Supply management capability, strategic orientation and firm performanceDay, M., Lichtenstein, S. and Samouel, P. (2025) Supply management capability, strategic orientation and firm performance. Strategy and Leadership. ISSN 1087-8572 (In Press)
It is advisable to refer to the publisher's version if you intend to cite from this work. See Guidance on citing. To link to this item DOI: 10.1108/SL-02-2025-0018 Abstract/SummaryPurpose – This study investigates the performance impact of how supply management capabilities interacts with firm-level strategic configurations. The research addresses the significant gap in empirical understanding of whether and how different firm-level strategies moderate the relationship between procurement capabilities and firm performance. Design/methodology/approach – Using partial least squares structural equation modelling (SEM), mediation and moderation effects were tested for the key variables include supply management capability measured as four routine bundles, strategic orientation using the Miles and Snow typology and two performance outcomes (operational and financial) on a sample of 518 usable responses from UK-based supply management professionals. Findings – The findings reveal that supply management capability positively affects financial performance but only indirectly through operational performance and only for firms with stable strategic orientations (prospectors, analyzers or defenders). In contrast, strategically unstable businesses (reactors) lack a performance impact from supply management capability. Research limitations/implications – Theoretically, this research advances understanding of the operational performance value of specific bundles of supply management capabilities by highlighting the necessity of strategic coherence for capability-driven performance gains. Practical implications – For practitioners, these findings suggest that managers should prioritize building supply management capabilities only when their firms have a clear and stable strategy, as such investments yield no performance benefit in strategically incoherent contexts. Social implications – The study opens avenues for future research on the dynamics of supply management during periods of strategic transition and the development of more granular capability measures. Originality/value – The research addresses the significant gap in empirical understanding of whether and how different firm-level strategies moderate the relationship between procurement capabilities and firm performance. Keywords Strategy, Configuration, Supply management, Capability, Mediation, Moderation Paper type Research paper
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