The Hybridity of Strategic Partnerships and Construction Supply Chain Management

Nicolaj Frederiksen (Danish Building Research Institute, Aalborg University, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Lasse Fredslund (Danish Building Research Institute, Aalborg University, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Stefan Christoffer Gottlieb (Danish Building Research Institute, Aalborg University, Copenhagen, Denmark)

10th Nordic Conference on Construction Economics and Organization

eISBN: 978-1-83867-051-1

ISSN: 2516-2853

Publication date: 1 May 2019

Abstract

Purpose

Strategic partnerships and construction supply chain management are claimed to improve productivity through their capabilities of managing internal and external relations between stakeholders. Thus, this study aims to present an analysis of a major Danish contractor group’s efforts to increase performances by building trust and long-term relationships across stakeholders of complex building projects with use of these managerial initiatives.

Design/Methodology/Approach

Scrutinising the social reality of the group, neo-institutional theory provides the analytical lens of an interpretivist case study drawing on empirical data (i.e. interviews and observations) collected through one year of enrolment in the group.

Findings

Findings reveals that internal organisational circumstances negatively influence the efforts to implement logics of strategic partnerships and construction supply chain management. Nevertheless, we propose organisational practitioners to obtain the perspectives of hybridisation as a fruitful concept for creating productive interactions between otherwise distinct managerial logics.

Research Limitations/Implications

The triangulation of the interpretivist data is limited to generalisations based on only one group operating in the Danish construction industry. However, the assumption is that critical implications of hybridity address generic issues across the industry.

Practical Implications

Organisational practitioners should experiment with hybridity of managerial mechanisms and dynamics, which potentially can influence the construction industry positively by innovating the operational performances in the entire value chain.

Originality/Value

The inquiry contributes to the puzzle of integrating strategic partnerships and construction supply chain management by rethinking dualism of logics generating alternatives of how hybridity can increase performance by combining various aspects of managerial initiatives.

Keywords

Citation

Frederiksen, N., Fredslund, L. and Gottlieb, S.C. (2019), "The Hybridity of Strategic Partnerships and Construction Supply Chain Management", Lill, I. and Witt, E. (Ed.) 10th Nordic Conference on Construction Economics and Organization (Emerald Reach Proceedings Series, Vol. 2), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 77-83. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2516-285320190000002029

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Nicolaj Frederiksen, Lasse Fredslund, Stefan Christoffer Gottlieb.

License

Published in the Emerald Reach Proceedings Series. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode


1. Introduction

The construction industry is a driving force in the Danish society because of its impacts on the national economy and the built environment. Thus, the industry is expected to take responsibility for maintaining a healthy national economy, and is a target of public policy instruments requiring change during perceptible economic fluctuations. According to Gottlieb and Haugbølle (2013), the industry has been subject to a series of policies aiming to increase productivity without delivering significant results.

In the efforts to solve issues of productivity, one of Denmark’s leading contractor groups has launched two managerial initiatives through its subsidiaries giving promises of increased capacity for managing relations between stakeholders and clients (Gottlieb et al., 2018; Fredslund and Gottlieb, 2018). Hence, a strategic partnership (SP) initiative, named TRUST, is anchored in the subsidiary Enemærke & Petersen A/S (E&P) intensifying internal relations. Another initiative, which is anchored in the subsidiary MT Højgaard A/S (MTH), seeks to progress construction supply chain management (CSCM) by strengthening external relations to suppliers and sub-contractors. Accordingly, the group responses to several institutional demands and pressures by integrating different managerial initiatives through the subsidiaries (e.g. lean construction, BIM, and location-based management, etc.). Thus, Zhao (2011) suggests that a high degree of internal integration enables external integration embracing the relevance of organisations’ internal capabilities including the willingness to integrate with external partners. In addition, Ellegaard and Koch (2012) argue that low integration affect the external resource mobilisation negatively while high integration allow resource mobilisation effectively. Accordingly, the success of managerial initiatives can be considered a question of the subsidiaries’ degree of internal integration, which we will scrutinise by exploring the critical implications of their practical actions.

