34 results on '"Lawlor-Wright, Therese"'
Search Results
2. The role of published standards in achieving project quality
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Where does quality need managing?
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Quality management throughout the project lifecycle
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Why manage quality?
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. What is quality, and why do priorities need balancing?
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. When does quality need to be managed?
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Project management techniques vital to quality
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Quality analysis techniques
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Extending quality management through the supply chain
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Project success and balancing the iron triangle
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. IT project quality management
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Project Success and Quality
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew, primary and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The impact of the dark side of leadership on project followers
- Author
-
Robinson, Anna, Hearne, Pam, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
Z766 - Abstract
The historical approach of researching leadership without considering its negative aspects could mean the concept of leadership itself is not fully understood. This multi-method qualitative study explores challenging behaviour in project leaders, and how followers cope. It identifies what followers perceive to be challenging leader behaviour, explores how this impacts on followers and how they cope. The study identifies challenging project leader behaviours relating to teams, performance, relationships and change. Impacts of the behaviour on the follower are categorised as psychological, work and personal impacts. Coping strategies used by followers include approach/avoidance and problem-focused/emotion-focused categories. This research could support organisations in identifying leaders who display challenging behaviours, enabling them to design interventions to mitigate the impact on followers. It recommends that organisations take responsibility for providing easy access to support mechanisms, and also suggests future studies measuring the effectiveness of coping strategies.
- Published
- 2020
15. Performance Management in the Context of Healthcare Infrastructure
- Author
-
Lawlor-Wright, Therese, primary and Kagioglou, Mike, additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Computer aided design of prismatic parts encompassing cutting tool selection
- Author
-
Lawlor-Wright, Therese F.
- Subjects
620.0042029 ,Computer-Aided Design - Published
- 1988
17. Project Success and Quality
- Author
-
Wright, Andrew and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
Z49 ,Z11 ,Z465 ,Z441 - Abstract
Projects are inherently risky, since they involve some level of uncertainty, doing something new in the target environment, but the percentage of projects seen as a success is still disappointingly low, especially for IT projects. The ‘Iron Triangle’ of time/cost/quality suggests that all three aspects are equal, but with quantitative methods for monitoring project performance, the focus is primarily on managing cost and time. This book seeks to redress the balance, explaining the rationale and benefits of focusing more on quality (fitness for purpose and conformance to requirements) before detailing a range of tools and techniques to support rebalancing the management of projects, programmes and portfolios. It shows how managing project quality actively can reduce costs through minimising wastage, and reduce delays through avoiding rework, leading to improved project success rates and customer satisfaction.
- Published
- 2018
18. Development of a printed circuit board design for in-circuit test advisory system
- Author
-
Lawlor-Wright, Therese and Gallagher, Charles
- Subjects
Printed circuits -- Design and construction ,Manufacturing processes -- Analysis ,Industrial design -- Analysis - Published
- 1997
19. Small but Complex: The Construction Industry in North Cyprus
- Author
-
Yapicioglu Balkiz and Lawlor-Wright Therese
- Subjects
Organizational behavior ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,Unrest ,trauma and memory ,complex ,project management ,Politics ,Market economy ,Construction industry ,Economics ,General Materials Science ,Marketing ,Project management ,Adaptation (computer science) ,business ,Memory and trauma - Abstract
