Champions of Social Procurement in the Australian Construction Industry: Evolving Roles and Motivations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What motivates people to become champions of social procurement in the construction industry?
- What is the nature of these evolving roles in the construction industry?
2. Social Procurement Champions in Construction: Motivations and Roles
3. Methodology
3.1. Data Collection
- What is driving SP outside and within the business?
- What is your main motivation in doing this job?
- Can you describe your job in terms of SP and what you actually do?
- How important are relationships to your job, and how much time do you spend nurturing and building them?
- Is your SP role formally established and recognised within the business; where does it sit in the organisational structure and how has it evolved over time?
- How do you persuade people to get onboard? What methods do you use to build support for SP in the business?
- Who are the most important people to get onboard; why and how do you do that?
- How do you build a community of support within the organisation and across organisations?
3.2. Analysis
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Research Question One: What Motivates People to Become Champions of Social Procurement in Construction Companies?
4.1.1. Opportunity to Make a Difference
I don’t think the fame and the fortune are necessarily going to come. But I do think being able to play some role in making a difference to the lives of a lot of people who find it a little bit hard that’s probably the most important thing(R7)
I am fortunate enough to now be in a position that I can challenge people’s preconceived ideas of what somebody who needs a handout looks like. It’s a personal thing(R14).
I come from a bit of a working-class background and have been exposed to a few things growing up that sort of motivates me personally.(R2)
I’ve always had a strong appetite and active participation in social justice issues.(R5)
4.1.2. Opportunity to Leverage the Power of Business to Cause Change
Mission-based businesses were still not at the main table, here there’s the right resourcing, there’s the right opportunity for market share.(R5)
Improving the system. I mean part and parcel of that delivery is actually coming up with a better way to do things(R7)
It’s hard for people to think about social value when they have to deliver projects under incredibly demanding time and cost constraintssocial value is just another distraction.(R7)
I took a step out of construction because I just got really disillusioned about the industry, that it was just rough, it was brutal, and lots of men and just the same. I saw that there was some change happening in this space.(R2)
4.1.3. Supporting Third-Sector Capacity Buildings in the Third Sector
The demand is just simply going to outstrip the supply. So we’ve spent the last couple of years trying to build capacity in social enterprises and Indigenous businesses. We’ll teach you how to do it, we’ll teach you how to be cost comparative and how to actually stand on your own two feet.(R14)
It’s sometimes just the basic ability to facilitate linkages into socially primed or mission based businesses or community organizations in a way that’s respectful and mutually beneficial.(R5)
In its simplest sense, social procurement is a form of organizing.(R7)
4.1.4. Political Motives
I was going to say my motivation is not political, but it is political, I suppose. Yeah if you come to the nub of it my motivation really is quite political, part of my motivation is to respond to the fragmentation that I know is being created deliberately.(R7)
The minute we’re seen as the expert or the lefty or the social justice person we don’t have clout in the business anymore(R5).
4.2. Research Question Two: What Is the Nature of These Evolving Roles in Construction Companies?
4.2.1. Inspiring People
It’s about inspiring people a lot of inspirational thought leadership, giving some really fun examples.(R5)
We engaged the hearts of these crusty hardnosed commercially driven supervisors and engineers, that whilst they might not be getting the cheapest subcontract out of a social enterprise they were transforming lives.(R2)
4.2.2. Cross-Functional Working and Linking to Communities
I worked with our HR and our diversity inclusion team to come up with some innovative responses that could meet the government requirements(R8).
How you can get sometimes quick tactical wins, but also how do you embed strategic planning into supply chain for long term enduring outcomes with community,it’s informing our bids or proposals.(R5)
4.2.3. Developing Culturally Appropriate Workforces, Narratives, Languages and Practices
So if you can create a narrative where you are slowly but surely educating those people around you and providing opportunities for them to actually engage in that narrative, you’re creating other champions(R5).