2. Theoretical framework

The theoretical framework focusses on the micro-level processes of neo-institutional theory embracing novel understandings of the pluralistic institutional field of construction, which can give rise to conflicts. Accordingly, actors of the industry are assumed as connected by reciprocal relationships of institutional logics and orders framing their social reality and day-to-day activities (Reay and Hinings, 2009). As such, focusing on the potentials of hybridity and micro-level agency, the theoretical framework describes the multiple and often contradictory institutional demands organisations face and why they respond differently (Greenwood et al., 2011).

2.1. Institutional complexity, pluralism and logics

Institutional processes exist at multiple levels of analysis from individuals to organisations and fields. Our focus is to analyse how practitioners can advance managerial logics affecting field structures and orders in the process of handling an overall institutional pressure of increasing productivity. In that perspective, institutional pluralism describes situations faced by organisations that operate within multiple institutional spheres (Kraatz and Block, 2008), while institutional complexity describes situations where organisations experience contradictions between co-existing logics. Thus, pluralism is concerned with how legitimacy can be gained or maintained within different institutional spheres (Kraatz and Block, 2008), while complexity outlines “…‘demands’ and ‘prescriptions’ not as givens subject to organizational compliance but as available and accessible strategic opportunities and resources for action” (Ocasio and Radoynovska, 2016, p. 288). Following Ocasio and Radoynovska (2016), strategic organisational choices are shaped by available institutional logics. As such, efforts to implement SP and CSCM can fruitfully be studied in an institutional perspective, where both initiatives are considered managerial logics or practices sought integrated through the group subsidiaries.

The concept of logics is assumed relevant for understanding how managerial initiatives and micro-level processes guide behaviour by abstaining views of actors “…as ‘cultural dopes’ trapped by institutional arrangements or as hyper muscular institutional entrepreneurs” (Thornton et al., 2012, p. 1). Hence, logics are defined as “…axial systems of meaning or ways of ordering time and space” (Suddaby, 2010, p. 16) presents a framework for “…analysing the interrelationship among institutions, individuals, and organizations in social systems” (Thornton et al., 2012, p. 2).

Accordingly, the puzzle of co-existing managerial logics can expose a more nuanced perceptions of how different initiatives work together within organisations leading to potentials of managerial innovations and effective hybrids. Thus, the hybridity of logics is embracing institutional pluralism by analysing “…the creative agency that arises in the friction between logics that have traditionally appeared irreconcilable” (Johansen and Waldorff, 2017, p. 66). In essence, we focus on exploiting the benefits of interdependence between managerial logics and how this approach implicates the operational performance of the group (Reay and Hinings, 2009).

3. Methodological design and data collection

Scrutinising the micro-processes of different institutional environments involves an interpretivist approach exposing actionable understandings and practical knowledge when analysing the critical mechanism of the managerial logics. As such, by one year of enrolment in two subsidiaries, the research attempts to recognise the “…institutional landscapes and the ways in which organizations construct and navigate them in practice” (Smets et al., 2015, p. 283). Intrinsically, we build a case study on the triangulation of data that comprises the everyday life of the two subsidiaries (e.g. meetings, workshops, disseminations, dialogs, information and interviews) in relation to productivity issues. As such, the empirical data supports cross-organisational opinions and knowledge of the entire group. Additionally, the triangulation process and generalisations is solely based on the respond of only one group, which is limiting the research. However, empirical considerations are associated to address recognised issues of the Danish construction industry.

4. Case analysis

The group operates within different areas of construction and consists of seven subsidiaries, including the two case organisations. In addition, the group has annual revenue of €910M and employs 4,200 people, making it one of the largest contractor groups in Denmark. In this section, we scrutinise how the two case organisations respond differently to institutional pressure of increasing productivity by progressing altered managerial logics. Subsequently, we pursue to better understand critical implications of internal integration and mechanisms of hybridity by analysing the operational environment of the group.

4.1. E&P and the strategic partnership “TRUST”

E&P is a 43-year-old project-based organisation of approx. 700 employees, which has experienced a remarkable growth in last decade. E&P is recognised as a proactive and innovative contractor using a variety of production concepts. Furthermore, they are well-known for their social profile and dialog-driven approach to the market, which is mirrored by the company slogan “people who build for people”. For this reason, strong social aspects are deeply rooted in the company culture and their efforts to increase productivity.