Organizational functioning depends on the behaviour and attitude of people within a given society; organizational behaviour is extremely influenced by the socio-cultural environment within which the organization operates. The construction industry in North Cyprus is a very young industry and application of advanced project management methods and adaptation to the changing environment is a challenging process for this sector. The trauma caused by the political conflict on the island is presented as a serious challenge for this industry. The future of North Cyprus's construction industry is embedded in its past, this has given it certain social, political and historical characteristics. The on-going political unrest in North Cyprus escalates and diminishes at certain intervals. These fluctuations can sometimes be absorbed by the industry, however the frequency is such that the industry struggles to adapt and sometimes even to absorb the shocks. This paper analyses the socio-political environment of North Cyprus's construction industry. Although the organization of SMEs in the construction sector in North Cyprus are very simple, the inter-relationships between the companies, the fragmentation of the industry and the participation of families in the businesses make this a socially complex system. In this environment, the decision making processes of the managers are not based on structured management disciplines but on abrupt decisions that emphasize the family interest of the owner manager under severe uncertainties. Therefore, the unpredictable environment within this sector creates a complex environment to manage regardless of the industry's size.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. On the role of digital consultation tools in public space design:a case study
- Author
-
Simm, Will, Ferrario, Maria-Angela, Whittle, Jon, Davenport, Ryan, Binner, Jane, Frankova, Katerina, Garton, Laurence, Woodcock, Andrée, Lam, Busayawan, Lawlor-Wright, Therese, Simm, Will, Ferrario, Maria-Angela, Whittle, Jon, Davenport, Ryan, Binner, Jane, Frankova, Katerina, Garton, Laurence, Woodcock, Andrée, Lam, Busayawan, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Abstract
Organizations increasingly rely on digital tools, such as social media, to harvest public opinion on a variety of issues ranging from brand reputations to political debates. One area in which digital tools have great potential is in consultation on design of public spaces. Public organizations are expected to consult with users of a public space before, during and after occupancy. Digital tools could increase the effectiveness of this consultation because: (i) they are available 24 h and do not rely on the presence of researchers and (ii) data are collected and analysed using automated methods, allowing faster decision-making. Despite these potential advantages, little is understood about how digital and non-digital consultations compare in practice. This paper reports on a live trial with a prototype digital consultation tool called VoiceYourView, which was co-designed with stakeholders and used to canvass opinion on the refurbishment of a major metropolitan library. Over 6 weeks, we used a variety of methods to collect comment from 600 users. VoiceYourView solicits opinion in unprompted form—it does not ask specific questions as in a survey—so users can say anything they like at any time. VoiceYourView carries out real-time analysis of data collected and uses public display screens to summarize comments-to-date in situ. Our research methods focused on observational studies conducted ‘in the wild’: this allowed us to capture user interactions with VoiceYourView in a realistic setting. Our findings indicate that VoiceYourView encouraged more positive feedback than non-digital methods. We also find that positive comments in general contain less actionable information than negative comments, and unprompted comments have similar actionable content to prompted comments. We suggest that this pattern in soliciting more (traditionally difficult to obtain) positive comments with VoiceYourView versus traditional survey methods implies that digital consultation tools of this
- Published
- 2016
21. Better service design for greater civic engagement
- Author
-
Lam, Busayawan, Chen, Yu Ping, Whittle, Jon, Binner, Jane, Lawlor-Wright, Therese, Lam, Busayawan, Chen, Yu Ping, Whittle, Jon, Binner, Jane, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Abstract
Generally, people have a good understanding of their local areas. Hence, encouraging them to share this tacit knowledge with local authorities, urban designers and city planners could help improve the quality of public space design significantly. However, persuading people to share their concerns/ideas about their areas, especially through a digital platform, presents a real challenge. One of the main barriers is a lack of trust in the public feedback system. Thus, this research investigates relationships between online trust and service design in order to provide a guideline on how to design the feedback system that addresses users' practical and emotional requirements. A mixed-methods approach was employed to identify key factors affecting online trust and their implications on service design. Six key factors affecting online trust were identified and combined to form a basis for service design guidelines. The outcomes show that service design can support all components required to build trust.
- Published
- 2015
22. Better Service Design for Greater Civic Engagement
- Author
-
Lam, Busayawan, primary, Chen, Yu Ping, additional, Whittle, Jon, additional, Binner, Jane, additional, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. On the Role of Digital Consultation Tools in Public Space Design: A Case Study
- Author
-
Simm, Will, primary, Ferrario, Maria-Angela, additional, Whittle, Jon, additional, Davenport, Ryan, additional, Binner, Jane, additional, Frankova, Katerina, additional, Garton, Laurence, additional, Woodcock, Andrée, additional, Lam, Busayawan, additional, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. On the Role of Digital Consultation Tools in Public Space Design: A Case Study.
