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Title:
Understanding the construction client
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Publication Information:
India : Blackwell Publishing Limited, 2006
ISBN:
9781405129787
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30000010156578 TH215 B69 2006 Open Access Book Book
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30000010087511 TH215 B69 2006 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This book breaks new ground by creating a framework to understand clients' actions and needs. Most construction management books focus on improving the construction process; this one focuses on a better engagement with the client. It challenges conceptions of both the construction industry and clients' businesses so that a more effective process and greater client satisfaction can be achieved. The book suggests that 'buildings are not about building but about changing and developing the client'. The technical, organisational and psychological aspects of this are described and analysed in detail so that current experience can be explained and better practice determined.

The book offers well-researched information about clients in a number of sectors - developers, supermarkets, NHS, government, airports and housing associations - which will help you understand what these client's business or service needs are and how construction fits into this. It demonstrates how to develop an appreciation of the client's perspective with a toolkit for ensuring successful client engagement. This makes Understanding the Construction Client a user-friendly and practical guide, as well as significant text for academia.


Author Notes

David Boyd is Deputy Head of the School of Property & Construction, University of Central England, Birmingham, UK. Ezekiel Chinyio is based at the Univeristy of Wolverhampton, UK.


Table of Contents

Foreword Chair of Clients' Constrction GroupGraham Farrant
Preface: Building Not about Building!
Chapter 1 Clients?
1.1 Introduction
1.2 The Nature of the Problem
1.3 A Category of Clients
1.4 What Clients Want
1.5 A Problem of Delivery
1.6 The Structure of the Book
1.7 A Concluding Remark
1.8 References
Chapter 2 Model of Clients and Industry
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The Basic Thesis
2.3 A Model of Clients
2 Fundamental Awarenesses and the Model
2.5 The Model for Sector Analysis
2.6 References
Chapter 3 The Client at Rest
3.1 Clients Knowledge and Processes
3.2 Clients See the World Differently
3.3 Normal Organisational Knowns
3.4 Normal Organisational Unknowns
3.5 People in Organisations
3.6 Conclusions
3.7 References
Chapter 4 The Client in Change
4.1 The Project Means and Ends
4.2 Means and Ends as Values
4.3 Building involves organisational change in the client
4.4 Building Involves Unknowns that are Unformed
4.5 Emotion of change
4.6 Change creates gaps and contradictions
4.7 The Means and Ends of Engagement
4.8 What is to be done
4.9 references
Chapter 5 Developer Clients
5.1 Introduction
5.2 The Business Environment of Property Development
5.3 Finance and Risk of Projects
5.4 Business Constitution: Strategy to Operations
5.5 The Experience of Building: from unknowns and contradictions to means and ends
5.6 Key Points
5.7 Books and Resources
Chapter 6 Supermarkets Clients
6.1 Introduction
6.2 The Business Environment of Supermarkets: strategy
6.3 Business Structure and Processes: The Tactical Plan
6.4 Business Operations
6.5 The Experience of Building: from unknowns and contradictions to means and ends
6.6 Key Points
6.7 Books and Resources
Chapter 7 NHS Clients
7.1 Introduction
7.2 The Environment of NHS Acute Trusts
7.3 NHS Acute Trusts: Gaps and contradictions
7.4 The Means and Ends of Building
7.5 Key Points
7.6 Books and Resources
Chapter 8 Government Clients
8.1 Introduction
8.2 The Political Domain: Service in a Political Environment
8.3 The Management of Government Services
8.4 The Operation of Government Services
8.5 The Experience of Building: gaps and contradictions to means and ends
8.6 Key Points
8.7 Books and Resources
Chapter 9 Airport Clients
9.1 Introduction
9.2 The Business Environment of Airports
9.3 Business Structure Processes and Operations
9.4 The Experience of Building: from unknowns and contradictions to means and ends
9.5 Key Points
9.6 Books and Resources
Chapter 10 Housing Association Clients
10.1 Introduction
10.2 The Business Environment of Housing Associations
10.3 The Management of Housing Associations
10.4 The Operation of Housing Associations
10.5 The Experience of Building: gaps and contradictions to means and ends
10.6 Key Points
10.7 Books and Resources
Chapter 11 Toolkit for Engagement
11.1 Introduction and Summary
11.2 Outline of Toolkit
11.3 Working with the ClientÆs Change Process
11.4 Understanding the Clients Business
11.5 Managing the Construction IndustryÆs Fragmentation
11.6 developing the Approach
11.7 Conclusion
11.8 References
Chapter 12 Postscript
Appendix
The Interviewees
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