Tag Archives: supply networks

Call for papers: S-D Logic and Supply Chain Risk

Is supply chain risk is now beginning to enter more and more areas of  supply chain thinking? It would seem so. Yesterday’s I posted about a call for papers on supply chain risk in China, and  three days ago I posted about a call for papers on global supply chain risk management. Today I have another one, so this is my third “call-for-papers”-posting in just four days. This time it is the well-known and renown International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics (IJPDLM) that is planning a Special Issue on papers dedicated to Applying service-dominant (S-D) logic to physical distribution and logistics management, among many others also including topics such as Supply network resilience and Natural disaster management in supply networks. This triggered my interest, but since I had never heard about S-D Logic before, I had to do some digging and googling first, so I could understand what it was  that I would be promoting.

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Control or laissez-faire?

Maintaining a company’s competitive advantage depends on managing and controlling a global supply chain that is perhaps never static, and one major supply chain risk is that supply networks are constantly changing. Supply chains, once established,  have become increasingly unpredictable in today’s global and highly dynamic business environment. No sooner have you mapped your supply chain end-to-end and devised  a strategy for how to manage it, the chain changes on you – new and better suppliers emerge and new relationship configurations pop up. Perhaps not controlling, but letting things happen and letting supply networks emerge is the best management strategy? According to Supply networks and complex adaptive systems: control versus emergence by Thomas Choi, Kevin Dooley and Manus Rungtusanatham supply chain managers must appropriately balance how much to control and how much to let emerge.

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Risk in supply networks – a tale of principals and agents

Sometimes the most interesting articles are found outside the mainstream journals of ones field, and so it is with  Seu Keow Cheng and Bon Hooi Kam (2008) A conceptual framework for analyzing risk in supply networks, found in the Journal of Enterprise Information Management, a very unlikely journal for finding a paper on supply chain risk. It is not often that I see a paper focusing on the network relationships risks rather than the network risks, let alone applying the principal-agent theory so elegantly.

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Risk in supply networks – seeing it all, or not?

It is practically impossible to write a paper on supply chain risk without citing Risk in supply networks by Christine Harland, Richard Brenchley & Helen Walker (2003). Why? Because it delivers a holistic take on risk, risk management and supply chains, and an excellent discourse on types of risk, sources of risks and descriptions of risk. Particularly, it relates risk to loss and consequences, and looks at how the increasing trend of product/service complexity, e-business, outsourcing, and globalization affects risks in supply networks.

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