Internal Integration and Organizational Performance
Internal Integration and Organizational Performance
Internal Integration and Organizational Performance
The author concluded that internal integration enables firms to better explain
functional interdependencies. Thus better functional coordination and cross-
functional teams, enable staff to manage disagreements and conflicts arising across
individual functions (Vickery et al., 2003). Droge et al. (2004) further argued that
using organizational capabilities in isolation does not support the creation of a
unified value chain. This is because individual abilities are interrelated and must be
synchronized in order for firms to achieve better levels of organizational
performance (Flynn et al., 2010; Huo, 2012). S
ome authors argued that the systematic coordination between departmental
functions and mutual problem-solving initiatives could also diminish the barriers
caused by traditional departmentalization and functional borders (Aryee et al.,
2008; Germain and Iyer, 2006; Zhao et al., 2011). In other words, internal
integration breaks down traditionally departmental barriers and stimulates
cooperation, which shapes the foundation for the coordination of data flow across
different functional departments (Flynn et al., 2010). Therefore some have argued
that not focusing on the role of internal integration, would result in various
departments becoming cross-purpose and strictly functional.
For example, Pagell (2004) found that in companies with lower internal integration,
resources were more frequently wasted. The author concluded that such waste of
resource had detrimental effect on cost and quality performance. Similarly
Rosenzweig et al. (2003) suggested that internal integration enables cross-
functional teams to concurrently improve product and process design. The authors
argued this assist companies with decreasing their production cost and increasing
production quality. By further investigating the production literature, it was also
found that internal integration enables the share of knowledge throughout different
departments and manufacturing plants (Narasimhan and Kim, 2002), and thus
allows better coordination of production capacity, enhanced production flexibility,
and better delivery performance (Droge et al., 2004).
It has also been argued that internal integration influence external integration. For
example authors such as, Flynn et al. (2010) and Zhao et al. (2011) suggested that
internal integration acts as the foundation to which a company can more effectively
obtain, interpret and apply external information/resources. Thus, external
integration could be considered an extension of internal integration across company
borders (Huo, 2012). Some theorists have gone the extra mile and have suggested
that internal integration is a precondition for external integration (e.g. Morash and
Clinton, 1998; Narasimhan and Kim, 2002). This implies that internal integration
could aid organizations in understanding the needs of their customers, work with
them in mutual product design initiatives, exchange data more effectively, and
ultimately strategic alliance success. Therefore without the cooperation of
numerous internal departments, it would be difficult for focal companies to meet the
needs of their customers, especially in more uncertain business environment (Huo,
2012; Zhao et al., 2011; Wong et al., 2011b). Furthermore internal integration also
improves the ability of companies to better understand their suppliers (e.g. quality
standards of raw materials and components).
For example, Huo (2012) argued that internal integration could enhance
information exchange, partnerships, joint planning, and product design with
suppliers. Additionally in a number of studies it was found that idea/knowledge
sharing and value creation using internal integration had a positive effect on the
degree of external cooperation and organizational competitive performance (Allred
et al., 2011; Childerhouse and Towill, 2011; Droge et al., 2004; Flynn et al., 2010;
Gimenez and Ventura, 2005; Koufteros et al., 2005; Prajogo and Olhager, 2012;
Wong and Boon-itt, 2011; Zhao et al., 2011). However, in other studies results were
mixed (Devaraj et al., 2007; Flynn et al., 2010; Germain and Iyer, 2006).
Not all information received from the external sources is useful and in some cases
they may be overlapping (Lau et al., 2010; Liu et al., 2013; Olhager and Prajogo,
2012). For example, Danese and Romano (2012) found that closer coordination with
customers (downstream integration) did not significantly impact organizational
efficiency. Therefore, this research argues that form a strategic perspective, it is the
companys responsibility to internally assess and alter the external data into an
economically valuable source (e.g. utilizing data management systems and learning
mechanisms). Moreover in order to design an internally integrated firm that can
appropriately interact with firm external uncertainties, managers use variety of
techniques, such as concurrent engineering, cross-functional teams, enterprise
resource planning (Droge et al., 2004; Koufteros et al., 2005; Vickery et al., 2003).
Regardless of the differences, managers typically use such techniques in order to
initiate the strategic modification of individual goals, inspire knowledge and idea
sharing, and to establish collaborative cultures (Flynn et al., 2010).
Based on the systematic review on the current SCI studies, two significant outcomes
on the dimension of internal integration are presented. Firstly, a stream of literature
indicates that knowledge sharing and values obtained using internal integration, aid
companies in strengthening their collaboration with customers and suppliers. A
number of authors have highlighted the importance of close cooperation between
different functional units, for effectively managing relationships with the partners
outside the company boundaries (e.g. Flynn et al., 2010; Schoenherr and Swink,
2012; Vickery et al., 2003; Zhao et al., 2011). For example, Vickery et al. (2003)
reported a direct and significant association between SCI (including cross functional
team integration) and customer service. Swink et al. (2007) also reported that
internal integration (product-process technology) enhances manufacturing abilities,
and consequently customer satisfaction.
Secondly, studies have also found that internal integration has either a direct or
indirect effect on organizational performance (Danese and Romano, 2011; Danese
et al., 2013; Frohlich and Westbrook, 2001; Lau et al., 2010; Rosenzweig et al.,
2003; Stank et al., 2001a; Stank et al., 2001b) and financial performance (e.g.
