Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry

abstract: Commodity contracts are often awarded on the basis of price. A price-based methodology for making such awards fails to consider the suppliers' ability to minimize the risk of non-performance in terms of cost, schedule, or customer satisfaction. Literature suggests that nearly all risk...

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Other Authors: Smithwick, Jake B. (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14589
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-145892018-06-22T03:02:35Z Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry abstract: Commodity contracts are often awarded on the basis of price. A price-based methodology for making such awards fails to consider the suppliers' ability to minimize the risk of non-performance in terms of cost, schedule, or customer satisfaction. Literature suggests that nearly all risk in the delivery of commodities is in the interfacing of nodes within a supply chain. Therefore, commodity suppliers should be selected on the basis of their past performance, ability to identify and minimize risk, and capacity to preplan the delivery of services. Organizations that select commodity suppliers primarily on the basis of price may experience customer dissatisfaction, delayed services, low product quality, or some combination thereof. One area that is often considered a "commodity" is the delivery of furniture services. Arizona State University, on behalf of the Arizona Tri-University Furniture Consortium, approached the researcher and identified concerns with their current furnishing services contract. These concerns included misaligned customer expectations, minimal furniture supplier upfront involvement on large capital construction projects, and manufacturer design expertise was not being utilized during project preplanning. The Universities implemented a best value selection process and risk management structure. The system has resulted in a 9.3 / 10 customer satisfaction rating (24 percent increase over the previous system), for over 1,100 furniture projects totaling $19.3M. Dissertation/Thesis Smithwick, Jake B. (Author) Sullivan, Kenneth T (Advisor) Kashiwagi, Dean T (Committee member) Badger, William W (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Business Engineering Best Value Commodity Contracts Facilities Management Furniture Services Performance Information System eng 284 pages M.S. Construction 2012 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14589 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2012
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Business
Engineering
Best Value
Commodity Contracts
Facilities Management
Furniture Services
Performance Information System
spellingShingle Business
Engineering
Best Value
Commodity Contracts
Facilities Management
Furniture Services
Performance Information System
Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry
description abstract: Commodity contracts are often awarded on the basis of price. A price-based methodology for making such awards fails to consider the suppliers' ability to minimize the risk of non-performance in terms of cost, schedule, or customer satisfaction. Literature suggests that nearly all risk in the delivery of commodities is in the interfacing of nodes within a supply chain. Therefore, commodity suppliers should be selected on the basis of their past performance, ability to identify and minimize risk, and capacity to preplan the delivery of services. Organizations that select commodity suppliers primarily on the basis of price may experience customer dissatisfaction, delayed services, low product quality, or some combination thereof. One area that is often considered a "commodity" is the delivery of furniture services. Arizona State University, on behalf of the Arizona Tri-University Furniture Consortium, approached the researcher and identified concerns with their current furnishing services contract. These concerns included misaligned customer expectations, minimal furniture supplier upfront involvement on large capital construction projects, and manufacturer design expertise was not being utilized during project preplanning. The Universities implemented a best value selection process and risk management structure. The system has resulted in a 9.3 / 10 customer satisfaction rating (24 percent increase over the previous system), for over 1,100 furniture projects totaling $19.3M. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.S. Construction 2012
author2 Smithwick, Jake B. (Author)
author_facet Smithwick, Jake B. (Author)
title Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry
title_short Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry
title_full Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry
title_fullStr Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry
title_full_unstemmed Management of Facility Commodity Contracts: A Model for the Furniture Services Industry
title_sort management of facility commodity contracts: a model for the furniture services industry
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14589
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