Determinants of Long-Term Orientation in Buyer-Seller Relationships
- 1 April 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Marketing
- Vol. 58 (2) , 1-19
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1252265
Abstract
Marketing managers must know the time orientation of a customer to select and use marketing tools that correspond to the time horizons of the customer. Insufficient understanding of a customer's time orientation can lead to problems, such as attempting a relationship marketing when transaction marketing is more appropriate. The author suggests that long-term orientation in a buyer/seller relationship is a function of two main factors: mutual dependence and the extent to which they trust one another. Dependence and trust are related to environmental uncertainty, transaction-specific investments, reputation, and satisfaction in a buyer/seller relationship. The framework presented here is tested with 124 retail buyers and 52 vendors supplying to those retailers. The results indicate that trust and dependence play key roles in determining the long-term orientation of both retail buyers and their vendors. The results also indicate that both similarities and differences exist across retailers and vendors with respect to the effects of several variables on long-term orientation, dependence, and trust.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vertical Trade Relationships: The Role of Dependence and Symmetry in Attaining Organizational GoalsJournal of Marketing Research, 1992
- A Transaction Cost Analysis Model of Channel Integration in International MarketsJournal of Marketing Research, 1990
- Forward Integration into Distribution: An Empirical Test of Transaction Cost AnalysisJournal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 1988
- The Role of Dependence Balancing in Safeguarding Transaction-Specific Assets in Conventional ChannelsJournal of Marketing, 1988
- On the Measurement of Interfirm Power in Channels of DistributionJournal of Marketing Research, 1983
- Assessing Measurement Error in Key Informant Reports: A Methodological Note on Organizational Analysis in MarketingJournal of Marketing Research, 1981