Sharing stories is critical(R2)
4.2.4. Challenging Institutions and Existing Incumbent Relationships
It’s a high risk environment, they don’t want to do anything that’s going to potentially pose risks, particularly with unions.(R2)
4.2.5. Changing Perceptions of Value
Engineers and builders see construction as a technical exercise and rarely if ever ask what buildings are for social procurement is about recognising that buildings are ultimately tools for social change. This is huge change in thinking for procurement professionals who generally are taught to think in one dimension and seek the lowest price.(R3)
Processes around redefining what value is they won’t compromise you also need to be realistic around what that cost is, be articulate in telling someone like [company name] this is the cost and this is why it costs, and the outcomes.(R11)
4.2.6. Managing Risk
In my head it’s all around risk mitigation. So if I have an engineer saying we don’t need to procure from Aboriginal businesses or we don’t need that person onsite, I’m already thinking about what are their perceived risks, and how can I sell it to them in a way that I’m already solving their problem so that’s giving them an opportunity.(R14)
Cost, cost is super important, there needs to be acceptance, endorsement, and a level of confidence and comfort that the team that they’re going to be introducing on this project is going to execute it and design and deliver.(R4)
4.2.7. Learning, Educating, Experimenting and Innovating
It’s about education, it’s about us--without wanting to sound arrogant, it’s about us educating our subcontractors as to the potential.(R7)
It’s about constantly educating those around you and providing opportunity for those around you to learn and experience. Because I think this is very experiential if never actually experienced it it’s very hard to understand or walk in somebody else’s shoes.(R6)
4.2.8. Building Trust and Relationships
To make sure that we have infrastructure and the connections that enable us to--I suppose ultimately to outperform. I mean if you spend a lot of time joining the dots, you start to understand just what benefits can be derived by putting people in touch with each other.(R7)
You take time, you take a lot of time, you can’t build a relationship in a minute, it does take time, and it gets back to all of those things about being genuine, about your transparency, about those levels of trust.(R6)
I mean my phone’s always on, I never turn my phone off and there are drawbacks to that I know.(R7).
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research Question | Factors | Key References |
---|---|---|
1. What motivates people to become champions of social procurement in construction companies? | Altruism. Opportunities for addressing social problems in a new and more efficient way. Responsibility to the community. Making change for the better. Idealism. | [10,21] |
Inspiration from others. Personal experience of disadvantage and injustice. Social networks/encouragement from others. | [35] | |
Personality (determined to bring about change). Cognition (deep understanding of social problems and causes, as well as potential solutions). Feasibility (a realistic opportunity to bring about change). Desirability (need for change to happen and confidence that others support change). Skills available (confidence can bring about change). Personal experience/confidence in bringing about change successfully (having seen injustice). Social networks (social circles for encouragement). Conducive environment (social, economic, political). | [36] | |
Creating new positions, roles, influences, organisational freedoms, and power bases aligning with personal goals, interests, and values. | [37] | |
Career opportunities and rewards. | [38] | |
Spiritual leadership (vision, altruism, compassion, social responsibility). | [39] | |
Relationships between social procurement field actors which motivate and enable the sharing of information and practices. Resources that provide finance, support, and the best practice guidance to enable inter-organisational learning. | [1] | |
Create change at a systems level. Moral outrage against injustice. Opportunity to create community benefit/social value. | [20] | |
2: What is the nature of these evolving roles in construction companies? | Sell and protect ideas. Provide emotional and material support. Channel resources to a project. Enlisting and securing support. Motivating others to come onboard. Supply ideas, energy and determination. Different levels of champions working together. | [12,13,40] |
Form supporting intra- and inter-organisational cross-sector collaborations/relationships. | [41] | |
Encourage, promote, and facilitate open discussion. Protect ideas from threat. | [19] | |
Engage in extracurricular tasks (outside normal job description). Self-made adjustable roles which rely on operational, education and collaborative work. Engage in institutional work (to change existing norms and practices and legitimise new social procurement roles, relationships and authority in existing structures). Adopt rhetorical strategies to bring about change. | [8,10,11,34,42] | |
Value-adding connector—adding social value along the interaction chain. | [32] | |
Mesh people, processes technologies, cultures and systems. Leadership (visionary, political, ethical). | [30] | |
Research—collect and present evidence to back-up arguments/case. Working outside existing rules and procedures, defined roles and lines of responsibility. | [31] | |
Educate stakeholders. | [41] | |
