Author List: Gefen, David; Wyss, Simon; Lichtenstein, Yossi;
MIS Quarterly, 2008, Volume 32, Issue 3, Page 531-542.
This study examines the role of business familiarity in determining how software development outsourcing projects are managed and priced to address risks. Increased business familiarity suggests both more prior knowledge, and hence reduced adverse selection risk, and increased implied trust about future behavior, and hence implied reduced moral hazard risk. Preferring high business familiarity partners may also alleviate concerns about incomplete contracts. By reducing these risks, higher business familiarity is hypothesized to be associated with higher priced projects, reduced penalties, and an increased tendency to contract on a time and materials rather than a fixed price basis. These hypotheses were examined with objective contractual legal data from contracts made by a leading international bank. Integrating trust theory into agency theory and into incomplete contract theory and examining unique contract data, the contribution of the study is to show that the premium on business familiarity and the trust it implies is not in directly affecting price, but, rather, in changing how the relationship is managed toward a tendency to sign time and materials contracts. Implications about integrating trust into agency theory and incomplete contract theory, as well as implications regarding trust premiums and software development outsourcing, are discussed.
Keywords: Business familiarity; Contractual governance; fixed price; incomplete contract theory; software development outsourcing; Time and Materials
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#70 0.353 contract contracts incentives incentive outsourcing hazard moral contracting agency contractual asymmetry incomplete set cost client parties examine effort structures double
#261 0.098 software development maintenance case productivity application tools systems function tool engineering projects effort code developed applications analysis estimation methodology methods
#110 0.094 theory theories theoretical paper new understanding work practical explain empirical contribution phenomenon literature second implications different building based insights need
#40 0.093 increased increase number response emergency monitoring warning study reduce messages using reduced decreased reduction decrease act sessions cost good key
#212 0.065 business digital strategy value transformation economy technologies paper creation digitization strategies environment focus net-enabled services processes insights challenges key response
#172 0.063 trust trusting study online perceived beliefs e-commerce intention trustworthiness relationships benevolence initial importance trust-building examines discussed building future context transactions
#264 0.060 risk risks management associated managing financial appropriate losses expected future literature reduce loss approach alternative mitigate failures failure cause mitigation
#202 0.054 online uncertainty reputation sellers buyers seller marketplaces markets marketplace buyer price signaling auctions market premiums ebay transaction reverse literature comments