- Author
-
SIMM, WILL, FERRARIO, MARIA-ANGELA, WHITTLE, JON, DAVENPORT, RYAN, BINNER, JANE, FRANKOVA, KATERINA, GARTON, LAURENCE, WOODCOCK, ANDRÉE, LAM, BUSAYAWAN, and LAWLOR-WRIGHT, THERESE
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,SOCIAL media ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,DECISION making ,AUTOMATION ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems - Abstract
Organizations increasingly rely on digital tools, such as social media, to harvest public opinion on a variety of issues ranging from brand reputations to political debates. One area in which digital tools have great potential is in consultation on design of public spaces. Public organizations are expected to consult with users of a public space before, during and after occupancy. Digital tools could increase the effectiveness of this consultation because: (i) they are available 24 h and do not rely on the presence of researchers and (ii) data are collected and analysed using automated methods, allowing faster decision-making. Despite these potential advantages, little is understood about how digital and non-digital consultations compare in practice. This paper reports on a live trial with a prototype digital consultation tool called VoiceYourView, which was co-designed with stakeholders and used to canvass opinion on the refurbishment of a major metropolitan library. Over 6 weeks, we used a variety of methods to collect comment from 600 users. VoiceYourView solicits opinion in unprompted form--it does not ask specific questions as in a survey--so users can say anything they like at any time. VoiceYourView carries out real-time analysis of data collected and uses public display screens to summarize comments-to-date in situ. Our research methods focused on observational studies conducted 'in the wild': this allowed us to capture user interactions withVoiceYourView in a realistic setting. Our findings indicate that VoiceYourView encouraged more positive feedback than nondigital methods. We also find that positive comments in general contain less actionable information than negative comments, and unprompted comments have similar actionable content to prompted comments. We suggest that this pattern in soliciting more (traditionally difficult to obtain) positive comments with VoiceYourView versus traditional survey methods implies that digital consultation tools of this type can complement existing channels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The importance of soft skills in complex projects
- Author
-
Azim, Syed, primary, Gale, Andy, additional, Lawlor‐Wright, Therese, additional, Kirkham, Richard, additional, Khan, Ali, additional, and Alam, Mehmood, additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Better Service Design for Greater Civic Engagement.
- Author
-
Busayawan Lam, Yu Ping Chen, Whittle, Jon, Binner, Jane, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
SERVICE design ,COMMUNITY involvement ,TACIT knowledge ,PUBLIC spaces ,URBAN planning ,URBAN planners - Abstract
Generally, people have a good understanding of their local areas. Hence, encouraging them to share this tacit knowledge with local authorities, urban designers and city planners could help improve the quality of public space design significantly. However, persuading people to share their concerns/ ideas about their areas, especially through a digital platform, presents a real challenge. One of the main barriers is a lack of trust in the public feedback system. Thus, this research investigates relationships between online trust and service design in order to provide a guideline on how to design the feedback system that addresses users' practical and emotional requirements. A mixed-methods approach was employed to identify key factors affecting online trust and their implications on service design. Six key factors affecting online trust were identified and combined to form a basis for service design guidelines. The outcomes show that service design can support all components required to build trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A feature-based design for manufacture: CADCAM package.
- Author
-
Lawlor-Wright, Therese and Hannam, Roger G.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Capabilities development in the public sector : the role of excellence models
- Author
-
Mohamed, Adil Ahmed Eltigani, Gale, Andrew, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
658.4 ,EFQM ,Dynamic Capabilities ,Strategy-as-practice ,Structuration ,TQM ,Quality Management ,Public sector ,UAE ,Abu Dhabi - Abstract
The European Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM) excellence model is used increasingly in the public sector in the Middle East. This thesis addresses a shortage of empirical research in this field and extends the, so called, dynamic capabilities perspective by investigating how the EFQM model can contribute to developing organisational capabilities. A research model was developed based on the theory of structuration and the dynamic capabilities perspective. A multiple case study design was used in three public sector organisations in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The unit of analysis was the activity configuration involved in the deployment of the EFQM model. This research investigates how activity configurations changed over time, their effect on the organisational social structure and their outcomes in developing new capabilities. In-depth data were collected using interviews and archival sources. The thesis suggests that motives for using the EFQM model represent an important factor in defining the type of activities in its deployment and for its success. It was found that external and internal motives can both have positive impact. The findings showed that organisations experienced with the EFQM model tend to follow similar paths of deployment and achieve comparable results. An indicative model is proposed describing the three stages the organisation can go through in the deployment of the EFQM model. Firstly, the organisation develops the capability to understand the benefits of the model and to plan for its successful deployment. Secondly, the organisation focuses on developing operational capabilities, using the EFQM model. Thirdly, the organisation improves existing capabilities and develops new ones in a recurring cycle, referred to as the cycle of dynamic capabilities. This research contributes to the perspective of dynamic capabilities by investigating the sources of capabilities and how they are shaped through the deployment of the EFQM excellence model. The theoretical background and the research methodology used in this research extend the research application of the structuration theory by linking it with the dynamic capabilities perspective. Suggestions for further research include investigation of the learning cycle of dynamic capabilities through the lens of organisational learning. The research methodology can also be extended to consider strategy formation. An investigation of the EFQM model, which is the basis for assessment in the government award scheme, carries inevitable sources of limitations and bias. A significant proportion of the data collected and analysed was confidential in nature and presented challenges in relation to dissemination of the results.
