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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Incentive maintenance outsourcing contracts for channel coordination and improvement

, , &
Pages 671-684 | Received 01 May 2005, Accepted 01 May 2005, Published online: 23 Feb 2007
 

Consider a manufacturer who has a process with an increasing failure rate over time. In order to improve the process performance, the following two types of maintenance activity are outsourced to an external contractor: (i) preventive maintenance is performed periodically to improve the reliability of the process when the process is functional; and (ii) corrective maintenance is used to restore the process to a specified condition when it fails. We consider the use of incentive contracts to induce the contractor to select the maintenance policy that optimizes the total profit of the manufacturer and contractor. It is demonstrated that an incentive contract based on a combination of a target uptime level and a bonus always leads to the desired win-win coordination, and provides flexibility in allocating the extra profit generated from coordination and, importantly, an incentive to the contractor to improve the efficiency of the maintenance operations. The incentive contract can also be used to select the most economically efficient contractor from multiple contractors with different maintenance capabilities.

Acknowledgements

We wish to thank the Department Editor and three anonymous referees for their many helpful suggestions, which improved this paper.

Notes

*The UTB contract can always lead to the new channel coordination by adding a simple constraint requiring the uptime to be at least U(τ).

*Channel coordination is not achieved under the CS contract.

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