To read this content please select one of the options below:

Raising facilities management’s profile in organisations: Developing a world‐class framework

Sezgin Kaya (Research Fellow, Centre for Facilities Management, School of Construction and Property Management, University of Salford, UK; Tel: +44 (0) 161 295 5357; E‐mail: s.kaya@salford.ac.uk)
Christopher Andrew Heywood (University of Melbourne PhD candidate and researcher in corporate real estate and facilities management in the Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning)
Kirsten Arge (Senior Researcher at the Norwegian Building Research Institute)
Graham Brawn (Professor of architecture at the University of Melbourne)
Keith Alexander (Director of the Centre for Facilities Management (CFM))

Journal of Facilities Management

ISSN: 1472-5967

Article publication date: 31 December 2004

1687

Abstract

Leading organisations expect that all business processes, including facilities management (FM), achieve world‐class standards. This paper presents the results of an international, collaborative investigation, on behalf of a UK‐based blue chip company and a member of the Facilities Management Foundation, to identify organisations that are recognised as exemplars of world‐class FM (WCFM) and to understand the processes that underpin world‐class performance. Much FM practice remains cost focused, rooted in operations and concerned primarily with maintaining the steady‐state position of an organisation. In contrast, most authors propose that facilities should be strategically planned, aligned to business needs and demonstrate contribution to achieving explicit business objectives. They argue for a common language and for conditions that ensure that facilities add value to the business. Very little is known about how these conditions are created in different organisational contexts. The paper describes a heuristic study of three cases, selected as exemplars of WCFM, focusing on the underlying processes. Project partners in Australia, Norway and the UK conducted the case studies to a common brief. The paper presents the framework that was created to enable comparison of FM processes in the case studies and a matrix of business drivers and FM outputs that was adapted for the project. The investigation identifies three FM roles ‐ as translator, processor and demonstrator. Facilities management identifies business needs and translates strategy into workplaces, owns the processes of providing those workplaces and demonstrates their impact on organisational outcomes. The paper develops a WCFM framework to provide a management tool for considering and relating FM projects at different levels in an organisation. The study highlights the importance of reframing FM projects as business projects, and concludes that participation at senior management, business unit and individual levels in the organisation is an important factor in obtaining value. The study also highlights the need for effective change management processes continually to adapt the workplace to changing business needs, and shows how FM provides value through sustaining the organisation through business cycles.

Keywords

Citation

Kaya, S., Heywood, C.A., Arge, K., Brawn, G. and Alexander, K. (2004), "Raising facilities management’s profile in organisations: Developing a world‐class framework", Journal of Facilities Management, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 65-82. https://doi.org/10.1108/14725960510808356

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2004, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Related articles