THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT PRACTICES OF AUSTRALIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 15 THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT PRACTICES OF AUSTRALIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES M. Loosemore, University of New South Wales M. M. M. Teo, Building Construction Authority, Singapore INTRODUCTION Events such as September 11th, high-profile corporate collapses such as HIH, the subse- quent turmoil in our insurance industry and the recent financial reporting debacle in the USA, have acted as a stark and sudden re- minder of the unpredictability of the world around us and of the construction industry’s vulnerability to it. Those companies that have over relied on insurance to manage uncertainty are now counting the costs and are being forced to review their risk man- agement practices by financers and insur- ance companies that are reconsidering their risk coverage, reducing claim payments and increasing their fees (Lawson, 2002). While risk management is increasingly practised in the construction industry, albeit in an un- sophisticated way, knowledge of crisis man- agement practices is less widespread (Loosemore, 2000). Given the current secu- rity concerns surrounding major buildings and infrastructure in Australia, this is an aspect of risk management which justifies special attention at the moment. However, even in “normal” times, it is an area of prac- tice to which construction companies should give more attention. Organisational crises are a special type of risk which manifest themselves into decisive periods of acute difficulty that threaten the viability of an organisation, its business units or key products and even the lives of people (Fink, 1986; Aguilera and Messick, 1986). They are low probability, high impact events which create the need for critical and rapid analytical decision-making skills, the results of which are likely to fall under ex- tensive public, media and/or government scrutiny (Perrow, 1984; Pauchant and Mi- troff, 1992; Irving, 1997; Pearson and Clair, 1998). Consequently, crises are character- ised by an extreme sense of urgency which hyper-extend an organisation’s coping ca- pabilities, producing stress and anxiety among organisational actors and stake- holders (Allen, 1990; Pearson et al., 1997). Although most companies would prefer to avoid a crisis, there is an increasing realisa- tion that crises are becoming an inevitable and healthy part of organisational life, which have to be planned for (Frazer and Hippel, 1984; Pascale, 1993; Furze and Gale, 1996; Lerbinger, 1997). This planning should be part of an integrated and thoroughly imple- mented risk management process but evi- dence suggests that many organisations exist in a low state of crisis preparedness, having an inadequate understanding of their risk exposure, of how to mitigate those risks and of the internal systems needed to cope with and learn and recover from their even- tuality. While crises can destroy unprepared organisations they can strengthen those that are well prepared since a well con- ceived crisis management plan should har- ness potential opportunities as well as ensure survival (Pascale, 1993; Furze and Gale, 1996). It is within this context that an investigation of the crisis preparedness of construction companies was undertaken in Sydney. The objectives were to gauge attitudes towards crisis management and the adequacy of sys- tems used to plan for and manage them. The signs of crisis proneness All construction companies are prone to crisis but to different extents, depending upon the nature of work they are engaged in. For example, a company involved in large complex inner city projects is likely to be more prone to crises than a company in- volved in house building. However, this is largely dependent upon the way an organi- sation is managed and Pauchant and Mitroff (1992), Mitroff and Pearson (1993) and Per- son et al. (1997) have found that crisis-prone organisations have certain characteristics in common. In particular, they tend to be scep- tical about risk management and character- ised by a culture of managerial invincibility and fatalism. Such organisations also tend to have task-orientated cultures which con- sistently stress the importance of profits M. LOOSEMORE AND M. M. M. TEO 16 THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 over other corporate goals. The mind-set that is nurtured is that crises are essentially negative in nature, that company size and past successes provide protection from fu- ture crises, that crises happen to others, that good management and hard work pre- vents crises and that desirable business ends justify the taking of high-risk business means. People in crisis-prone organisations also believe that crisis management is someone else’s responsibility and that they have the power to offload risks onto other parties, thereby insulating themselves from their environment. For these organisations, crisis management plans are considered a sign of weakness because crises are seen as a sign of managerial failure. To a crisis- prone organisation, there is little justifica- tion for the re-examination of existing or- ganisational practices in the aftermath of a crisis, and rather than learning lessons for the future the priority is to maintain the or- ganisation’s public image and to ensure that internal operations remain intact. In