Developing New Business Relationships: An Outside-In Perspective

There is a considerable body of research on ongoing customer-supplier relationships in business markets, but empirical research on the development of new business relationships and early stages of business relationships is more limited (Edvardsson et al., 2008). The initial phase of development of a business relationship appears to pose specific problems with important consequences for marketing and management of business relationships (Aaboen et al., 2011; Gadde et al., 2012). The relationship marketing literature in general implies that development of new customer-supplier relationships tends to be intentional and results from the identification of exchange opportunities and the development of an economically convenient offering (Gummesson, 1996; Sheth & Parvatiyar, 1995). In contrast research dealing with business relationships has shown that the initial phases of a business relationship are often “chaotic” for the managers involved on both sides and the development often takes unexpected directions. This aspect of the customer-supplier relationship development is rather neglected in the general relationship marketing literature. Since business relationships develop as a sequence of interactions that take place between two counterparts (Holmlund, 2004), an investigation of interaction processes is required to understand how new relationships start. In this paper we report a case study describing the interaction processes when business relationships are initiated and illustrates how contextual factors affect the process. Exploring the development of a business relationship between previously unconnected businesses we focus on the role played in relationship development by exogenous factors.

[1]  Anna Dubois,et al.  Organising Industrial Activities Across Firm Boundaries , 1998 .

[2]  David T. Wilson,et al.  Managing Business Relationships , 1998 .

[3]  Lars-Erik Gadde,et al.  Interactive resource development in new business relationships , 2012 .

[4]  G. Easton Critical realism in case study research , 2010 .

[5]  Enrico Baraldi,et al.  Resource interaction in inter-organizational networks: Foundations, comparison, and a research agenda , 2012 .

[6]  J. Sheth,et al.  The evolution of relationship marketing , 1995 .

[7]  Frida Lind,et al.  Start-ups starting up - Firms looking for a network , 2011 .

[8]  D. Ford,et al.  How should companies interact in business networks , 2002 .

[9]  H. Håkansson,et al.  Developing relationships in business networks , 1995 .

[10]  Maria Holmlund,et al.  Analyzing business relationships and distinguishing different interaction levels , 2004 .

[11]  Bo Edvardsson,et al.  Initiation of business relationships in service-dominant settings , 2008 .

[12]  Lars-Erik Gadde,et al.  Business Networks , 2010, Encyclopedia of Social Network Analysis and Mining. 2nd Ed..

[13]  Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al.  Theory Building From Cases: Opportunities And Challenges , 2007 .

[14]  Frank V. Cespedes Concurrent Marketing: Integrating Product, Sales, and Service , 1995 .

[15]  Evert Gummesson,et al.  Relationship marketing and imaginary organizations: a synthesis , 1996 .

[16]  Ajay K. Kohli,et al.  Rethinking Customer Solutions: From Product Bundles to Relational Processes , 2007 .

[17]  Michael Gibbert,et al.  From complexity to transparency: managing the interplay between theory, method and empirical phenomena in IMM case studies , 2010 .

[18]  Asta Salmi,et al.  International research teams as analysts of industrial business networks , 2010 .