Non-Profit-Maximizing Behavior in Supply Chain Management
Non-profit-maximizing behavior in supply chain management focuses on the human component in supply chain management. It develops behavioral models that consider individual and social preferences of supply chain members in order to improve our understanding of actual decision-making in supply chain management.
The author challenges the common assumption of a selfish homo economicus and introduces the human component in three experimental studies: In the first study, he examines the effect of individual risk preferences in the Newsvendor context. In the second study, a common group identity to overcome incentive conflicts in forecast sharing is studied. The third study explores underlying cognitive processes in contractual decision-making.
Potential readership includes scholars and graduate students who are interested in the field of behavioral operations management and practitioners looking for behavioral aspects of decision makingin supply chain management.
3. Group Preferences and Forecast Sharing in Supply Chains
4. Fairness Preferences and Priming in Contracting
5. Conclusion
Bibliography.
The author challenges the common assumption of a selfish homo economicus and introduces the human component in three experimental studies: In the first study, he examines the effect of individual risk preferences in the Newsvendor context. In the second study, a common group identity to overcome incentive conflicts in forecast sharing is studied. The third study explores underlying cognitive processes in contractual decision-making.
Potential readership includes scholars and graduate students who are interested in the field of behavioral operations management and practitioners looking for behavioral aspects of decision makingin supply chain management.
1. Introduction
2. Risk Preferences of Informed Newsvendors3. Group Preferences and Forecast Sharing in Supply Chains
4. Fairness Preferences and Priming in Contracting
5. Conclusion
Bibliography.
Gully, Torsten
| ISBN | 978-3-658-24087-5 |
|---|---|
| Medientyp | Buch |
| Auflage | First Edition 2013. reprint 2019 |
| Copyrightjahr | 2019 |
| Verlag | Springer, Berlin |
| Umfang | XVII, 171 Seiten |
| Sprache | Englisch |