The impact of sourcing enterprise system use and work process interdependence on sourcing professionals’ job outcomes |
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Authors: | Arun Rai Rob Hornyak |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center for Process Innovation & Department of Computer Information Systems, Robinson College of Business, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30303, USA;2. Department of Information Systems, W.P Carey School of Business, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287 4606, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() We examine sourcing professionals’ work context to conceptualize how they use sourcing enterprise systems (SESs) and to understand when SES use results in positive/negative job outcomes. We differentiate between SES use for supplier selection and supplier governance, identify sourcing professionals’ work process interdependence as a moderator for the impacts of SES use on job satisfaction, and suggest job satisfaction mediates the impacts of SES use on job performance. We conducted a field study of sourcing professionals’ SES use at one of the largest consumer product companies in the United States, which has implemented an SES to innovate its sourcing professionals’ work processes. Based on our analysis of the survey and qualitative data we collected, we found the impacts of both types of SES use (1) to be negative on job satisfaction when work process interdependence was high, (2) to be positive on job satisfaction when work process interdependence was low, and (3) to be mediated by job satisfaction for job performance. We discuss the implications of our findings for the literature at the intersection of information systems and operations management as well as for the information technology enabled innovation of sourcing processes and, more generally, complex business processes. |
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Keywords: | Sourcing enterprise system use Supplier selection Supplier governance Job outcomes Work process interdependence IT capabilities |
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