Towards a Resilient Organization: Lessons Learned from the Oil and Gas Sector in Qatar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Significance and Contribution
3. Research Methodology
4. Case Study: Organizational Resilience: Lessons Learned from the Oil and Gas Sector in Qatar
4.1. Survey Structure
- Speaking-Up culture: It covers speaking-up culture-related indicators, as shown in Table 1, for creating a culture that allows reporting issues and concerns throughout the organization without fearing punishment. Such a culture allows the organization to recognize and learn from its weaknesses [7,8,16,17].
- Awareness: This part covers awareness-related indicators, as shown in Table 1. Collecting data that provides the management with insights into what is going on with a plan by analyzing the quality of human performance, the extent to which it is a problem, and the actions taken to defeat the problems [7,8,16,17].
- Flexibility: This dimension covers flexibility-related indicators, as shown in Table 1. This deals with the capability of an organization to cope with disruptive problems and to be able to resolve problems without impacting its functionality. Front-line supervisors must be given the authority to make necessary decisions to deal with situations during disruptive events without having to wait for approval from top management [7,8,16,17].
Description | No | REIs | RDs |
---|---|---|---|
Your organization has a strong training program for professional development. | I01 | Strong Training Program | D06-Learning |
Your organization has a healthy working culture and good teamwork spirit | I02 | Healthy Working Culture | D02-Speaking-up Culture |
Speed of decisions and transparency is part of your company’s culture | I03 | Speed and Transparency of Decisions | D02-Speaking-up Culture |
You are empowered to make decisions during emergencies without waiting for permission. | I04 | Making During Emergency | D01-Top Management Commitment |
Your organization has a very well-developed organizational governance | I05 | Organizational Governance | D05-Being Prepared |
Your organization has a very well-developed risk management system. | I06 | Risk Management System | D05-Being Prepared |
COVID-19 was part of your organization’s pre-identified risks and was dealt with efficiently. | I07 | Risk Identification | D05-Being Prepared |
Does your organization have a designated core crisis response team? | I08 | Crisis Response Team | D04-Awareness |
Did you have a clear role and responsibility during the COVID-19 crisis? | I09 | Role and Responsibility During Crisis | D04-Awareness |
Pre-COVID-19, Your organization has a very well-developed Information Technology system, i.e., ERP, email system, Work Remote Access Systems, etc. | I10 | Information Technology System | D03-Learning |
Your company has in-house expertise to fix and maintain all your critical equipment. | I11 | Inhouse Maintenance Team | D03-Flexibility |
Your organization relies heavily on external (outside Qatar) vendors and the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) to maintain its critical equipment. | I12 | Outsourced Maintenance Team | D03-Flexibility |
Your organization relies heavily on local vendors (within Qatar) to maintain its critical equipment. | I13 | Local Maintenance Team | D03-Flexibility |
All licensed technologies in your company are maintained only by the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) | I14 | Services of Original Equipment Manufacturer | D03-Flexibility |
Your organization has an effective equipment and materials-sparing philosophy tested during COVID-19. | I15 | Effective Sparing Philosophy During Crisis | D05-Being Prepared |
Most of the critical equipment for your company’s operations was readily available as spares in the warehouse. | I16 | Warehouse Spare Capacity | D05-Being Prepared |