essence, crisis-prone organisations have an inappropriate structure and culture in relation to their risks and do not dedicate sufficient resources to proactive crisis man- agement planning. Consequently, crisis management plans represent little more than a managerial façade and have minimal impact upon day-to-day organisational prac- tices and attitudes. As Mitroff and Pearson (1993, xvii) point out, “in such organisations, CM (crisis management sic) activities may be designed to fool everyone, but ultimately they fool no one at all”. Crisis-prepared organisations In contrast to crisis-prone organisations, those which are prepared have a culture of openness, awareness and sensitivity to or- ganisational risks and of their social and financial responsibilities to stakeholders and the wider environment (Ginn, 1989; Lerbinger, 1997; Pearson et al., 1997). Pro- active risk management is systematically incorporated into strategic planning proc- esses and championed by senior executives so that it is an integral part of organisational life at all levels (More, 1995). In this sense, senior executives provide the drive and sup- port for crisis management by providing suf- ficient resources and clear statements of fundamentally held core beliefs and atti- tudes relating to organisational priorities. For example, crisis-prepared organisations often have a permanent crisis management team, charged with the responsibility of cre- ating a comprehensive crisis management plan and to continuously communicate, co- ordinate and review crisis management ef- forts. As Osborne (1991) argues, centrally co-ordinated guidance is critical in creating corporate attitudes and managerial inclina- tions that are able to unite an organisation in a decisive and immediate crisis response at a time of strong divisive and procrastinat- ing forces. Another characteristic of crisis-prepared organisations is their flexibility and willing- ness to “let go” of formal, standardised sys- tems and procedures which serve them well in normal times but which become restric- tive and counter-productive during a crisis (Mintzberg, 1976; Sagan, 1991). However, total flexibility may result in a loss of mana- gerial control and a disjointed crisis re- sponse, meaning that a delicate balance between formality and informality is neces- sary. Such a balance facilitates effective horizontal and vertical communications with external and internal stakeholders at a time when existing information systems are stressed to the limit. During a crisis, effec- tive communication is essential but difficult and companies with a track record of effec- tive communication as an intrinsic part of their day-to-day life are most likely to sur- vive (Mindszenthy et al., 1988; Aspery and Woodhouse, 1992; Sikich, 1993). Effective communication systems are particularly important in dealing with external stake- holders such as emergency services, the public, the media and existing and potential customers. The media, in particular, play an important role in constructing the public’s image of events, and poor communications can result in distortions of the truth, unjusti- fied mistrust, suspicion and irrevocable damage to customer relations. In essence, a crisis-prepared organisation has well devel- oped and widely understood crisis manage- ment plans which keep them in constant touch with what type of crisis it faces, when they begin, why they occur and who they affect (Mitroff and Pearson, 1993). It is the state of knowledge in these areas which represents the fundamental difference be- tween crisis-prone and crisis-prepared or- ganisations. THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT PRACTICES OF AUSTRALIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 17 Crisis management planning The importance of a well-conceived crisis management plan cannot be overstated and it represents one of the defining charact- eristics of a crisis-prepared organisation. This has been illustrated many times, such as in the Occidental Piper Alpha disaster where appropriate operating manuals on how to interrupt a potentially catastrophic sequence of events were almost totally lacking (Bea, 1994). Having a preconceived plan that can be automatically implemented takes away some of the initial pressure and shock associated with the early phases of a crisis. This creates a valuable “breathing- space” within which people can calmly in- vestigate the problem and agree on an ap- propriate response. The importance of a good start in crisis management cannot be over-stated. During a crisis, every second counts and the first few hours are particu- larly critical. This is especially true if exter- nal constituencies are involved because initial impressions play a disproportionately large role in shaping their judgments of competence and blame. If initial impres- sions are bad then an organisation will be judged guilty until proven innocent and in many instances this can intensify a crisis and accelerate its escalation (Loosemore, 2000). Many organisations in high-risk industries have a permanent disaster committee that is responsible for championing the need for crisis management, identifying current pre- paredness and vulnerabilities, devising dis- aster plans, and coordinating people during a crisis (Kutner, 1996). The membership of such committees is an important factor in determining their ability to do this, and they should consist of senior