Droge et al., 2004; Flynn et al., 2010; Frohlich and Westbrook, 2001; Kim, 2009;
Koufteros et al., 2005; Narasimhan and Kim, 2002; Petersen et al., 2005;
Rosenzweig et al., 2003; Swink et al., 2007). For example, Gimenez and Ventura
(2005) reported that internal integration positively impacts external integration, and
that external integration plays a mediating role on the association between internal
integration and organizational performance. Likewise Koufteros et al. (2005)
investigated the inter-relationships amongst internal and external integration the
context of new product development. By assessing 244 US manufacturing firms the
authors found that a high degree of internal integration (e.g. concurrent workflow
and early involvement) were important enablers and assisted timely trade of key
data (know-hows) amongst customers and suppliers.
Although in some research a direct association was not found amongst internal
integration and organizational performance (Koufteros et al., 2005; Gimenez and
Ventura, 2005), Other researchers managed to find direct positive associations
including, enhancing customer satisfaction, productivity, financial performance and
development time (Allred et al., 2011; Chen et al., 2007); developing competitive
capabilities and process efficiency (Rosenzweig et al., 2003; Saeed et al., 2005);
improving quality, cost, delivery, and flexibility (Boon-itt and Wong, 2011; Swink et
al., 2007; Wong et al., 2011b); improving responsiveness and time-based
performance (Danese et al., 2013; Droge et al., 2004); enhancing logistics and
service performance (Germain and Iyer, 2006; Stank et al., 2001a; Stank et al.,
2001b); and improving schedule attainment and competitive performance (Zhao et
al., 2013).
In another study, Frohlich and Westbrook (2002) reported that greater level of SCI
improved delivery time, transaction costs, and inventory turnover. Similarly Saeed
et al. (2005) argued that more effective external integration (information exchange)
improved process and sourcing efficiency. The authors reported that the degree of
shared data with supplier was a significant determinant of organizational
performance. Cousins and Menguc (2006) also suggested that higher degrees of
supplier integration had a significant positive impact on supplier communication
performance. Koufteros et al. (2007a) reported a significant and direct relationship
between gray-box supplier integration and product innovation.
In another empirical study Handfield et al. (2009) argued that more effective
supplier integration improves sourcing enterprise performance. Wong et al. (2011b)
also found a significant association between supplier integration and organizational
performance (e.g. delivery and flexibility). More recently studies have shown that
higher supplier integration improves delivery performance (Droge et al., 2012). For
example, Prajogo et al. (2012) found a positive relationship amongst strategic long-
term supplier integration and delivery, flexibility and, cost performance.
Furthermore studies have also found that more effective supplier integration
improves buyer performance (e.g. efficiency and flexibility) (Danese, 2013)
schedule attainment (Zhao et al., 2013) and new product performance
(manufacturing flexibility) (He et al., 2014).
Additionally supplier integration also involves organizational routines, which are
created amongst companies. Some argue that such associations are unique set of
competencies, which are built upon tacit, heterogeneous, and context-specific
knowledge (Schoenherr and Swink, 2012). For example, Swink et al. (2007) argued
that greater levels of supplier integration is often reflected by mutual commitments,
dedicated associations, and co-developed systems (e.g. company competences,
knowledge assets, and other features of SCI). Furthermore such integration
practices can create mixtures of unique skills, knowledge, and mutual abilities. It
was argued that better supplier integration is likely to produce product quality
improvements. This idea generation and assessment conducted mutually with
suppliers could result in superior product design and launch quality (He et al.,
2014).
demand and transportation time, were amongst the most significant factors in
establishing the efficiency of the SC. In a systematic review Gunasekaran et al.
(2001) offered a summary of performance metric within SCs. Using an integrative
framework, the authors viewed the different functions inside a firms SC, and offered
a metric related to managing the SC (e.g. plan, source, make, and delivery). In
another study Gunasekaran et al. (2004) argued that for effective implementation of
performance metric, organization-wide coordination was needed. Thus, in
monitoring performance every single metric must take a SC perspective, and each
unit in the supply chain must be measured and enhanced in accordance to the
common goals. It has been suggested that non-financial metric are gaining more
consideration than the financial ones and that additional effort is needed to create
and design new qualitative measures (e.g. Bhagwat and Sharma, 2007;
Gunasekaran et al., 2004; Shepherd and Gunter, 2011).
Therefore it is argued that a systematic approach to organizing and collecting
measures for assessing SC performance is needed. Further on as presented above,
debates exist over the most applicable method to classify such measures. Some
have classified them as, qualitative or quantitative measures (e.g. Beamon, 1999;
Chan, 2003); others focused on strategic, organizational or tactical (e.g.
Gunasekaran et al., 2001); and a few have classified the measures based on SC
process (Chan and Qi, 2003; Huang et al., 2004; Li et al., 2005). Furthermore
authors have used performance indicators such as cost and non-cost (De Toni and
Tonchia, 2001; Gunasekaran, 2001); quality, cost, delivery, and flexibility
(Schnsleben, 2003); cost, quality, resource utilization, flexibility, visibility, trust,
and innovativeness (Chan, 2003); resources, outputs, and flexibility (Beamon,
1999); supply chain collaboration efficiency, coordination efficiency, and
configuration (Hieber, 2002); and, input, output and composite measures (Chan and
Qi, 2003).