Most of your company’s suppliers and vendors are available in Qatar | I17 | Availability of Suppliers and Vendors | D03-Flexibility |
Developing local expertise and R&D capabilities in your organization is important to sustain business continuity during a crisis. | I18 | Availability of Local Expertise and R&D Capabilities | D01-Top Management Commitment |
COVID-19 had an impact on the productivity of your organization | I19 | Productivity Level During Crisis | D04-Awareness |
COVID-19 had a financial impact on your organization | I20 | Financial Arrangement During Crisis | Awareness |
COVID-19 had an impact on the supply chain of your company | I21 | Supply Chain Continuity During Crisis | Awareness |
Your company has adopted new practices from learnings from COVID-19 | I22 | Lessons Learnt-Based Practices | Learning |
As a result of the recent crisis, your company has redesigned its operations and supply chain philosophies. | I23 | Change Strategies Upon Crisis | Top Management Commitment |
In the aftermath of the recent crisis of COVID-19, your organization has become more innovative with solutions addressing the business challenges. | F24 | Innovative Solutions for Business Challenges | Learning |
4.2. Target Sample and Sample Size
4.3. Data Analysis
4.3.1. Data Screening for Careless Responses and Outliers
4.3.2. Normality Test
- where:
- —constants generated from the covariances, variances, and means of the sample from a normally distributed sample
- —order statistic of a statistical sample
- —sample values
- —sample size
- —sample mean
4.3.3. Cronbach Alpha
- where:
- = the number of items (factors)
- = correlation between the items
- −
- The reliability can be considered as excellent when, 0.9 ≤ ∝ ≤ 1.0
- −
- The reliability can be considered as good when, 0.8 ≤ ∝ < 0.9
- −
- The reliability can be considered as acceptable when, 0.7 ≤ ∝ < 0.8
- −
- The reliability can be considered as questionable when, 0.6 ≤ ∝ < 0.7
- −
- The reliability can be considered as poor when, 0.5 ≤ ∝ < 0.6
- −
- The reliability can be considered as unacceptable when, 0.0 ≤ ∝ < 0.5
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Respondents Profile
5.2. Ranking Approach
5.2.1. Relative Importance Index (RII)
- where:
- = The weight given to each factor by the respondents (1 to 5)
- = The highest weight (in this case, the highest weight is 5)
- = The total number of responses
- −
- The RII can be considered as high when, 0.8 ≤ RII ≤ 1.0
- −
- The RII can be considered as High-Medium when, 0.6 ≤ RII < 0.8
- −
- The RII can be considered as Medium when, 0.4 ≤ RII < 0.6
- −
- The RII can be considered as Medium-Low when, 0.2 ≤ RII < 0.4
- −
- The RII can be considered as Low when, 0.0 ≤ RII < 0.2
5.2.2. Resilience Performance Index (RPI)
- where:
- = Relative importance index of indicator
- = Number of indicators under consideration
5.2.3. Dimensions Performance Index (DPI)
5.3. Discussion of Resilience Indicators and Dimensions
6. Conclusions and Recommendations
- Develop an immediate response plan (IRP) or Be-Well Prepared plans or backup plans as supported by lessons learned and best practices for more flexibility and innovation in managing business with minimal human interference.
- Adopt fast digital transformation and artificial intelligence digitalization programming.
- Develop structured training for all employees on crisis management. This also includes the COVID Task Force to mitigate any future threat.
- Increase investment in internal R&D and Qatari talent to develop local expertise.
- Implement a more dynamic human resources process.