managers, manag- ers from all functional departments, and external professionals who have experience of crisis management, public relations, the law, and physical and mental health issues. In particular, commitment from the top of an organisation is essential if the activities of a disaster committee are to be taken se- riously and if they are to have a chance of success. The various aspects of these activi- ties are discussed below. Conducting crisis audits and creating crisis portfolios A crisis audit assesses an organisation’s crisis capabilities and identifies the inherent risk factors in its environment, internal activities, technology, infrastructure, and culture that need to be addressed to im- prove its crisis preparedness (Mitroff and Pearson, 1993). The first stage in this proc- ess should be to develop a working defini- tion of a crisis from the organisation’s viewpoint and to then identify and rank, in probability and consequence terms, the types of crises the organisation is vulner- able to. This involves learning from past events, looking into the future and exploring unusual combinations of events that may seem unlikely, but could combine to pro- duce a serious crisis. Ranking allows appro- priate judgments to be made about the relative costs and benefits of constructing a crisis management plan in each case be- cause planning for every possible crisis is not economically rational. Establishing monitoring systems and standard operating procedures One aspect of the disaster committee’s job is to establish monitoring systems to detect potential crises. The disaster committee should also develop standard procedures that define precisely who should be involved in a crisis response, what they should be doing, when they should be doing it, and how they should be doing it. These procedures, in effect, establish a pre-defined emergency communication network that needs to be followed during a crisis’ early but critical phases, when people are disorientated by events. The intention is to “buy” the organi- sation some time to come to terms with events, to allow people to re-orientate themselves, and to ensure that appropriate resources are mobilised quickly and that they are commensurate with a crisis’ scale. To do this, the procedures should be achiev- able, simple, flexible, and understandable by all internal and external stakeholders. For example, in Australia and Singapore, con- struction sites have many migrant workers and this may require the production of manuals in a range of different languages. Creating a command centre During a crisis, information is constantly being generated from a multitude of sources and it is critical that it is supplied “live” to the correct place, at the correct time, and in an understandable format (Davis, 1995). In this sense, a key aspect of a disaster committee’s job during a crisis is to identify a clear command centre that repre- sents a single point of responsibility for M. LOOSEMORE AND M. M. M. TEO 18 THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 decision-making and information manage- ment. Such centres are a critical co- ordination mechanism that helps facilitate a unified crisis management effort since one of the greatest problems that can emerge during a crisis is the tendency for people to act independently. For example, in the case of a fire emergency, the command centre should have the sole responsibility for con- tacting emergency services and to co- ordinate individual supervisors who are charged with clearing certain areas of the site. In the case of an economic crisis, such as the bankruptcy of a major sub- contractor, the command centre should be responsible for re-organizing work and em- ploying another sub-contractor. In addition to being of practical importance during a crisis, command centres also play an important symbolic role. Nicodemus (1997) provides an example of a company that faced a crisis and named their command centre “the war room,” where they declared war on the problem. Security Security is another important issue for a disaster committee to consider since inter- ference from unwanted elements can exac- erbate a crisis or, at the very least, interfere with its management. This involves identify- ing external constituencies who feel that they have a stake in a crisis’ outcome but who cannot contribute to its solution. While all stakeholders must be managed and kept informed, those involved in crisis manage- ment efforts should be insulated from these disruptive elements so they can develop a strong focus on the problem. In some situations, it is also important that the site of a crisis is physically cut off from these elements, particularly when it contin- ues to represent a danger to the public. In such situations, evacuation procedures may need implementing and it is essential that they are clearly communicated to everyone on a project and reinforced by regular train- ing and mock drills. For example, public address systems, sirens and horns can be used to notify people of an incident if they are placed at strategic locations so everyone can hear them. Whatever signal is used, it must be as simple and as unequivocal as possible. Responsibilities for using them must be clear, as should appropriate back up if, as Murphy’s Law dictates, key people are away on the day of an incident or if essential equipment malfunctions. An important part of evacuation is the clear labelling