A company's ability to best exploit performance potentials within
buyer-supplier relationships has become a critical success factor in
securing competition and improving a company's overall performance.
Implementation of suitable mechanisms and execution of control
activities across company boundaries - commonly executed by both
partners - is often insufficient because actual improvement potentials
are not identified correctly. Embedded in a contingency-based research
framework, the author combines several statistical methods to
empirically analyze causal relationships between performance and
contingent performance-determinants. Resulting in a control
process-oriented guideline, findings support companies in the design and
use of performance control systems in buyer-supplier relationships and
open the field for further research.