- Empower the local market and build relationships with more reliable suppliers.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Code | Skew and Kurtosis | Shapiro–Wilk | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Skew | c.r. | Kurtosis | c.r. | Statistic | p-Value | |
I01 | −0.808 | −3.444 | 0.131 | 0.279 | 0.857 | 0.000 |
I02 | −0.963 | −4.106 | 1.041 | 2.218 | 0.814 | 0.000 |
I03 | −0.776 | −3.308 | 0.107 | 0.227 | 0.836 | 0.000 |
I04 | −0.471 | −2.007 | −0.357 | −0.761 | 0.885 | 0.000 |
I05 | −0.984 | −4.196 | 1.05 | 2.238 | 0.771 | 0.000 |
I06 | −1.234 | −5.261 | 2.252 | 4.799 | 0.771 | 0.000 |
I07 | −1.392 | −5.933 | 2.052 | 4.372 | 0.760 | 0.000 |
I08 | −2.434 | −10.375 | 8.457 | 18.023 | 0.609 | 0.000 |
I09 | −1.144 | −4.875 | 1.185 | 2.525 | 0.733 | 0.000 |
I10 | −1.16 | −4.942 | 1.128 | 2.404 | 0.744 | 0.000 |
I11 | −0.542 | −2.31 | −0.461 | −0.981 | 0.868 | 0.000 |
I12 | −0.192 | −0.817 | −0.443 | −0.944 | 0.855 | 0.000 |
I13 | −0.009 | −0.04 | −0.459 | −0.979 | 0.863 | 0.000 |
I14 | −0.396 | −1.689 | −0.346 | −0.737 | 0.856 | 0.000 |
I15 | −0.97 | −4.132 | 1.159 | 2.47 | 0.807 | 0.000 |
I16 | −0.504 | −2.15 | −0.275 | −0.586 | 0.848 | 0.000 |
I17 | −0.021 | −0.091 | −0.382 | −0.815 | 0.879 | 0.000 |
I18 | −0.624 | −2.66 | −0.477 | −1.017 | 0.792 | 0.000 |
I19 | −0.186 | −0.795 | −1.045 | −2.227 | 0.890 | 0.000 |
I20 | −0.544 | −2.318 | −0.255 | −0.544 | 0.877 | 0.000 |
I21 | −0.471 | −2.007 | −0.109 | −0.232 | 0.868 | 0.000 |
I22 | −0.81 | −3.453 | 0.383 | 0.816 | 0.794 | 0.000 |
I23 | −0.261 | −1.113 | −0.202 | −0.431 | 0.880 | 0.000 |
I24 | −0.651 | −2.776 | 0.353 | 0.752 | 0.853 | 0.000 |
Indicator | Cronbach’s Alpha Values (If the Item Is Deleted) |
---|---|
I01 | 0.862 |
I02 | 0.858 |
I03 | 0.858 |
I04 | 0.863 |
I05 | 0.860 |
I06 | 0.860 |
I07 | 0.867 |
I08 | 0.860 |
I09 | 0.860 |
I10 | 0.860 |
I11 | 0.860 |
I12 | 0.869 |
I13 | 0.868 |
I14 | 0.869 |
I15 | 0.856 |
I16 | 0.861 |
I17 | 0.867 |
I18 | 0.869 |
I19 | 0.881 |
I20 | 0.877 |
I21 | 0.875 |
I22 | 0.862 |
I23 | 0.859 |
I24 | 0.857 |
Overall | 0.869 |
Profile | Freq. | % | Profile | Freq. | % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sector | Level of Resilience | ||||
Oil and Gas | 88 | 78.6% | High level of Resilience | 69 | 70.4% |
Government/Public Sector | 4 | 3.6% | Moderate level of Resilience | 24 | 24.5% |
Semi-Government | 5 | 4.5% | Low level of Resilience | 2 | 2.0% |
Private Sector | 7 | 6.3% | No Resilience | 3 | 3.1% |
Academic | 14 | 12.5% | |||
Other | 3 | 2.7% | |||
Job Family | Experience | ||||
Management/Leadership | 62 | 55.4% | Less than five years | 2 | 1.8% |
Operation | 22 | 19.6% | 5–10 years | 7 | 6.3% |
Technical Supervisory Support | 12 | 10.7% | 10–15 years | 16 | 14.3% |
Administration Support | 8 | 7.1% | 15–20 years | 19 | 17.0% |
Other | 8 | 7.1% | More than 20 years | 68 | 60.7% |
Indicators | Dimensions | Description | RII | Overall Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|
I08 | D04 | Crisis Response Team | 0.910 | 1 |
I09 | D04 | Role and Responsibility During Crisis | 0.886 | 2 |
I10 | D06 | Information Technology System | 0.877 | 3 |
I18 | D01 | Availability of Local Expertise and R&D Capabilities | 0.855 | 4 |
I07 | D05 | Crisis Risk Identification | 0.853 | 5 |
I05 | D05 | Organizational Governance | 0.851 | 6 |
I06 | D05 | Risk Management System | 0.848 | 7 |
I22 | D06 | Lessons Learned Best Practices | 0.848 | 8 |
I02 | D02 | Healthy Working Culture | 0.824 | 9 |
I15 | D05 | Effective Sparing Philosophy During Crisis | 0.794 | 10 |
I16 | D05 | Warehouse Spare Capacity | 0.785 | 11 |
I24 | D06 | Innovative Solutions for Business Challenges | 0.778 | 12 |
I03 | D02 | Speed and Transparency of Decisions | 0.771 | 13 |
I21 | D04 | Supply Chain Continuity During Crisis | 0.769 | 14 |
I14 | D03 | Services of Original Equipment Manufacturer | 0.763 | 15 |
I12 | D03 | Outsourced Maintenance Team | 0.760 | 16 |