of exit routes from all parts of the site. In particular, people should know that mechanical hoists cannot not be used in an evacuation and that all potentially danger- ous machinery in the vicinity of escape routes must be switched off. Since a con- struction site is a constantly changing physical environment, the positions of no- tices and their maintenance needs constant monitoring. Furthermore, all evacuation routes should follow the shortest possible route to checkpoints where roll calls can be taken in safety. They should also be wide enough to facilitate an orderly evacuation of the building. On inner city sites this may be the street, and the hazards to the public, to traffic, and to site workers must be as- sessed in association with public services such as the police. The potential danger of not having ade- quately thought out evacuation plans and well-marked evacuation routes was demon- strated in the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire in May 1977 which killed 164 people. The official investigation report reveals that the club had no evacuation plan and that em- ployees were not schooled or drilled in the duties they were to perform in the case of fire. Furthermore, means of egress were not marked and the escape route itself was too narrow to take the number of people who were in the building at that particular point in time (Best, 1977). Developing a culture of collective responsibility The need to insulate a disaster response team from unwanted elements does not mean it should be allowed to become intro- verted. Consideration also needs to be given to the re-organisation of non-crisis man- agement activities so the remainder of an organisation can function as normally as possible. Crises inevitably drain a consider- able amount of energy from other functional areas within an organisation, demanding special efforts from the people who operate there. Clearly, without a considerable de- gree of peripheral goodwill and a sense of collective responsibility, the impact of a cri- sis can spread to other parts of an organisa- tion. Such goodwill cannot be expected if it did not exist before a crisis, and in this sense the crisis management process needs to be continuous. THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT PRACTICES OF AUSTRALIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 19 One way of developing a culture of collective responsibility is to communicate everyone’s interdependency during a crisis and to clar- ify and, ideally, share project risks as much as possible. Most crises demand an injec- tion of extra resources into a project and if the disaster committee does not identify their source in advance, then a crisis will stimulate negotiations and potential con- flicts that will delay a response. Decisions concerning risk distribution are particularly relevant to economic crises, and earlier we provided evidence to suggest that they have been a major cause of conflict within construction projects. We also identi- fied a series of principles to guide risk deci- sion-making. These principles apply at all points along the contractual chain, and to consultants as well as contractors. It is also important to realise that the client’s initial risk management practices are inevitably transferred along the contractual chain. For example, if a contractor is employed under a high-risk contract and has not been given the opportunity to price for those risks, then it is likely that they will attempt to transfer those risks along the chain by using back- to-back contracts and similar employment practices with their sub-contractors. Indeed, sub-contractors may do the same and so on, until all project risks have been dissi- pated to the end of the contractual chain. Unfortunately, it is here that the most vul- nerable, crisis-prone organisations exist, and when problems begin to occur that de- mand extra resources, the end result of this risk-cascade is inevitably a backlash of con- flict up the contractual chain as parties deny any responsibility for them. Public relations Public relations are an essential aspect of crisis management since most types of cri- ses have implications beyond an organisa- tion’s boundaries. In essence, the three “publics” that need to be involved in a crisis are employees not directly affected by it, external and quasi-external interest groups and the general public. We have already dis- cussed the first two publics and it would be foolish to ignore the third. As Aspery (1993, p. 18) argues, “crisis communications built on well-established relationships with key audiences stand a better chance of protect- ing, even enhancing your reputation during difficult times. A company which decides to start communicating during a crisis will have little credibility”. Unfortunately, construction companies tend to attach little importance to the building of sound relationships with the media, seeing it as a non value-adding activity and perceiv- ing most journalists as dangerous, untrust- worthy, and irresponsible (Moodely and Preece, 1996). This rejection of the media tends to be particularly strong during a cri- sis when organisations look inward and consciously hide from the public, seeing them as an unnecessary distraction to res- cue efforts. However, this is precisely the time when it is most dangerous to ignore the media, since in the aftermath of a crisis, the public has a tendency to embark on