data collected through a survey of business units of enterprises embedded in customer and channel partner ties in the high-tech and financial services industries. We find that IS integration with channel partners and customers contributes to both knowledge sharing and process coupling with both types of enterprise partners, whereas IS flexibility is a foundational capability that indirectly contributes to value creation in interfirm relationships by enabling greater IS integration with partner firms. We find that two types of relational assets are significantly associated with business performance—knowledge sharing with channel partners and process coupling with customers—pointing to underlying mechanisms that differentially leverage resources of different types of channel partners. Implications for theory development and practice based on these findings are proposed.

Key Words: interorganizational information systems; competitive impacts of IS; strategic management of IT; IS applications management; relational value; marketing channels
History: This paper was received on August 15, 2005.





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