Author List: Huber, Thomas L.; Fischer, Thomas A.; Dibbern, Jens; Hirschheim, Rudy;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2013, Volume 30, Issue 3, Page 81-114.
This paper develops a process model of how and why complementarity and substitution form over time between contractual and relational governance in the context of information systems outsourcing. Our analysis identifies four distinct process patterns that explain this formation as the outcome of interaction processes between key elements of both contractual and relational governance. These patterns unveil the dynamic nature of complementarity and substitution. In particular, we show that the relationship between contractual and relational governance oscillates between complementarity and substitution. Those oscillations are triggered mainly by three types of contextual events (goal fuzziness, goal conflict, and goal misalignment). Surprisingly, substitution of informal control did not occur as an immediate reaction to external events but emerged as a consequence of preceding complementarity. Thus, our study challenges the prevailing view of an either/or dichotomy of complementarity and substitution by showing that they are causally connected over time.
Keywords: contract; contractual governance; formal control; informal control; information systems outsourcing; outsourcing; process view; relational governance; trust
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#76 0.517 governance relational mechanisms bpo rights process coordination outsourcing contractual arrangements technology benefits view informal business formal exchange hybrid complementarity flexibility
#128 0.103 dynamic time dynamics model change study data process different changes using longitudinal understanding decisions develop temporal reveal associated state identifies
#220 0.084 research study different context findings types prior results focused studies empirical examine work previous little knowledge sources implications specifically provide
#280 0.078 control controls formal systems mechanisms modes clan informal used internal literature outsourced outcome theory configuration attempts evolution authority complementary little
#188 0.058 processes interaction new interactions temporal structure research emergent process theory address temporally core discussion focuses area underlying deep structures way