Linking employee empowerment with productivity in off-site construction

Author:

Alazzaz Faisal,Whyte Andrew

Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to address current knowledge gaps in off-site sub-element fabrication efficiency factors, by identifying an explicit relationship between productivity and employee empowerment. Design/methodology/approach – The research is based on two engineering fabrication-yard case studies that investigate both qualitatively (via analysis of semi-structured interviews that incorporate a five-point Likert scale, with fabrication-product stakeholders), and also quantitatively (via assessment using SPSS statistical analyses to determine significance and trends in the data-set) the relationship between empowerment and productivity. Findings – The results reveal a positive linear relationship in off-site construction between “employee empowerment factors” and, explicitly fabrication-yard “productivity-levels”. An especially strong and significant positive correlation is found to exist in resource development, worker involvement, process improvement, and task recognition as they refer to off-site construction productivity. Practical implications – Most academic studies of off-site construction remain largely anecdotal and lack an empirical objective study; as a result, this (fabrication-yard) case-study research provides a useful approach to measure empirically the link between employee empowerment and productivity of off-site construction. Originality/value – Employee empowerment in the construction industry has long been a focus of analyses; however, there remains a lack of consensus and very few studies into the direct relationship between employee empowerment on the one-hand, and productivity in off-site construction on the other-hand. It is argued here that the on-going new research undertaken in the present study will go beyond subjective opinion towards objective measurement of actual performance in off-site construction.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Business, Management and Accounting,Building and Construction,Architecture,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference52 articles.

1. Abdel-wahab, M. and Vogl, B. (2011), “Trends of productivity growth in the construction industry across Europe, US and Japan”, Construction Management and Economics , Vol. 29 No. 6, pp. 635-644.

2. Alazzaz, F. and Whyte, A. (2012), “Towards assessing productivity in off-site building methods for engineering and construction projects”, in Vimonsatit, V. , Singh, A. and Yazdani, S. (Eds), Research, Development, and Practice in Structural Engineering and Construction, The 1st Australasia and South East Asia Conference in Structural Engineering and Construction (ASEA-SEC-1) , Research Publishing Services, Perth, pp. 915-920.

3. Alvanchi, A. , Azimi, R. , Lee, S. , Abourizk, S.M. and Zubick, P. (2011), “Off-site construction planning using discrete event simulation”, Journal of Architectural Engineering , Vol. 1 No. 1, pp. 26-26.

4. Argyris, C. (1998), “Empowerment: the emperor’s new clothes”, Harvard Business Review , Vol. 76 No. 3, pp. 98-105.

5. Bernstein, H. , Morton, B. , Gudgle, J. and Russo, M. (2011), Smart Market Report: Prefabrication and Modularization: Increasing Productivity in the Construction Industry, McGraw-Hill Construction, New York, NY.

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