- Published
- 2013
29. Investigation of the decision making process for technology investment in the Saudi Arabia petrochemical industry
- Author
-
Alsahli, Tariq, Lawlor-Wright, Therese, and Fenn, Peter
- Subjects
658.152 ,decision making ,technology investment ,petrochemical industry - Abstract
Companies and organizations in different industries around the world make use of different technologies for many reasons and purposes, such as to improve performance and to stay competitive. This raises some questions and concerns about the use, benefit, risk and the investment decision-making process for the selected technology. A review of the available literature shows that the decision-making processes related to investments in general are difficult and complex. As a result of this, many organizations that have invested in technology have not achieved the required benefits; this leads to unsuccessful investment decisions and loss of opportunities. This can occur when decision makers and planners do not pay enough attention to some critical factor that may affect the investment, or they may just not have planned sufficiently carefully for it. This research aims to examine and investigate the gaps and factors behind technology investment decisions, with a focus on several of the more important factors and elements that may have a huge impact on these decisions. These include investment justification techniques, technology selection, organizational readiness, technology alignment, and benefits realization. The unique aspect of this research is that these five elements have not previously been linked in research publications or reports, particularly within the petrochemical industry. Thus, the research focuses on these five elements to identify the critical factors and difficulties to support decision makers in order to achieve successful technology investment in the petrochemical industry. To address the research aims, the issues affecting investment decision-making within a number of the biggest petrochemical companies in Saudi Arabia were investigated.
- Published
- 2012
30. Understanding and managing project complexity
- Author
-
Azim, Syed Waqar, Gale, Andrew, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
338.0068 ,Project Complexity ,Project Critical Success Factors ,Hard and Soft skills - Abstract
This research focuses on project complexity with the aim to better understand it and to highlight the factors that affect/contribute to it. In addition, this research also highlights key project management practices and project critical success factors considered important to manage project complexity/complex projects. The two main motivating factors behind this research were, the lack of understanding of complex projects and the lack of relevance of project management theory to practice, which have been highlighted by many researchers. Since projects in different sectors are increasingly being characterised as complex, this entails a better project management knowledge base focusing on the dynamic, social and complex contexts of projects, so that the interrelationships, interdependencies and uncertainties between different project interfaces can be understood and managed properly. In order to understand this 'project actuality', it was necessary to obtain the views from practitioners working in these project settings and managing project dynamics and intricacies. To establish this pragmatic view, a series of interviews and questionnaire surveys was carried out and all efforts were made to select the participants working on complex projects with complex products falling under the Complex Product Systems (CoPS) category which was the case in the 2nd phase interviews and questionnaire, whereas in the 1st phase practitioners with industrial experience and also involved and/or in the process of getting academic qualification in project management were preferred. The first phase helped in establishing the theoretical and pragmatic perspective and the 2nd phase in refining and validating the findings. The questions were inline with the research focus mentioned earlier.The main findings of the research show that the perception of project complexity and its contributing factors were very much influenced by the project context, i.e. from organization level to work discipline level. No difference in the practitioners' perception of project complexity and its contributing factors was observed among the practitioners based in a similar organization and project setting. Novelty was found to be one of the key project complexity characteristics related to three project elements-people, product and process. In terms of key project management practices and skills considered important in managing project complexity, soft skills were reported useful by majority of the participants. The key processes found useful were either the ones which focused on people or others which helped to manage changes/deviations in projects. Influence and relationship, delegation, flexibility and trust were the main project critical success factors which emerged out of this research for complex projects.