In 2016, the City of Copenhagen announced an SP-tender for a four-year project portfolio of municipal construction projects of approx. €310M. Six AEC companies, including E&P, formed the business unit ‘TRUST’ as a response to the tender, focusing on integrating internal values such as trust, transparency, risk-sharing, common culture and collaboration reflecting the culture of E&P.

The legitimacy of the SP is a desire for organising complex-projects in novel ways resulting in economic productivity and more quality for the citizens of Copenhagen. Furthermore, the SP addresses challenges as fragmented value chains, uncertainties, distrust, disputes and autonomy, which are contemporary issues in the construction industry. Consequently, it has taken a year to build trust and a common culture, where teams are working for the SP rather than their respective companies. In addition, the companies involved are financially co-responsible, and any losses associated with new working methods are accountable to the companies.

According to the project executive of TRUST, the effort has already resulted in productivity improvements by at least 10 per cent through shorter planning and execution time owing to the already established team, as well as optimised processes and partnership principles between the involved parties. Thus, efficiency is obtained, nonetheless, it has been difficult for the actors of the partnership to valuate specific projects owing to divergent assessment criteria and non-generic project attributes. Accordingly, the validation of projects is of highest interest to maintain legitimacy and continued support by the City of Copenhagen. Furthermore, another issue (or opportunity) of the SP is how to relate strong internal relations to external dimensions by the acknowledgement of the potentials and volumes of the project-portfolio affiliated to suppliers and sub-contractors increasing productivity by also partnering the supply chain.

4.2. MTH and construction supply chain management

MTH is a project-based organisation of approx. 1,500 employees and have 100 years of history constructing bridges, infrastructure and buildings. The organisational procurement function is divided into strategic and project procurement and their objectives is to create market differentiation by continuously reducing costs, as well as ensuring value creation through alternative solutions, which is the rationality of progressing CSCM.

Strategic procurement focusses on how purchasing is organised in terms of policies, management and evaluation as a natural extension of contract preparation with external actors. Consequently, the potential of their efforts is to coordinate the purchasing volume, reduce risks and to address the market as a combined organisation, resulting in scaled benefits and competitive prices. As such, they assist with sourcing processes, benchmarking, invoice control and critical KPI’s addressing cost-avoidance, bonus, compliance and evaluations to secure competitive advantages and bottom line improvements. In contrast, project procurement focusses on project scrutiny and design in collaboration with project-stakeholders to optimise resources related to the projects.

In MTH, procurement practitioners highlight issues as unique products, fragmentation, inexpedient tendering and one-time collaborations as barriers to build trust and long-term relations in the supply chain. Furthermore, they emphasise internal organisational contradictions between company-policies and project-practice owing to the lack of compliance between strategic agreements and practices on site. Thus, tensions are created in relation to how supplier bonuses at the company level influence project budgets, which leads to sub-optimisations within the company. For example, strategic agreements are used to create an overall price dump in the market and act to direct prices in a high conjuncture market releasing bonuses at the company level, which not necessarily provide the lowest project price. Hence, strategic agreements and sourcing processes are accused of being too rigid to follow the fluctuations in a descending market and therefore lower project-level prices can be achieved by detouring strategic agreements in the short run, at the same time as savings are directed to the project instead of company bonuses. The majority of the practitioners are missing incentive structures to mediate this duality releasing the capacity of collaboration instead of organisational sub-optimisation.

With reference to internal and external implications of progressing CSCM, overall issues are according to the practitioners a blind-price-focus instead of a multi-criteria-focus of suppliers and sub-contractors. Consequently, the practitioners see CSCM as not only a complex logic to understand and mobilise, but also a necessary and value adding initiative for progressing external relations. Thus, they identify several critical aspects as building trust, risks and benefits allocation, knowledge sharing, transparency, innovation assessment, mutual KPIs and supplier evaluations as main remedies to progress CSCM.