I11 | D03 | Inhouse Maintenance Team | 0.758 | 17 |
I01 | D06 | Strong Training Program | 0.758 | 18 |
I20 | D04 | Financial Arrangement During Crisis | 0.754 | 19 |
I04 | D01 | Making Decisions During Emergency | 0.738 | 20 |
I23 | D01 | Change Strategies Upon Crisis | 0.730 | 21 |
I13 | D03 | Local Maintenance Team | 0.697 | 22 |
I19 | D04 | Productivity Level During Crisis | 0.670 | 23 |
I17 | D03 | Availability of Suppliers and Vendors | 0.650 | 24 |
Factor | DPI | Rank |
---|---|---|
D05—Being Prepared | 0.826 | 1 |
D06—Learning | 0.815 | 2 |
D04—Awareness | 0.798 | 3 |
D02—Speaking-up Culture | 0.798 | 4 |
D01—Top Management Commitment | 0.774 | 5 |
D03—Flexibility | 0.726 | 6 |
Resilience Dimension | Indicator | Indicator Description | RII | REI Rank | D. Wt. (DPI) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
D05-Being Prepared | I07 | Crisis Risk Identification | 0.853 | 5 | 0.826 |
D05-Being Prepared | I05 | Organizational Governance | 0.851 | 6 | |
D05-Being Prepared | I06 | Risk Management System | 0.848 | 7 | |
D05-Being Prepared | I15 | Effective Sparing Philosophy During Crisis | 0.794 | 10 | |
D05-Being Prepared | I16 | Warehouse Spare Capacity | 0.785 | 11 | |
D06-Learning | I10 | Information Technology System | 0.877 | 3 | 0.815 |
D06-Learning | I22 | Lessons Learned Best Practices | 0.848 | 8 | |
D06-Learning | I24 | Innovative Solutions for Business Challenges | 0.778 | 12 | |
D06-Learning | I01 | Strong Training Program | 0.758 | 18 | |
D04-Awareness | I08 | Crisis Response Team | 0.91 | 1 | 0.798 |
D04-Awareness | I09 | Role and Responsibility During Crisis | 0.886 | 2 | |
D04-Awareness | I21 | Supply Chain Continuity During Crisis | 0.769 | 14 | |
D04-Awareness | I20 | Financial Arrangement During Crisis | 0.754 | 19 | |
D04-Awareness | I19 | Productivity Level During Crisis | 0.67 | 23 | |
D02- Speaking-up Culture | I02 | Healthy Working Culture | 0.824 | 9 | 0.798 |
D02- Speaking-up Culture | I03 | Speed and Transparency of Decisions | 0.771 | 13 | |
D01-Top Management Commitment | I18 | Availability of Local Expertise and R&D Capabilities | 0.855 | 4 | 0.774 |
D01-Top Management Commitment | I04 | Making Decisions During Emergency | 0.738 | 20 | |
D01-Top Management Commitment | I23 | Change Strategies Upon Crisis | 0.730 | 21 | |
D03-Flexibility | I14 | Services of Original Equipment Manufacturer | 0.763 | 15 | 0.726 |
D03-Flexibility | I12 | Outsourced Maintenance Team | 0.760 | 16 | |
D03-Flexibility | I11 | Inhouse Maintenance Team | 0.758 | 17 | |
D03-Flexibility | I13 | Local Maintenance Team | 0.697 | 22 | |
D03-Flexibility | I17 | Availability of Suppliers and Vendors | 0.650 | 24 |
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Al Mohannadi, I.M.; Naji, K.K.; Abdella, G.M.; Nabeel, H.; Hamouda, A.M. Towards a Resilient Organization: Lessons Learned from the Oil and Gas Sector in Qatar. Sustainability 2024, 16, 109. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010109
Al Mohannadi IM, Naji KK, Abdella GM, Nabeel H, Hamouda AM. Towards a Resilient Organization: Lessons Learned from the Oil and Gas Sector in Qatar. Sustainability. 2024; 16(1):109. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010109
Chicago/Turabian StyleAl Mohannadi, Issa M., Khalid Kamal Naji, Galal M. Abdella, Hamad Nabeel, and Abdel Magid Hamouda. 2024. "Towards a Resilient Organization: Lessons Learned from the Oil and Gas Sector in Qatar" Sustainability 16, no. 1: 109. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010109
APA StyleAl Mohannadi, I. M., Naji, K. K., Abdella, G. M., Nabeel, H., & Hamouda, A. M. (2024). Towards a Resilient Organization: Lessons Learned from the Oil and Gas Sector in Qatar. Sustainability, 16(1), 109. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010109