Trust   successful
Chidambaram ~ RBI ~ Stock Markets ~ Equities ~ Mutual Funds ~ Insurance ~ Global MarkesEva Longoria
Home / Business News / 2008 / May 2008 / May 4, 2008
Trust is the key to successful joint business ventures

Top News

Andhra Pradesh SSC 2008 Results

Rededication Day marks Congress Government's fourth year in office

60 per cent voting recorded in second phase of Karnataka polls

BRIC nations join chorus for Security Council reforms

Bollywood film Aashayein all set for release

Chidambaram blames Inflation on soaring global oil prices

Manchester bans big screens for Champion League Final fearing violence

Body clock cog finding could end jet lag

Bird flu spreads in Darjeeling

Trust is the key to successful joint business ventures

In order to survive in the global economy, corporate collaboration is becoming a necessity, thereby making trust critical to the success of joint business ventures.

Washington, May 4 : In order to survive in the global economy, corporate collaboration is becoming a necessity, thereby making trust critical to the success of joint business ventures.

A University of Missouri study examined the effects of trust at three distinct organizational levels and found that business executives should strive to build and maintain trust to improve performance.

Building that trust may include consideration of staffing, special compensation and adjusted management processes.

"Firms form collaborative entities to generate value and achieve objectives that would be difficult, if not impossible, to achieve independently," said Lisa Scheer, the Emma S. Hibbs Distinguished Professor at MU's Robert J. Trulaske, Sr. College of Business.

"Collaborations often fail to reach those goals and the culprit may be poor relations and the lack of trust in joint ventures," she added.

In the research, the scientists studied 114 international joint business ventures (JBVs) and found that trust was a key component at three levels - between the two collaborating firms; in each firm's reliance on its own representatives; and, among the individuals assigned to a collaborative entity, which is a group with representatives from both firms formed to facilitate the joint venture.

Trust occurring at the collaborating firm level is called inter-organizational trust. This can be trust between two CEOs or it can be institutionalized trust among people at different firms who have worked together for a long time.

In many cases, management assigns specific people in each firm to form a collaborative group, or entity. The entity may be formed for different reasons, such as to develop new products, strengthen supply chains, reduce operational costs, reach new markets, devise industry standards or serve specific customers. At this trust level, the parent organization must trust the people in this group.

On another level, the people in the collaborative entity must trust each other and be able to share critical information to achieve their objective. Trust must be established because sharing and coordination creates vulnerabilities that a partner might exploit.

"Any collaborative entity will have unique problems. But collaborative entities also share similar challenges arising from the mixed loyalties and conflicting objectives the individual collaborators face. If the collaborators continually place their respective parent firm's goals first, the collaboration is likely to fail. Actions that benefit only the entity, however, may undermine the parent firm's short-term interests," Scheer said.

The study, "Trust at Different Organizational Levels," is published in the Journal of Marketing.

ANI

May 17, 2008

May 16, 2008

May 15, 2008

May 14, 2008

May 13, 2008

May 12, 2008