Purchasing Policy or Purchasing Police? The Influence of Institutional Logics and Power on Responses to Purchasing Formalization
Journal article, Peer reviewed, Journal article
Accepted version
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10642/4438Utgivelsesdato
2016-07-18Metadata
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Sammendrag
Seeking to benefit from higher levels of purchasing maturity, many organizations strive to
formalize their purchasing practices. Why these practices are not adopted
by
certain organizations
or for certain types of purchases is less
well
understood
,
however
. It has been argued that the
purchasing of knowledge
-
intensive services is particularly difficult to formalize, but an in
-
depth
understanding of the inter
-
and intra
-
organizational dynamics influencing this process is lacking.
This study contributes to th
e purchasing and supply management literature by providing a fine
-
grained understanding
of
how actors respond to formalization initiatives. Building on an
exploratory interview methodology and using institutional logic and power theory as foundations,
we s
how that formalization initiatives lead to institutional complexity and conflicts. Sets of
strategies and counterstrategies for how to deal with the complexity and conflicts are identified
,
and relational power is found to moderate which strategy is used b
y the actors. Based on the
empirical findings, a conceptual model is developed to describe the response process.