• Post category:StudyBullet-7
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Contract Management, SRM, and Outsourcing Explained by Ground Economic and Psychological Theories

What you will learn

Establish foundational knowledge of contracts and outsourcing by relying on classical economic theories

Explain the Rational Choice Theory and Bounded Rationality and how they affert our decision-making

Introduce Transactional Cost Economics and Incomplete Contracts and suggest practical ways to overcome the Hold-up Problem and make outsourcing decisions.

Explain the spectrum of outourcing and contractual relationships, types of contracts, and evolution of relational contracting

Show how formal and relational contracts coexist and add value to each other

Discuss parties’ expectations under outsourcing contracts

Set the basis for further professional development in contract management, outsourcing, and Supplier Relationship Management (SRM)

Description

This content isn’t a typical crash course on contract management, SRM, or outsourcing. It equally suits newcomers to the profession and seasoned experts who just missed some applicable classical concepts and their practical implications on the contract and supplier management and outsourcing.

We suggest the brief but informative synthesis of ground economic and psychological theories that our students might’ve overlooked.

We will talk about decision-making, heuristics, incomplete contracts, relationships, and trust – all of that will be explained and suggested for practical use.

Much is being said about the importance of relations in contract management, SRM, and outsourcing. However, the arguments supporting broad statements are primarily subjective.

Indeed, we need to trust our suppliers. We must carefully nurture relations with them, which might eventually bring some fruits of cooperation, support, and innovation.

We rather feel that we understand such ideas. Everyone promotes value creation, relationship building, and business transformation. Yet, there’s a certain lack of theoretical background to justify or disapprove of famous slogans and buzzwords.


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Meanwhile, some classic economic and psychological theories logically and consistently explain the value of relationships in contract management, SRM, and outsourcing.

One of them is Behavioral Economics – an elegant blend of psychological, cognitive, emotional, and cultural aspects that all together explain the human nature of economic decisions.

With the help of Rational Choice Theory, Bounded Rationality, Transactional Cost Theory, Agency Theory, and Incomplete Contracts, this course will tell you a story of relational norms, mutual dependence, and trust in the modern world of opportunism and irrationality.

It will describe how science explains our behavior when we cooperate, negotiate, or satisfice.

This course suggests ways to reach a constructive and healthy commitment between economic actors.

English
language

Content

Introduction

Introduction

Behavioral Economics

Rational Choice Theory
Practical Excercise in Rational Decision-Making
Bounded Rationality Theory
What is Satisficing?
Heuristics in Real Life
Decision-Making Under Stress

Transactional Cost Economics and Incomplete Contracts

TCE and Incomplete Contract Theory
Practical case: The Way to Resolve Hold-up Problem

Formal and Relational Contracts

A Theory of Social Contracts by Ian Macneil
The Agency Theory
Types of Contracts
The Evolution of Relational Contracting
The Co-existence of Formal and Relational Contracts
Contracting Parties’ Expectations under the Relational Contract
The Practical Treatment of Relational Contracts by English Law