Sensemaking, sense giving and sense breaking. Connecting actors in new ways. Influencing others through combinations of rhetorical, evidence-based and rational strategies. Unlearning (breaking existing logics and institutions). Bricolage (making do, combining existing resources and redefining roles in new ways). | [13] | |
Creating new proto-institutions. | [8] | |
Praxis (drive change through developing new practices, trial and error and experimentation, working in different, careers, fields and business units). | [28] | |
Role changes over phases of the innovation process: Design for change; develop business case; internalise change; implement change; evaluate change. Knowledge stage; persuasion stage; decision-making; implementation; confirmation. | [43,44] | |
Create and leverage new cross-sector partnerships between private, public and third sector organisations. | [33] |
Respondent | Position | Gender | Organization Description |
---|---|---|---|
R1 | Social Procurement Manager | Female | Major international construction and infrastructure contractor. Revenue: AUD 4.2 billion |
R2 | Social Inclusion Manager | Male | Major international construction and infrastructure contractor. Revenue: AUD 4.2 billion |
R3 | General Manager | Female | Major international building construction, infrastructure, investment and development company. Revenue USD 5.19 billion |
R4 | Head of Sustainability | Male | Major international building construction, infrastructure, investment and development company. Revenue USD 5.19 billion |
R5 | Technical Director Social Outcomes | Female | Major project management, engineering and consulting services firm operating in 150 countries. Revenue AUD 2.72 billion |
R6 | Social Programme Manager | Female | An international construction contractor which specialises in commercial high-rise buildings. AUD 3.78 billion |
R7 | Employee Relations Manager | Male | An international construction contractor which specialises in commercial high-rise buildings. Revenue AUD 3.78 billion |
R8 | Director, Communication and Stakeholder Engagement | Female | An engineering, management, design, planning, project management, consulting and advisory company Revenue AUD 1.06 billion |
R9 | Senior Project Manager | Male | Project management consultancy, project manages major projects, 22 employees operate across Australia |
R10 | Stakeholder Engagement Manager and Training Project Officer | Female | Multinational and publically listed construction, property and infrastructure company. Revenue AUD 11.1 billion |
R11 | Social Diversity Supply Chain Manager | Male | Multinational and publically listed construction, property and infrastructure company. Revenue AUD 11.1 billion |
R12 | People and Engagement Director | Male | International construction, tunnelling, rail, building and services provider Revenue: AUD 4.2 billion |
R13 | Workforce Development and Industry Participation Manager | Female | An international construction contractor which specialises in commercial high-rise buildings. Revenue AUD 3.78 billion |
R14 | Development and Services Manager | Female | Construction contractor specialising in Metro, Freight and Heavy Haul and Light Rail infrastructure. Revenue AUD 55.1 million |
R15 | Managing Director | Male | Major subcontractor specialising in electrical contracting |
Evidence | Codes | Analytic Categories | Emergent Themes |
---|---|---|---|
RQ1: What motivates people to become champions of social procurement? | |||
The demand is just simply going to outstrip the supply. So we’ve spent the last couple of years trying to--… we’ll teach you how to do it, we’ll teach you how to be cost comparative and how to actually stand on your own two feet’. (R14) It’s sometimes just the basic ability to facilitate linkages into socially primed or mission based businesses or community organizations in a way that’s respectful and mutually beneficial. (R5) | Supply outstripping demand Teaching and supporting suppliers Ability to facilitate linkages Mutually beneficial Respectful | Third-sector capacity building [43] Social capital (bonding capital, bridging capital, linking capital) [53] | Third-sector capacity building |
RQ2: What is the nature of these evolving roles in the construction industry? | |||
Is it the language we are using, is it the culturally appropriate practice that is informing our processes. (R5) The language of a project director, of a site engineer, of a cost planner, how they price services and products. (R11) | Language Culture Profession Supportive Appropriate | Field of collaborative practices and the enabling role of micro process such as language [54] | Developing culturally appropriate workforces, narratives, languages and practices |
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Loosemore, M.; Keast, R.; Barraket, J.; Denny-Smith, G. Champions of Social Procurement in the Australian Construction Industry: Evolving Roles and Motivations. Buildings 2021, 11, 641. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120641
Loosemore M, Keast R, Barraket J, Denny-Smith G. Champions of Social Procurement in the Australian Construction Industry: Evolving Roles and Motivations. Buildings. 2021; 11(12):641. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120641
Chicago/Turabian StyleLoosemore, Martin, Robyn Keast, Jo Barraket, and George Denny-Smith. 2021. "Champions of Social Procurement in the Australian Construction Industry: Evolving Roles and Motivations" Buildings 11, no. 12: 641. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120641
APA StyleLoosemore, M., Keast, R., Barraket, J., & Denny-Smith, G. (2021). Champions of Social Procurement in the Australian Construction Industry: Evolving Roles and Motivations. Buildings, 11(12), 641. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120641