Proceedings of the 17th International Symposium on Advancement of Construction Management and Real Estate 2013
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-35548-6_131
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Innovative Australian Public Sector Construction Management: Effectively Engaging the Private Sector

Abstract: This research addresses problems where 'poor quality tender documents continue to be a source of inaccurate estimates, claims and disputes' (Laryea, 2011 pps 275-286) and 'few industries suffer more from conflict than construction' (Black et al, 2000). Much of this conflict derives from differing aims -Australian public sector owners aim to achieve 'value for money', while contractors aim to optimize profit and improve reputation. Counter-intuitively, the research found that construction industry experts eng… Show more

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(4 citation statements)
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“…Mohamed et al (2010) argue that a lack of clarity of information, customer preferences, potential competitors and the overall marketplace make bidding a very complex process (Figure 3). This is evident from the findings that 'industry reliance on performance metrics fixed at the project outset is being superseded by increasing use of emergent customer judgments to characterize success' (Thomson, 2012). But customers may still consider a 'project that fails to meet formalized time, cost and performance goals successful if it satisfies emergent requirements not understood during the initial briefing' and that 'construction practitioners do not routinely recognize that customer awareness of requirements improves as projects progress' (Thomson, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Mohamed et al (2010) argue that a lack of clarity of information, customer preferences, potential competitors and the overall marketplace make bidding a very complex process (Figure 3). This is evident from the findings that 'industry reliance on performance metrics fixed at the project outset is being superseded by increasing use of emergent customer judgments to characterize success' (Thomson, 2012). But customers may still consider a 'project that fails to meet formalized time, cost and performance goals successful if it satisfies emergent requirements not understood during the initial briefing' and that 'construction practitioners do not routinely recognize that customer awareness of requirements improves as projects progress' (Thomson, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is evident from the findings that 'industry reliance on performance metrics fixed at the project outset is being superseded by increasing use of emergent customer judgments to characterize success' (Thomson, 2012). But customers may still consider a 'project that fails to meet formalized time, cost and performance goals successful if it satisfies emergent requirements not understood during the initial briefing' and that 'construction practitioners do not routinely recognize that customer awareness of requirements improves as projects progress' (Thomson, 2012). Further, 'internal conflict among the customer stakeholders and their reflections on the emerging project solution help customer stakeholders to better understand their needs'.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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