Social and cultural drivers of incentive effectiveness in infrastructure projects


Autoria(s): Rose, Timothy M.; Volker, Leentje
Contribuinte(s)

Kajewski, Stephen

Manley, Karen

Hampson, Keith

Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Formal incentives systems aim to encourage improved performance by offering a reward for the achievement of project-specific goals. Despite argued benefits of incentive systems on project delivery outcomes, there remains debate over how incentive systems can be designed to encourage the formation of strong project relationships within a complex social system such as an infrastructure project. This challenge is compounded by the increasing emphasis in construction management research on the important mediating influence of technical and organisational context on project performance. In light of this challenge, the research presented in this paper focuses on the design of incentive systems in four infrastructure projects: two road reconstructions in the Netherlands and two building constructions in Australia. Based on a motivational theory frame, a cross case analysis is conducted to examine differences and similarities across social and cultural drivers impacting on the effectiveness of the incentive systems in light of infrastructure project context. Despite significant differences in case project characteristics, results indicate the projects’ experience similar social drivers impacting on incentive effectiveness. Significant value across the projects was placed on: varied performance goals and multiple opportunities to across the project team to pursue incentive rewards; fair risk allocation across contract parties; value-driven tender selection; improved design-build integration; and promotion of future work opportunities. However, differences across the contexts were identified. Results suggest future work opportunities were a more powerful social driver in upholding reputation and establishing strong project relationships in the Australian context. On the other hand, the relationship initiatives in the Dutch context seemed to be more broadly embraced resulting in a greater willingness to collaboratively manage project risk. Although there are limitations with this research in drawing generalizations across two sets of case projects, the results provide a strong base to explore the social and cultural influences on incentive effectiveness across different geographical and contextual boundaries in future research.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81185/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81185/1/WBC13%20paper%20authors%20copy.pdf

http://www.conference.net.au/cibwbc13/papers/cibwbc2013_submission_222.pdf

Rose, Timothy M. & Volker, Leentje (2013) Social and cultural drivers of incentive effectiveness in infrastructure projects. In Kajewski, Stephen, Manley, Karen, & Hampson, Keith (Eds.) Proceedings of the 19th International CIB World Building Congress, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, Brisbane, QLD.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Authors and/or their employers

Fonte

School of Civil Engineering & Built Environment; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120201 Building Construction Management and Project Planning #Incentives #Collaboration #Infrastructure project #Australia #the Netherlands
Tipo

Conference Paper