a process of ritual damnation. This is particu- larly true of high-profile, publicly financed projects in which people may feel a greater right to recrimination as a result of having paid their taxes to finance it. As Horlick- Jones (1996, p. 61) notes, “since the aboli- tion of capital punishment, the British public has turned to those in charge during lurid disasters to satisfy its lust for retribution. Find someone to blame, cries the mob, and off runs Whitehall to offer up someone for lynching”. Poor public relations have been the downfall of many organisations that have underestimated the power of the me- dia in shaping public opinion of how a crisis is being handled. The media The construction industry is particularly vul- nerable to poor media coverage because of its very negative public image. Furthermore, there is increasing scrutiny of the industry as a result of the ever-greater appreciation of its impact on the built and natural envi- ronment (Moodley and Preece, 1996). This, coupled with growing sympathies with the environmental movement amongst the gen- eral population, has resulted in increasing numbers of confrontations with the public, particularly on large infrastructure, mining and housing projects. Notably, in many of these increasingly common and public con- frontations, the media has portrayed con- struction companies in a heavy-handed and unsympathetic way and there is little doubt that the future viability of many projects will have been affected by this coverage. In this sense, media relations is an area of tradi- tional neglect to which companies operating in the construction industry must turn their attention. Construction managers cannot rely upon the media to put their case and a continued reluctance to communicate with M. LOOSEMORE AND M. M. M. TEO 20 THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 the media will almost certainly lead to nega- tive reporting of the industry’s activities. In contrast, open relationships with the press and more sensitivity to environmental issues will enable managers to better shape the public’s attitudes and thereby obtain a more balanced presentation of the facts from the media during a crisis. One way of ensuring open communication with the press during a crisis is to establish a 24-hour-a-day press office, which has the responsibility of providing factual and up-to- date information to the media and to em- ployees. If managed well, such an office should be able to turn media inquiries into opportunities rather than problems by initi- ating, rather than reacting to, press, radio, and TV coverage. Public relations are best handled by one trained person who is named as an official spokesperson and who has skills in dealing with the media. TV in- terviews with untrained staff who appear uncaring, flustered and unsure of the facts are damaging to the public’s perception of competence whereas a trained person with experience of such events can portray a positive image. The importance of identifying such a person was illustrated during the aftermath of the TWA flight 800 crash when the rush of distraught families, an eager press, and an interested public were left to the management of one chief ticket agent who, through no fault of his own, released inaccurate information which fuelled uncer- tainty, anxiety and false speculation about the handling of the affair (Bobo, 1997). This was a primary reason for TWA being widely criticised afterward by public relations counsellors, crash victims’ families and the media for having an uncaring attitude. Post-crisis management After a crisis, a disaster committee should organise follow-up meetings so lessons can be learned and fed into subsequent crisis management efforts. Everyone affected by a crisis must be involved in this process. In addition to managing the learning process, the disaster committee should also turn its attention to the recovery. This can be a lengthy and sensitive process that is likely to be influenced by how well a crisis was man- aged. For example, it may involve delicate challenges such as conducting investiga- tions into causes, mending damaged rela- tionships, re-organizing the project program, settling on-going disputes and re- assessing project requirements. At the same time, attention must be given to the long-term consequences of a crisis such as rectifying damage to the environment, or dealing with government or legal investiga- tions. Clearly, the less effectively a crisis is managed, the more arduous is the recovery process. Research method Mitroff and Pearson (1993) provided a con- ceptual framework for investigating crisis- proneness and understanding the major factors which contribute to effective crisis management. Essentially, they argued that effective crisis management is determined by: Attitudes towards crisis management and the extent to which an organisation under- stands the types of crises which it should prepare for, given its mission and its indus- try. The extent to which an organisation re- sources crisis management activities and effectively manages the five distinct phases through which all crises pass, namely, sig- nal detection, preparation and prevention, damage containment, recovery and learn- ing. The extent to which priorities and interac- tions between the technological, the individ- ual/human and the organisational/cultural systems are understood and managed. The relative perceptions of organisational