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Effect of job situational factors on work outcomes of facilities managers

Florence Yean Yng Ling (Department of Building, School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore)
Zhe Zhang (Department of Building, School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore)
Stephanie Yen Ling Tay (Department of Building, School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore)

Facilities

ISSN: 0263-2772

Article publication date: 3 August 2021

Issue publication date: 5 January 2022

293

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to investigate how the situational factors that facilities managers (FMs) in Singapore face in their jobs affect their work outcomes. Job situation factors such as types of tasks, interpersonal relationships in teams, supervisors’ actions and advancements opportunities are classified into job characteristics, social environment characteristics, leadership and organisational practices categories.

Design/methodology/approach

Based on a systematic literature review, a questionnaire was designed to collect data on work outcomes and job situational factors from FMs working in public housing estates in Singapore. Using the Statistical Package for the Social Science software, inferential statistical analyses were carried out.

Findings

FMs reported that they used economical means and resources to carry out their work significantly frequently and achieved significantly high productivity. Complaints are received significantly frequently and maintenance defects are regularly encountered. Many of the job situational factors are present and found to be significantly correlated with work outcomes and some of these may be used to predict FMs’ work outcomes. Based on the correlation results, the frequency of complaints from residents may be reduced through the following ways: make FMs’ work tasks less challenging; reduce the variety of work tasks that FMs need to execute; reduce FMs’ work volume and speed of work.

Research limitations/implications

This study is limited to FMs managing public housing estates in Singapore. The work outcomes are self-reported, and thus susceptible to bias. However, as the respondents reported significantly frequent complaints and defects, this might indicate that the bias is not serious.

Practical implications

FMs’ jobs should be broken down into small parts/tasks and assigned to different FMs to specialise. This makes FMs’ tasks less challenging, and allows them to specialise to increase their productivity, improve their quality of work and overcome the problem of high work volume or demanding work speed. By adopting job specialisation, the frequency of receiving complaints from residents may be reduced.

Originality/value

This study discovered strategies to reduce the number of complaints from residents of public housing about facilities management. The contribution to knowledge is that complaints by residents on facilities management can be reduced by adopting job specialisation but not job enlargement. Decomposing work into different tasks and allowing FMs to focus on a few tasks would lead to a reduction in complaints. It also enables FMs to master the skill and complete the tasks without much oversight or supervision.

Keywords

Citation

Ling, F.Y.Y., Zhang, Z. and Tay, S.Y.L. (2022), "Effect of job situational factors on work outcomes of facilities managers", Facilities, Vol. 40 No. 1/2, pp. 76-97. https://doi.org/10.1108/F-08-2020-0101

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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