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Facilities Change Management

ISBN: 978-1-405-15346-1

November 2011

Wiley-Blackwell

218 pages

Description
Modern organisations are subject to continual change - technologies evolve, organisational structures are modified, people and underlying cultures are transformed. Yet the facilities that organisations occupy are static and can impede the changes that are essential to organisational survival. The response to change in terms of property and support services is often too little too late - leading to facilities that do not support organisational reality. The facilities management team is thus constantly challenged to bridge the gap between what an organisation has and what it needs.

Facilities Change Management is a practical evaluation of the management of change for facilities managers and related professions. It considers:

  • the forces of change affecting facilities decisions
  • the obstacles to change at a resource level and human level
  • the effective implementation of change
  • the human aspect of change

Each of these is considered in relation to modern facilities management issues.  The discussion will enable practising facilities managers, project managers, surveyors, service providers and architects to understand, engage with and manage facilities change effectively at a strategic level. Through real-life case studies it demonstrates the complexities of change and hidden elements of change that may undermine carefully planned projects.

About the Author
Edward Finchis Professor of Facilities Management in the School of the Built Environment at the University of Salford. With a background of over twenty years of academic involvement in the discipline of facilities management, he is co-ordinator for the CIB International Working Party in Facilities Management (CIB W070) and Editor-in-Chief of Facilities – a leading peer reviewed academic journal in the area of facilities management.
Features
*Presents a fresh light on facilities management by considering front-of-house aspects.

*Treats workplace productivity and customer service as its central theme.

*Brings together a number of relevant themes from the design of the workplace to customer service and stakeholder management.

*Matches core competencies identified in the British Institute of Facilities Management training programme.

*Written in an accessible style by an established author and Editor of the journal Facilities.