1. Respondents provided an interesting
profile of the nature and extent of outsourcing in the
training area. On average, firms indicated that they used
outside suppliers for approximately 30% of their overall
training needs and 26% of their training budget was spent on
outside vendors. Additionally, 58% of the respondents noted
that they used five or fewer outside suppliers to provide
their training.
2. In terms of the type of training
outsourced, 25% of the respondents indicated that they used
training suppliers most often for management development
programs, while 23% indicated that they outsourced technical
training most often.
3. Survey results revealed that there were
no significant differences in client satisfaction in
relation to the primary type of training outsourced.
4. Of the 10 relationships hypothesized in
the model, eight received substantial support and two were
not significant: vendor dependency, and idiosyncratic
training and client satisfaction.
5. Vendor dependency—It
was anticipated that suppliers who rely on a particular
customer for the majority of their work would voluntarily
adapt to meet the needs of that customer. And, because
adaptive behavior is the foundation upon which trust is
built, it was thought that trust would increase as a result.
However, when a vendor is highly dependent, it was
discovered that adaptive behavior is not seen as an
indicator of genuine concern for the other party, i.e., the
client. It is possible that adaptive behavior is instead
seen as behavior to serve the vendor’s own interests. If
true, the client would be less likely to reciprocate.
Reciprocation is needed if socially-oriented trust is to
emerge (see definition of social exchange theory above).
6. Idiosyncratic (company-specific)
training and client satisfaction—The
authors predicted that when company-specific training was
entrusted to outside suppliers, client satisfaction levels
would be lower. This prediction turned out to be inaccurate.
Apparently, client firms did not feel as vulnerable to
opportunistic behavior from training vendors because they
were able to engage successfully in adaptive behaviors to
reduce concerns to protect their interests before entering
into their contractual agreements for training and
development (see definitions of transaction cost
economics and resource-based view above).