Empirical investigation of construction contractors' organizational learning
journal contribution
posted on 2014-11-20, 14:11authored byGrant K. Kululanga, Andrew Price, R McCaffer
Conceptual frameworks dominate organizational learning literature with limited empirical assessments. This raises several questions about the validity and applicability of the various conceptual frameworks for how managers can build organizational learning capabilities. As such, lessons from the conceptual frameworks of organizational learning for addressing performance improvement that might have been used by construction contractors have been limited. This paper presents a quantitative analysis of organizational learning by construction contractors. The principles that underlie organizational learning and the factors that promote double-loop learning as a strategy for improving construction contractors’ business processes are presented. The paper has also established the learning orientations and focus of the surveyed construction contractors to determine their organizational learning dimensions as well as the factors that induced their double-loop learning, as rich lessons for organizations in the construction industry.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Published in
JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT-ASCE
Volume
128
Issue
5
Pages
385 - 391 (7)
Citation
KULULANGA, G.K., PRICE, A.D.F. and MCCAFFER, R., 2002. Empirical investigation of construction contractors' organizational learning. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management, 128 (5), pp. 385 - 391.
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