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Measuring the impact of integration practices on firms’ supply chain performance: role of organizational antecedents in this relationship

Author

Listed:
  • Ehtisham Ali
  • Liu Jianhua
  • Mohsin Rasheed
  • Ahsan Siraj

Abstract

Purpose - This study empirically tests a conceptual framework that shows how integration practices are significantly associated with supply chain (SC) performance. This study also intends to achieve the following purposes: first, how the performance is influenced by the integration practices, i.e. internal and external; second, to measure the mediating effect of organizational antecedents (market orientation, learning orientation) between integration practices and firm’s SC performance. Design/methodology/approach - In a noncontrived study environment, a cross-sectional study design was used with a questionnaire. The study used a stratified proportionate random sample of 205 managers from manufacturing firms in China. Six hypothesized relationships were examined using the structural equation modeling (SEM) technique in AMOS software, and five were shown to be valid. The proposed model was validated through various techniques. Findings - Results of this study indicate that both external and internal integration influence SC performance and confirms the mediating role of organizational antecedents between integration practices and SC performance. According to the findings, five out of the six hypotheses are accepted. Findings of this research also offer very expedient insights for the companies’ management which can help them to ensure optimal output by giving due importance to external as well as internal integration. Research limitations/implications - The data for the study were only obtained from one province, which was Henan Province, and one industry, which was manufacturing; this constrained the generalizability of the study. The findings may be further validated in the future by expanding the scope of the studies to include various cultural contexts and types of businesses. Second, this study used data from a cross-sectional analysis; however, future research may potentially make use of a longitudinal design in order to more thoroughly confirm the findings. Practical implications - Findings of this study offer substantial managerial insights suggesting various ways to develop better internal as well as external integration to get better results. Management of the company should focus and give more importance to job rotation, trainings and management commitment as part of internal integration. Moreover, management should strive for improving the capabilities of integration in internal functions prior to external integration as internal collaboration, teamwork and interaction within the company are considered as a precondition to maintain integration with external stakeholders. It is also a social process which needs to be built up over a longer period of time. Originality/value - The authors contribute to the literature by experimentally evaluating the effects of integration practices on SC performance using a conceptual model drawn from current theories. The study also offer additional empirical evidence for Hanet al.(2007), who found that SCI enhances firm performance through quality management in their analyses of the relationships between SCI, quality management practices and firm performance.

Suggested Citation

  • Ehtisham Ali & Liu Jianhua & Mohsin Rasheed & Ahsan Siraj, 2023. "Measuring the impact of integration practices on firms’ supply chain performance: role of organizational antecedents in this relationship," Arab Gulf Journal of Scientific Research, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 41(3), pages 293-314, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:agjsrp:agjsr-10-2022-0232
    DOI: 10.1108/AGJSR-10-2022-0232
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