5. Discussion

Perspectives of managerial logics, complexity and pluralism are highlighted as ingredients to analyse and discuss how two subsidiaries of the group are responding to an institutional pressure of increasing productivity. The MTH subsidiary is trying to integrate external relations through CSCM whereas the E&P subsidiary is progressing SP as a remedy to problems of internal integration. In general, both managerial logics are, somehow, pursuing associated principles about partnerships and seem committed to the same sub-logics of trust and collaboration, creating a common ground of learnings regardless of their external and internal attributes. However, we see that the responses to the productivity issue differ, which partly can be explained by differences in the organisational characteristics. Furthermore, the ways in which both organisations respond to the availability of managerial logics are to some extent influenced by internal circumstances especially considerations to how potential savings should be accounted for in the specific organisations leading to inconsistencies. Accordingly, this phenomenon can negatively affect legitimacy and opportunities affiliated to the potentials of external dimensions by the lack of internal integrity, which is assumed relevant to build strong external associations. As a proposal, we emphasise experimental capabilities of managers progressing the group as a hybrid organisation to handle contradictory demands from the institutional environment.

In terms of organisational structure, MTH is more bureaucratic and centralised, focusing on systems and technologies in the performance of on-time projects-collaborations. In contrast, the E&P (TRUST) organisation is more culture-oriented in the process of handling a four-year project-portfolio with equivalent actors. Consequently, these diverse conditions can both bias learnings and value creation across the subsidiaries and disturb the overall innovation capacity of the entire group if both initiatives are implemented without acknowledging the potential incompatibilities they imply. Thus, novel attentions to the group as a hybrid nexus of managerial logics could be the remedy of inappropriate internal circumstances in both subsidiaries, through the ability to navigate the ambiguity of the otherwise competing managerial logics or practice.

In sum, the managerial initiatives can be understood as an answer to the complex nature of construction drawing on some similar sub-sets of logics, such as trust, collaboration, transparency and risk-sharing, as well as pursuing the same objective of increasing productivity. Nonetheless, they respond differently. A reason for this is, as emphasised, that organisations are very diverse focusing on dissimilar stakeholders and act as two interdependent companies regardless of their common obligations to the group. Inherently, the overall assumption is that the achievement of the productivity objective requires managerial interactions (i.e. hybridisation of logics) beyond the co-existence of logics moving from competitive group settings to a nexus environment of shared understandings and learnings. As such, managers of the group should initiate frameworks or platforms for substantiate cross-organisational interactions.

Substantially, the majority of costs in complex building projects are related to external stakeholders and it, thus, makes sense to strengthen these relations by developing an alliance of trusted suppliers and sub-contractors, which is highly relevant for the entire group including TRUST (E&P). Hence, learnings from TRUST (E&P) could potentially advance the CSCM logic of partnering with the supply chain as well as strengthening the overall relationships across the entire group by legitimating trust, collaboration and project-portfolios as sub-logics of increasing productivity and innovation.

6. Conclusions

We have analysed and discussed perspectives of how a major Danish contractor group can integrate co-exiting logics to increase productivity and innovation. Thus, we suggest that hybridisation and mutual adjustment of CSCM and SP is an opportunity to generate managerial innovations across the entire group integrating internal and external relations. Accordingly, logics can co-exist effectively, and we define the productive interdependence among them by the group’s ability to create managerial interactions of shared understandings and learnings. Ironically, the analysed subsidiaries are diverse and typically acting interdependently. Nevertheless, they attempt to establish the same level of trust and collaboration as core components to increase productivity and innovation.

Essentially, we have argued that hybridity can create a productive interdependence between managerial logics by sharing practical experiences and mutual interactions, which is our main proposal for relevant project-managers and for further research of managerial logics. For example, strong external relations demand mechanisms of partnerships, which make TRUST’s lessons relevant for the progress of CSCM. In contrast, CSCM learnings can increase the productivity of TRUST as most of project-costs are related to external dimensions. Hence, the attraction to institutional practices of the group is an analytical tool for conceptualising change and a method of discussing practical implications of managerial logics. In essence, we have analysed how the co-exiting of managerial logics can create productive innovations by frictions of incompatible logics that have otherwise seemed inconsistent. Nevertheless, we emphasise that aspects such as power, consensus, legitimacy and integrity affect the integration of logics and hereby the operational performance of the group as well as building trust requires substantial resources and time.