responsibilities to external and internal stakeholders. On the basis of these factors, Mitroff and Pearson produced a diagnostic model which identified the factors in an ideal crisis man- agement program (See Table 1): THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT PRACTICES OF AUSTRALIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 21 Table 1: Factors in an ideal crisis management (CM) program (Adapted from Mitroff and Pearson 1993, p.114) Elements of an integrated crisis management program Key questions to ask in an integrated crisis management program Strategic actions Is crisis management integrated into corporate philosophy, mission statements, strategic planning and notions of corporate excellence? Is there a dedicated CM unit or team? Are outsiders included on the Board and/or CM unit team? Is training conducted in CM? Are there regular crisis simulations? Are there any diversification and portfolio strategies? Technical and structural actions Has a dedicated budget for CM been created? Are steps taken to continually develop and change emergency policies and manuals? Are there computerised inventories of plant, employees, products and capabilities? Is there a strategic emergency room or facility? Are steps taken to reduce hazardous products, services and production processes? Are steps taken to improve overall design and safety of products and production? Is there technological redundancy (such as computer backup)? Are outside experts and services in CM used? Evaluation and diagnostic actions Are legal and financial audits of threats and liabilities conducted? Are there continuous reviews and modifications of insurance policies and coverage? Are environmental impact audits conducted? Is there ranking of the most critical activities necessary for daily operations? Is there any early warning signal detection, scanning and issues management system in place? Is there dedicated research on potential hidden dangers? Is there critical follow-up and learning from past crises? Communication actions Is there media training for CM? Are there major efforts in public relations? Is there extensive information on local communities? Are there good relationships with intervening stakeholder groups? Is there extensive collaboration and lobbying among stakeholders? Are new communication technologies and channels used? Psychological and cultural actions Is there strong top management commitment to CM? Are there good relationships with activist groups? Are whistleblowers accepted? Is there access to knowledge of potential criminal behaviour? Is the human and emotional impact of crises recognised? Is there psychological support for employees? Is there stress management and management of anxiety? Is there a corporate memory of past crises and dangers? M. LOOSEMORE AND M. M. M. TEO 22 THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 Table 2: Sample company profiles Company Workforce Annual Turnover (AU$mill) Company age (years) A 112 60 80 B 300 250 72 C 600 900 47 D 400 300 42 E 1000 1500 40 On the basis of Mitroff and Pearson’s diag- nostic model and key questions, semi- structured interviews were conducted with fourteen senior managers, in five large and well-established international construction companies based in Sydney, Australia. Company documents relating to crisis man- agement systems were also inspected. Those interviewed were selected because of their seniority and specific responsibility for risk management in their company. This targeted sampling strategy ensured that respondents had a good understanding of their organisation’s crisis management sys- tems. The purpose of the interviews was to investigate attitudes towards crisis man- agement activities and the adequacy of any existing crisis management systems. The company profiles are provided in Table 2 and were selected because their risk ex- posures would justify crisis management policies of a sophistication equivalent to those advocated in Mitroff and Pearson’s model. Smaller companies involved in rela- tively low risk projects would not justify sys- tems of the type advocated by Mitroff and Pearson. DISCUSSION OF RESULTS What follows is a general discussion of the strengths and deficiencies which emerged in the crisis management planning of the sampled companies. These are organised around attitudes towards crisis manage- ment, resources dedicated to crisis man- agement activities and learning processes instigated during the aftermath of crises. Attitudes towards crisis management 56% of respondents believed that crises were inevitable and 65% believed it possible and worthwhile to plan for their eventuality. Although this indicates reasonably low lev- els of managerial complacency, 28% had considerable sympathy with the idea that crises could be eliminated and 21% consid- ered it difficult to plan for their eventuality. Their attitude was that it was best to respond to crises as they arose and that crisis plans were best developed on an ad hoc basis in response to the peculiar prob- lems which each crisis presented. These respondents also felt that insurance provi- sions were adequate to cover the costs of a crisis, an attitude which is all too typical in the construction industry. This reliance upon insurance is worrying given recent world events and research which indicates that the average insurance payout only cov- ers approximately 60% of the costs of an insured event (Odeyinka, 2000). Even more worrying was the belief that crisis manage- ment was a specialised activity that was the province of very large companies in higher risk industries and that policies of not over- committing to excessive workloads or single contracts, above a certain proportion of turnover, insulated them from the occur- rence of serious crises. The respondents were working in the largest 5% of compa- nies in one of Australia’s most high-risk in- dustries. Resources for crisis management There was no evidence in any company of permanent crisis management teams and little evidence of any corporate crisis man- agement planning. Rather, crisis manage- ment was treated as a reactive activity and the assumption was made that in the event of a crisis, the organisation would be able to respond adequately with existing resources and that plans could be created “on-the- spot”. Crisis management planning was at best rudimentary, crisis plans taking the form of general informal procedures and “unwritten policies” incorporated into the mainstream operating procedures of each company. The vast majority of managerial effort had been invested in the formulation of “company policies” for health and safety problems (46%) industrial relations disputes (40%) and IT failure (14%), rather than in detailed contingency plans. THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT PRACTICES OF AUSTRALIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 23 Although there was little evidence of thor- ough crisis management planning, two companies had attempted to create work- improvement teams to facilitate communi- cation between different functional areas, and with union delegates, and to enable employees to highlight potential problems with, and solutions and improvements for working practices. However, respondents felt that company cultures were unsympa- thetic to the communication of “bad news” and that this largely mitigated the benefits of such activities. To avoid this problem, one company had developed plans through a consultative team that permitted workers to voice their concerns with impunity so that issues could be raised before they became a potential threat. Crisis management training was also rare, although in one company chief executives had undergone extensive media and worst- case scenario training and had experienced simulations of potential crises. Similarly, another company held risk-awareness workshops every six months for chief execu- tives. However, in all cases such training was insular, being confined to the most sen- ior levels, thereby limiting its potential value and impact. Only one company had an inte- grated communications policy, which in- volved issuing strict guidelines to all organisational levels about dealing with the media. This company also provided lists of emergency phone numbers for contact dur- ing a crisis, and specialised training at all organisational levels, particularly in the ar- eas of industrial relations and health and safety but not specifically in crisis manage- ment. None of the companies maintained regular and planned contact with external stakeholder groups, all confining policy communications with personnel employed on a consistent basis in their normal day-to- day activities. In this sense, little account seemed to be taken of a company’s potential impact upon and responsibilities to the emergency services, general community, minority groups and the environment. Learning from past crises 93% of respondents were aware of past cri- ses, causes being classified as accidents (46%), economic conditions (38%), disputes (industrial and others) (8%) and financial management (8%). Those with direct experi- ence of these past crisis indicated that the problems of crisis management had been in damage containment rather than in detection, because they had been largely anticipated in existence but not in impact. However, two companies had tackled this problem in the area of industrial disputes by developing plans to prevent them spreading between sites. In terms of learning and re- covering from crises, the general perception was that this was a natural long-term proc- ess which necessitated little assistance. However, there was considerable evidence to indicate that learning had become a prob- lem in many of the companies. Despite there being widespread confidence in being less vulnerable to similar future crises (58%), few of the interviewees had direct experience of past crises and had only be- come aware of them through company “folklore” and informal communication net- works. Furthermore, although there was a widespread (65%) and encouraging percep- tion that the uniqueness of crises does not preclude lessons being learnt for the future, only 8% of respondents had any knowledge or experience of an organised learning process in the aftermath of a past crisis or were able to provide details of consequent changes to company procedures. As one respondent said, learning from a crisis “is the biggest job that we don’t do” and those changes that were highlighted by respon- dents were considered to be relatively minor and part of an ongoing process of evolution- ary development. Other evidence of crisis vulnerability exists in comments which di- rectly reflect the rationalisations discovered by Mitroff and Pearson (1993) that hinder effective crisis management. For example, 65% of respondents considered that their company’s size