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A comparative case study of sustaining quality as a competitive advantage

  • Autores: Hung-Chung Su, Kevin Linderman, Roger G Schroeder, Andrew H. Van de Ven
  • Localización: Journal of Operations Management, ISSN-e 1873-1317, Vol. 32, Nº. 7-8, 2014, págs. 429-445
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Many organizations have achieved high levels of quality performance only to lose it later on. These firms that were once quality leaders can no longer compete on the quality of their products or services. This research develops a theoretical understanding of how organizations can sustain a quality advantage. It offers a conceptual definition of sustaining a quality advantage which involves not only sustaining a high level of quality performance, but also sustaining a high consistency of quality performance. A comparative case study provides evidence of three capabilities that distinguish firms with different levels of sustaining quality. These capabilities include: (1) meta-learning, (2) sensing weak signals, and (3) resilience to quality disruptions. The case analysis argues that meta-learning helps sustain a high level of quality performance, while sensing weak signals and resilience improves the consistency of quality performance. This study offers a dynamic capability-based strategy that explains how to sustain a competitive advantage in quality, which may also have implications for sustaining other operational competitive advantages.


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