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Prelims
THE ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS OF CONSTRUCTION
Updating and Cleaning Out: The “Make or Buy” Decision in Construction Revisited
Bispevika Project: Research for Constructing a Collaborative Value Chain
Social Considerations in the Procurement of Road and Railroad Projects in Sweden
Standardization and Industrialized Construction of Special Purpose Building
Identifying Contradictions of Integrating Life-Cycle Costing in Design Practices
Advancing Networking-Based Business Management in Construction Markets
Contracts and Culture in a Partnering Project
Sub-Contractors’ Perception of Contracting: The Case of Crime
Project Managers: Gatekeepers or Inside Men?
The Hybridity of Strategic Partnerships and Construction Supply Chain Management
Dynamic Capabilities and Risk Management: Evaluating the CDRM Model for Clients
An Opposite Design-Build Procurement Method: Competing on Quality with a Fixed Price
CONSTRUCTION AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT
An Appraisal of Water Infrastructure Projects’ Financing Challenges in South Africa
The Soft Factors in Design Management: a Hidden Success Factor?
Room to Manoeuvre: Governing the Project Provisions
A Longitudinal View of Adopting Project Alliancing: Case Finland
A Simulation-Based Optimization for Contractors in Precast Concrete Projects
Governed by Municipal Land Allocations: Implications for Housing Developers
Situation Picture Through Construction Information Management
Who Benefit from Crime in Construction? A Structural Analysis
Quality Evaluation of Contractor’s Schedule in the Bidding Phase
Activity Cruciality as Measure of Network Schedule Structure Resilience
Construction Programmes and Programming: A Critical Review
Procurement Research: Current State and Future Challenges in the Nordic Countries
Exploitative Learning in Inter-Organizational Projects: Evidence from Dutch Infrastructure Practices
The Transition from Design-Bid-Build Contracts to Design-Build
Exploring the Dynamics of Supplier Innovation Diffusion
Understanding Collaborative Working in a Facilitated Interdisciplinary Environment
Ensuring Successful Knowledge Transfer in Building Renovation Projects
Public Private Collaboration in the Context of Zero Emission Neighbourhood
Strategizing and Project Management in Construction Projects: An Exploratory Literature Review
BUILDING INFORMATION, DATA AND DIGITALIZATION
BIM-Enabled Education: a Systematic Literature Review
A BIM-Enabled Learning Environment: a Conceptual Framework
“I Work All Day with Automation in Construction: I am a Sociomaterial-Designer”
Developing Smart Services to Smart Campus
An Overview of BIM Adoption in the Construction Industry: Benefits and Barriers
BIM for Construction Education: Initial Findings from a Literature Review
Model for Smart, Self-learning and Adaptive Resilience Building
Investigating the Drop-Out rate from a BIM Course
INNOVATIONS IN THE CONSTRUCTION PROCESS
Senior Residence Concepts in Norway: Challenges and Actions for a Sustainable Development
3D-Printing Technology in Construction: Results from a Survey
Product and Manufacturing Systems Alignment: a Case Study in the Timber House Building Industry
Opening the Black Box of Accessibility Regulation
Orchestrating Multi-Actor Collaborative Innovation Across Organizational Boundaries
SUSTAINABILITY AND RESOURCE EFFICIENCY
Social Sustainability in Modelling of Value Creation in Housing Refurbishment
Reviewing the Role of Sustainability Professionals in Construction
Exploring the Evolution and Impact of Building Environment Assessment Methods in Achieving Green Building
STAKEHOLDERS OF CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE
Challenging the Rhetoric of Construction Briefing: Insights from a Formula 1 Sports Venue
Underlying Causes for Risk Taking Behaviour Among Construction Workers
Towards Developing a Framework for User-Driven Innovation in Refurbishment
Reconstructing Knowledge Integration in the Norwegian AEC-Industry
Institutional Complexity for Chinese International Contractors
BUILT ENVIRONMENTS
BIM Related Innovation in Healthcare Precinct Design and Facilities Management
Location is Crucial in Retrofit: Strategy Selection in Different Regions
CONSTRUCTION EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
From Theoretical to Practical Competence on Health and Safety
A Test Platform of Viable Methods to Improve Production and Learning on Construction Sites