- Published
- 2011
31. The Impact of Multitasking on Critical Chain Portfolios
- Author
-
Ghaffari, Mahdi, LAWLOR-WRIGHT, THERESE TF, Emsley, Margaret, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
Critical Chain, Project Scheduling, Theory of Constraints, Multitasking, Buffer Sizing, Portfolio Resource Capacity - Abstract
Critical Chain Project Management (CCPM) is a project scheduling technique which has been developed to overcome some of the deficiencies of traditional methods and where, in a single project environment, the critical chain is the longest chain of activities in a project network, taking into account both activity precedence and resource dependencies. In multi-project environments, the constraint is the resource which impedes projects’ earlier completion. CCPM relies on buffers to protect the critical chain and monitor/control the project. The literature review conducted by this study reveals that the research on CCPM principles in multi-project environments is still extremely scarce. The review also suggests that outright elimination of multitasking (i.e. switching back and forth among two or more concurrent tasks) by imposing a relay race mentality (i.e. starting a task as soon as it becomes available and finishing it as soon as possible), as one of the main features of CCPM, might worsen the resource constraints of CCPM portfolios and cause creation of over-protective buffers. It further implies that there is also a good level of multitasking that can benefit such environments by improving resource availability and requiring shorter protective buffers. This research aims to bridge the gap by investigating the impact of level of multitasking on resource availability issues and project and feeding buffer sizing in CCPM portfolios with different resource capacities. This is pursued through adopting a deductive approach and developing five research hypotheses, considering ten different levels of resource capacity, testing the hypotheses by conducting Monte Carlo simulations of randomly generated project data and comparing the results with deterministic duration values of the same portfolios with 30%, 40% and 50% feeding and project buffer sizes. In total, ten portfolios with similar size, variability and complexity levels, each containing four projects, were simulated. It was concluded that: firstly, some limited levels of multitasking, determined in relation to the level of resource capacity, can be beneficial to time performance of CCPM portfolios; secondly, shorter buffer sizes can be accounted for by abolishing the ban on multitasking while maintaining a lower rate of resource capacity; finally, the element of relay race work ethic that completely bans multitasking should not be implemented as it proved to be counterproductive in terms of resource availability. Seven recommendations and a buffer sizing framework are provided as complementary guidelines to practitioners’ own experience, knowledge and judgment, in addition to an explanation of theoretical and practical contributions and suggestions for future research.
- Published
- 2017
32. Resource Buffers in Critical Chain Project Management
- Author
-
Valikoniene, Leonarda, LAWLOR-WRIGHT, THERESE TF, Emsley, Margaret, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
Critical Chain ,Scheduling ,Resource buffers ,Project Management - Abstract
Critical Chain Project Management (CCPM) is a relatively new method of scheduling. Whilst it has a number of advantages over traditional scheduling methods, it is still far from perfect. A literature review of the CCPM method, its shortcomings and suggestions for improvement is presented in this thesis. The review reveals that, in addition to other issues addressed, most researchers concentrate on the question of project and feeding buffer size. Issues concerning the resource buffer are ignored in the literature. This is a crucial gap in research, as resources are needed to perform tasks, and resource buffers protect the critical activities from the unavailability of resources. Although the original CCPM method treats resource buffers only as a notice or a ‘wake-up call’, the research in this thesis proposes to include resource buffers as time buffers with the assigned resources and cost. The research in this thesis provides a simulation methodology to answer the problem of resource buffer allocation and sizing. The simulation is performed on 3 projects, generated by RanGen software, each with the same characteristics of network order strength, resource strength and resource use. Three different buffer sizes and three different uncertainty levels are applied to the schedules. The analysis of simulation results demonstrates that no optimum resource buffer can be obtained for all projects in general. Each project, even with the same characteristics, behaves differently. Therefore the simulation methodology, developed and presented in the thesis, has to be applied to decide on the size of resource buffer in a specific project. The research outcomes demonstrate that resource buffers cannot be neglected and should be simulated using CCPM schedules, as they help to reduce the total project duration during execution. The decision whether to apply the resource buffer should also be based on financial analysis of the cost and benefits of inclusion.
