Organizations in the construction industry struggle with three key issues: quality management or better meeting customer expectations, supply chain management or more effectively working with suppliers to provide a seamless service to customers, and knowledge management, the challenge of learning between collaborating organisations and between people working on similar projects around the world. Excellence in these key aspects of business is the hallmark of great companies. This book tackles each of these themes, demonstrating their significance as strategic concepts for the construction sector and illustrating how development goals in each of the areas can be met. To be successful Total Quality has to impact on the organisation’s Performance, which should be measured on a “balanced scorecard”, including the results from the customer. This can be achieved through good Planning and improvements in Processes through involvement of the People. These 4Ps combine with the 4Cs – Customer, Culture, Communication and Commitment to provide a model for implementing total quality into construction. The book brings together, within this consistent theoretical framework, international case studies from all areas of the construction industry. These include examples as diverse as quarrying, construction, design, real estate, land development and regulatory agencies, drawn from the UK, USA, Hong Kong, Singapore Australia and Japan. Through these the authors demonstrate how a total quality or business excellence strategy can be applied in all activities in the construction supply chain to achieve world-class performance. Written by two of the world's leading experts, in a logical and very practical style, Total Quality in the Construction Supply Chain offers students and others new to the subject a clearly structured introduction to the concept of quality in the industry, while offering help and guidance to the most experienced professionals. The book should also appeal to people from all areas of the building and construction sector in any country.
BS 5750 (Quality Systems) part 1-3 and even part 8 are more relevant to repetitive processes than to one-off projects.This book shows that the philosophy and principles of quality management apply just as much to the construction industry ...
BIBLIOGRAPHY Albin, J.M. Quality Improvement in Employment and Other Human Services – Managing for Quality through Change, Paul Brookes Pub., Baltimore, MD, 1992. Antony, J. and Preece, D. Understanding, Managing and Implementing ...
This book examines the various quality management systems applied to the construction industry in Hong Kong and other parts of the world. Hong Kong's experience is particularly important because it...
(Continued) Author Topic Patyal, Ambekar, and Prakash (2019) Organisational culture and total quality management practices in Indian construction industry Low, Abdul-Rahman, and Zakaria (2020) Organisational culture of Malaysian ...
The construction industry is faced with a host of new management techniques developed to improve quality and control cost. This book brings together the main new techniques in a single volume, with detailed guidance on further reading.
To accommodate those needs, this book presents the new management approaches that could be learned and applied in managing firms and projects.
3 THE SUBWAY PROJECT SUPPLY CHAIN ASSESSMENT OVERVIEW A century, the quality of management science from the proposed to mature through a quality inspection, statistical quality control and total quality management in three stages, ...
7.5 Summary and Conclusions The normal procurement environment and divisive culture in UK construction has until recently made the application of techniques such as Total Quality Management and Supply Chain Management difficult to apply ...
Engineering a value chain. ... Retrieved from https://www.isixsigma .com/methodology/total- quality- management- tqm/introduction- and- implementation- total- quality- ... Selection matters: In construction supply chain optimization.
This book brings together 13 contributors from research and industry to show how managing construction knowledge can bring real benefits to organisations and projects.