A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Partnering in facilities management: An advantageous approach for public sector organisation
Managing and maintaining the built environment can account for 10% to 20% of an organisation's operational costs. With public sector expenditure reaching £550bn in 2005/06, increased pressure has been placed on organisations to promote "Best Value" practices and many universities, emergency services operators and government organisations have outsourced areas of their facilities management operations to private sector service providers in an attempt to improve resource efficiency and service effectiveness. During the last twenty years the benefits of outsourcing as a strategy have continued to be questioned and a number of issues, such as the development of adversarial relationships, have been highlighted. This has in part, led to the evolution of the "partnering" concept as applied to FM. With the culture of openness and collaboration the concept promotes, it has been seen as a way to address some of the weaknesses of outsourcing. This report aimed to establish whether partnering is an advantageous approach for public sector organisations managing their facilities. In doing so it looked firstly at whether partnering as a concept addresses the outsourcing concerns echoed by organisations, secondly whether the partnering elements are aligned to those prioritised by public sector organisations and finally how the partnering arrangement can be successfully implemented and managed to make it an advantageous approach. When answering the above questions the research has looked at how authors and public sector organisations regard outsourcing and the concept of partnering. In doing so the investigation has involved reviewing a number of articles, analysing the results from a self-administered survey, considering feedback obtained through interviews and exploring appropriate case studies. The results from each of these have been consistent and conclusive and there are two key findings established from the research. The first is that the emphasis on communication and commitment within partnering arrangements has been ...
Partnering in facilities management: An advantageous approach for public sector organisation
Managing and maintaining the built environment can account for 10% to 20% of an organisation's operational costs. With public sector expenditure reaching £550bn in 2005/06, increased pressure has been placed on organisations to promote "Best Value" practices and many universities, emergency services operators and government organisations have outsourced areas of their facilities management operations to private sector service providers in an attempt to improve resource efficiency and service effectiveness. During the last twenty years the benefits of outsourcing as a strategy have continued to be questioned and a number of issues, such as the development of adversarial relationships, have been highlighted. This has in part, led to the evolution of the "partnering" concept as applied to FM. With the culture of openness and collaboration the concept promotes, it has been seen as a way to address some of the weaknesses of outsourcing. This report aimed to establish whether partnering is an advantageous approach for public sector organisations managing their facilities. In doing so it looked firstly at whether partnering as a concept addresses the outsourcing concerns echoed by organisations, secondly whether the partnering elements are aligned to those prioritised by public sector organisations and finally how the partnering arrangement can be successfully implemented and managed to make it an advantageous approach. When answering the above questions the research has looked at how authors and public sector organisations regard outsourcing and the concept of partnering. In doing so the investigation has involved reviewing a number of articles, analysing the results from a self-administered survey, considering feedback obtained through interviews and exploring appropriate case studies. The results from each of these have been consistent and conclusive and there are two key findings established from the research. The first is that the emphasis on communication and commitment within partnering arrangements has been ...
Partnering in facilities management: An advantageous approach for public sector organisation
Carraz, LJA (author)
2006-11-01
Doctoral thesis, UCL (University College London).
Theses
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
690
Partnering: A Public Sector Perspective
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1994
|Corporate partnering in facilities management
Emerald Group Publishing | 1995
|Facilities management: Ensuring partnering excellence
British Library Online Contents | 2006
Adding value to the healthcare sector – a facilities management partnering arrangement case study
Emerald Group Publishing | 2001
|Partnering for the Public Sector: Guest Editor's Introduction
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1994
|