- Published
- 2015
33. Management for Resilience: The Case of the North Cyprus Construction Industry
- Author
-
Yapicioglu, Belkis, FENN, PETER FP, Fenn, Peter, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
Resilience ,Management Strategy ,SMEs ,North Cyprus - Abstract
This thesis aims to understand how owner-managers of SMEs in a developing country manage their organizations in a turbulent environment, and how they seek to create resilience in their organizations in this context. Specifically, this thesis investigates the major factors influencing the management strategies of infrastructure construction sector SMEs in North Cyprus. The primary data for the research was collected from owner-managers of infrastructure construction SMEs in North Cyprus that held a Class-1 classification in the sector, allowing them to participate in infrastructure projects in North Cyprus. Twelve SMEs with Class-1 classification are identified in the Building Construction Association of North Cyprus (CT-BCA), of which nine out of twelve consented to participate in the research. A qualitative research approach was adopted, with primary data gathered through face-to-face semi-structured interviews with these owner-managers; the collected data was then subjected to thematic analysis. The research found that the most influential factors influencing the management strategies of SMEs in North Cyprus were the macro characteristics of the socio-political environment, the individual characteristics of the owner-managers, and the characteristics of the infrastructure construction sector itself. These factors, which are linked in deep and nuanced ways, were discovered to impact the perceptions of the owner-managers and to affect their approaches towards the management of their SMEs. By evaluating the interaction between these factors, this research identified that infrastructure construction SMEs in North Cyprus operate in a complex system, where the approach to their management is identified as dissipative. Overall, the findings indicate that SMEs in North Cyprus take a reactive approach to management within this complex system, an approach that is itself related to ever-changing relationships between the key individual and environmental factors mitigating owner-managers’ personal, sectorial and wider country circumstances. In this complex context, these SMEs cannot follow a systematic approach to management. Therefore, the resilience of these SMEs is found to lie in the adaptation of management strategies of SME owner-managers in the presence of disturbances, by experimenting and adjusting themselves in the existence of disturbances throughout their history.
- Published
- 2015
34. Investigation of The Decision MakingProcess for Technology Investment in TheSaudi Arabia Petrochemical Industry
- Author
-
Alsahli, Tariq, FENN, PETER FP, Fenn, Peter, and Lawlor-Wright, Therese
- Subjects
decision making, technology investment, petrochemical industry - Abstract
Companies and organizations in different industries around the world make use ofdifferent technologies for many reasons and purposes, such as to improve performanceand to stay competitive. This raises some questions and concerns about the use, benefit,risk and the investment decision-making process for the selected technology. A reviewof the available literature shows that the decision-making processes related toinvestments in general are difficult and complex. As a result of this, many organizationsthat have invested in technology have not achieved the required benefits; this leads tounsuccessful investment decisions and loss of opportunities. This can occur whendecision makers and planners do not pay enough attention to some critical factor thatmay affect the investment, or they may just not have planned sufficiently carefully for it.This research aims to examine and investigate the gaps and factors behind technologyinvestment decisions, with a focus on several of the more important factors and elementsthat may have a huge impact on these decisions. These include investment justificationtechniques, technology selection, organizational readiness, technology alignment, andbenefits realization. The unique aspect of this research is that these five elements havenot previously been linked in research publications or reports, particularly within thepetrochemical industry. Thus, the research focuses on these five elements to identify thecritical factors and difficulties to support decision makers in order to achieve successfultechnology investment in the petrochemical industry. To address the research aims, theissues affecting investment decision-making within a number of the biggestpetrochemical companies in Saudi Arabia were investigated. Companies and organizations in different industries around the world make use ofdifferent technologies for many reasons and purposes, such as to improve performanceand to stay competitive. This raises some questions and concerns about the use, benefit,risk and the investment decision-making process for the selected technology. A reviewof the available literature shows that the decision-making processes related toinvestments in general are difficult and complex. As a result of this, many organizationsthat have invested in technology have not achieved the required benefits; this leads tounsuccessful investment decisions and loss of opportunities. This can occur whendecision makers and planners do not pay enough attention to some critical factor thatmay affect the investment, or they may just not have planned sufficiently carefully for it.This research aims to examine and investigate the gaps and factors behind technologyinvestment decisions, with a focus on several of the more important factors and elementsthat may have a huge impact on these decisions. These include investment justificationtechniques, technology selection, organizational readiness, technology alignment, andbenefits realization. The unique aspect of this research is that these five elements havenot previously been linked in research publications or reports, particularly within thepetrochemical industry. Thus, the research focuses on these five elements to identify thecritical factors and difficulties to support decision makers in order to achieve successfultechnology investment in the petrochemical industry. To address the research aims, theissues affecting investment decision-making within a number of the biggestpetrochemical companies in Saudi Arabia were investigated.
- Published
- 2012
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.