The impact of supply chain relationships and automatic data communication and registration on forecast information quality
Journal article, 2008

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explain the effects of the customer-supplier relationship and of automatic forecast data communication and registration on the perceived information quality of forecasts. Design/methodology/approach – A conceptual model and three hypotheses are derived. The empirical analysis is based on survey data from 219 Swedish manufacturing companies. Findings – Findings show that the customer-supplier relationship and automatic data communication and registration have significant impact on the perceived quality of forecast information received from a downstream customer in the supply chain. The reliability and timeliness of the forecast information are affected to about the same extent byboth the relationship type andthe data communication andregistration strategy. Credibility is correlated with the relationship type, while the completeness, validity and conciseness of the received forecast are operative issues dependingmainly on the communication strategy. Research limitations/implications – Using single informants, focal customers and some single-item constructs in research design. Practical implications – The paper explains how various dimensions of forecast information quality are affected by different factors, thus guiding how to differentiate information quality improvement work in diverse situations. Originality/value – Detailed empirical studies of supply chain information exchange, especially focusing on explaining causes of high-quality information exchange, are lacking in the literature and demanded in industry.

Communication technologies

Channel relationships

Forecasting

Supply chain management

Sweden

Author

Patrik Jonsson

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Logistics & Transportation

Mattias Gustavsson

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Logistics & Transportation

International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management

0960-0035 (ISSN)

Vol. 38 4 280-295

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Economics and Business

DOI

10.1108/09600030810875382

More information

Created

10/7/2017