Bala, H., and Venkatesh, V.
Information Systems Research, 18,
2007, 340-362.
Organizations have not fully realized the
benefits of interorganizational relationships (IORs) due to the lack of
cross-enterprise process integration capabilities. Recently,
interorganizational business process standards (IBPS) enabled by
information technology (IT) have been suggested as a solution to help
organizations overcome this problem. Drawing on three theoretical
perspectives, i.e., the relational view of the firm, institutional
theory, and organizational inertia theory, we propose three mechanisms—relational,
influence, and inertial—to explain the assimilation of
IBPS in organizations. We theorize that these mechanisms will have
differential effects on the assimilation of IBPS in dominant and
nondominant firms. Using a cross-case analysis based on data from 11
firms in the high-tech industry, we found evidence to support our
propositions that relational depth, relationship extendability, and
normative pressure were important for dominant firms while relational
specificity and influence mechanisms (coercive, mimetic, and normative
pressures) were important for nondominant firms. Inertial mechanisms,
i.e., ability and willingness to overcome resource and routine
rigidities, were important for both dominant and nondominant firms.
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