Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore how a multitude of demands and challenges faced by public facilities management organizations’ (PFMOs) particularly in relation to a large building stock in need of measures’ are acted upon and negotiated in practice. Specifically this study asks: What are the institutional logics (IL) that constitute the organizational context of PFMOs? How does an institutional worker navigate to create change in PFMOs? Design/methodology/approach Data were collected through a case study of a public facility management organization and include interviews, a questionnaire, observations and organizational documents. The analytical focus is the work of a single actor, a project manager portrayed as “the navigator” and his institutional work (IW) of developing and implementing new organizational practices, to meet current challenges and develop a more “strategic” facility management. Findings The complex institutional landscape faced by officials in PFMOs enforce officials responsible for implementing and developing new practices to become navigators. Originality/value The findings offer a rich practice-based account of the day-to-day IW carried out by actors that try to navigate complex institutional landscapes, consisting of multiple and, at times, conflicting IL. Current challenges for PFMOs are to be portrayed as multi-dimensional and the actual work to transform organizational practices in this context is highly complex, unordered and messy. The findings point towards a need for new competences and roles to tackle current challenges; geared towards integrating different logics and perspectives.

Highlights

  • A central challenge for officials in public facilities management organizations (PFMOs), is to translate various political directives and demands into new practices

  • The navigator used two overall approaches, zooming in and zooming out, with four distinct strategies while conducting the institutional work (IW) of creating, disrupting and maintaining practices (Battilana and D’Aunno, 2010). These approaches overlapped at times, but we argue that they serve to emphasize a central aspect about navigating and doing IW in PFMOs

  • The in-depth case study explored in this paper foregrounds a sector-specific understanding of the multidimensional challenges faced by individual actors working to improve practices related to the management of the public building stock (Boyd and Schweber, 2017; Hill et al, 2013; Ramskov-Galamba and Nielsen, 2016)

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Summary

Introduction

A central challenge for officials in public facilities management organizations (PFMOs), is to translate various political directives and demands into new (organizational) practices. These practices need to align with both the structures and logics that condition the institutional. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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