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Western civilisations have tended to respect and reward individual rather than group initiatives. Such individualism extended to Western businesses where organisations consider their competitors, and very often their suppliers, as the enemy (Opper & Fresko-Weiss, 1992; Roper and Weymes, 2007). This is reflected in organisational theory as researchers traditionally view organisations as single entities characterised by bureaucratically-determined hierarchical structures that operate by placing individuals in predefined functional roles (Czarniawaska-Joerges, 1992). Business strategies have consequently focused on neutralising competitors to gain control over their buyers or suppliers (Porter, 1985), although recognising that some cartels did operate. Currently, competitive pressures are focusing greater attention on co-operative ventures with partners, even if some relationships are based more on power than co-operation (cf. Webster, 1995). In particular, electronic commerce enables organisations to create improved connections with trading partners and increase global competitiveness (Ngai & Wat, 2002). It has consequently spawned new business models and radically transformed existing ones (Hayes & Finnegan, 2005; Wise & Morrison, 2000). A lot of change has occurred at the business-to-business (B2B) level, with such applications accounting for the ‘largest dollar volume of transactions’ in e-Commerce (Albrecht et al., 2005). Of particular interest is electronic procurement, which has changed the nature of purchasing (Telgen, 1998) by building on existing experience with Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) and Just in Time (JIT) operations (Chaffey, 2002; Kim & Shunk, 2004) Internet technologies including ‘Intranets’ and ‘Extranets’ have been critical for electronic procurement by facilitating integration and coordinating across organisational boundaries (Grover & Malhotra, 1997). Indeed, such integration and coordination has resulted in e-Procurement having a fundamental impact on the nature of inter-organisational relationships (Roberts & Mackay, 1997). Nevertheless, additional research is needed on the influence that business-to-business relationships, which are a major source of competitive advantage (Dyer & Singh, 1998), have on e-Procurement systems (Knudsen, 2003). Indeed, the importance of interorganisational relationships cannot be understated as recognising the characteristics and type buyer/supplier relationship is one of the key strategic decisions for the procurement function (Virolainen, 1998; Matthyssens & Van den Bulte, 1994). In particular, Tanner et al. (2008) argue that management of interorganisational relationships is of crucial importance to e-Procurement and, thus, should be the primary topic of interest in future research.
To this end the objective of this research is to explore the effects that business-to-business relationships have on each of the transaction phases of e-Procurement using a field study of 6 organisations. The research questions are as follows:
The next section presents the theoretical foundation for the study. This is followed by an examination of the research methodology utilised. The findings reveal that B2B relationships have most effect on the sourcing, fulfilment, and consumption phases of the procurement cycle.