afforded protection against crises. Only one respondent saw a crisis as “a unique learning process” which provided a test of its plans and “an opportunity to im- prove its plans”. Finally, most respondents considered that most crises were caused by the actions of an individual who may, for unknown reasons, have uncharacteristically made an error in performing a task. This reflected a widespread belief that past cri- ses had been “freak” events which were be- yond managerial control and that existing systems had, and would, continue to avert many other crises. CONCLUSION The study reported within this paper ex- plored the crisis preparedness of five large, international construction companies oper- ating within Australia. Due to the limited M. LOOSEMORE AND M. M. M. TEO 24 THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND BUILDING VOL.2 NO.2 sample, the extent to which the mindsets and systems that were discovered predomi- nate within the construction industry is un- clear. However, considering the relatively high levels of risk to which these types of companies are exposed, the investigation suggests that their state of crisis prepared- ness is inadequate and unlikely to improve without external intervention. Corporate phi- losophies evidenced in this study do not seem to support crisis management and there exists a predominant attitude that a long-standing record of continued survival is sufficient justification for maintaining the status quo. Furthermore, there appears to be a general belief that effective risk man- agement practices can and should eliminate crises. The contemporary and alternative belief that crises are an inevitable and healthy part of organisational life is not widely espoused. Essentially, crisis man- agement does not appear to be taken seri- ously and is undertaken in an informal, fragmented fashion with few resources and little strategic guidance and support. The limited activities that are undertaken are preventative in focus and give little consid- eration to coping with the eventuality of a crisis. Furthermore, they are insular and non-integrative in their development, being confined to senior management and are limited in scope to issues such as safety, industrial relations and, to a lesser extent, cost control. They also appear to be limited to a narrow range of stakeholders and to largely ignore the impact of a crisis upon the wider community. In essence, there appears to be relatively little effort invested in ex- ploring the full range of risks which face companies at their various hierarchical lev- els, little understanding of the interdepen- dency between these risks and little attempt to plan for their eventuality. Mitroff and Pearson’s (1993) work suggests, that in the construction companies investi- gated in this research, a crisis would be likely to stimulate a period of reactionary chaos, social dislocation and disjointedness, at least in the short term. During this pe- riod, which would prevent any rational and coordinated response, costs would escalate and people would be guided by unwritten rules and procedures and information pro- vided through informal communication net- works. The managerial challenge during this period would be to re-establish an element of control and co-ordination in people’s activities by attempting to commu- nicate policies which may have been devel- oped in isolation at a senior managerial level, if at all. However, in the dynamic envi- ronment of a construction firm, communication is difficult, but particularly so during the pressures and high stakes of a crisis. Indeed, if the source of a crisis is at site level, then these problems would be further exacerbated by the obscurity of relationships between crisis planning at site and company level and by the need to co- ordinate the activities of sub-contracted or- ganisations with a wide range of conflicting interests. While many construction companies may have survived and indeed prospered for some time with the above mindset, contin- ued success in an increasingly changeable and competitive world will demand the elimination of potential resource wastage and the maximisation of potential opportuni- ties. Highly successful companies are able to turn problems to their advantage and fully exploit any opportunities they encounter. Crisis management capabilities are impor- tant in this respect because crises present both threats and opportunities and misman- agement can impart a heavy monetary and psychological toll upon an organisation and in extreme cases, destroy its viability. Com- placency is dangerous and it is evident that construction companies could benefit from systematically incorporating crisis man- agement activity as a part of their strategic planning process so that it is an integral and continuous part of organisational life at all levels. Such a change needs to be driven by senior management, supported by appropri- ate resources and guided by clearly expli- cated mission statements of central core beliefs, attitudes and organisational priori- ties and well conceived, fully integrated cri- sis management strategies, systems and procedures. There is also a role for re- search in bringing about this change. In par- ticular, research is needed into how to make the construction industry’s culture more optimistic, less inwardly and short-term orientated, and less cost-driven. 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