Jon Johnson’s research while affiliated with University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and other places

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Publications (1)


Broadening our understanding of interfirm rivalry: A call for research on how supply networks shape competitive behavior and performance
  • Article

February 2022

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52 Reads

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18 Citations

Journal of Supply Chain Management

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Jordan M. Barker

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Jon Johnson

In their pursuit of greater performance, firms invariably compete with their rivals for customer demand or scarce resources in factor markets. Firms’ competitive behavior—the series of competitive actions taken to create or maintain competitive advantage—thus, is a key predictor of profitability and has received much attention in the strategic management literature. The central tenet of this article is that supply networks and the relationships among firms in these networks fundamentally shape the nature of interfirm competition and, ultimately, firm performance. While prior research has amply studied the competitive dynamics among (horizontal) rival firms as well as the linkages between supply network characteristics and firm performance, there remain important opportunities to examine how supply networks enable and shape firms’ competitive behavior and the effectiveness of their rivalrous activity. The goal of this article, therefore, is to take stock of the advances made in prior literature and to outline topics for future study at the intersection of competition and supply chain management. Collectively, we lay out a comprehensive perspective on the role that supply networks can play in affecting competition that, we hope, will inform and guide efforts to enhance our understanding of firm‐level competitive behavior and associated performance outcomes.

Citations (1)


... In essence, LSCM is not about being "lean" with minimum inventory or no waste, but LSCM is a lean overall approach to supply chain management where the final goal is agility, efficiency, excellence, and customer satisfaction (Rossini et al.2023) [31] (El et al.2023) [8] . An efficient supply chain, to a greater extent, has become a strategic weapon and competitive advantage for many moves and countermoves in an attempt to bring efficiency gains to varying degrees (Hofer et al. 2022) [32] . These practices range from just-in-time, total quality management, and continuous replenishment, to collaboration between trading partners, outsourcing processes, or the entire warehousing and distribution functions, and manufacturing under the roof or buildcompete from other original equipment manufacturers known as original design manufacturers (Arjona et al. 2020) [33] (Brakman et al. 2020) [34] . ...

Reference:

Lean Supply Chain Management and Firm Performance: A Review
Broadening our understanding of interfirm rivalry: A call for research on how supply networks shape competitive behavior and performance
  • Citing Article
  • February 2022

Journal of Supply Chain Management