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E-Lance Enabled Network Exchanges within Supply Chains

Authors :
James L. Worrell
Robert Hooker
Carmen Lewis
Tom E. Yoon
Molly Wasko
Source :
International Journal of Information Systems and Supply Chain Management. 9:1-20
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
IGI Global, 2016.

Abstract

E-business based e-lance networks can impact the coordination and completion of work within organizations and improve efficiencies in global supply chains. This may be particularly true for organizations mitigating sudden demand spikes, or lacking internal expertise and bandwidth. However, little is known about what governance and social control mechanisms impact network success. Utilizing data from 14,644 projects, this research tests a theory of network governance specific to this new emerging e-lance economy by integrating transaction cost economics with the concepts of social controls. For transaction costs, findings indicate that higher average project values lead to more projects and more money being exchanged, but more bids leads to less monetary exchange. For social controls, restricting access by sealing bids and not disclosing budget amounts leads to less bidding, but not disclosing budgets is associated with more projects being posted. The authors further find that the best predictor of e-lance success across all measures is the number of projects posted in the prior time period.

Details

ISSN :
19355734 and 19355726
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Information Systems and Supply Chain Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a10aa9e4e7310fd3711b739b034848ce
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4018/ijisscm.2016040101