Learning to Contract: Evidence from the Personal Computer Industry
University of Southern California · Boston University
Abstract
Organizational forms involving more detailed contracts than are found in traditional spot market exchanges appear to be increasingly prevalent. There has been relatively little analysis, however, of the extent to which firms learn how to use contracts to manage their interfirm relationships over time. In this paper, we conduct a detailed case study of a time series of 11 contracts concluded during 1989–1997 between the same two partners, both of whom participate in the personal computer industry, to explore whether and how firms learn to contract. We find many changes to the structure of the contracts that cannot be fully explained by changes in the assets at risk in the relationship, and evidence that these…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 67.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 90
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Phenomenon
- Business
- Work (physics)
- Organizational learning
- Industrial organization
- Knowledge management
- Marketing
- Computer science