2017
DOI: 10.28945/3737
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Outsourcing Best Practice - The Case of Large Construction Firms in Iran

Abstract: Aim/PurposeDuring an evolutionary time for Iran the purpose of this research study was to establish the outsourcing best practices in the area of supply chain by investigating in the construction firms in Iran, which is identified as the most successful industry in outsourcing. BackgroundClarifying outsourcing decisions have been a difficult and challenging task because the outsourcing itself is complex. Meanwhile, the construction industry is recognized as one of the most complex and vibrant industries, altho… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
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“…The authors in the study that investigated the riotous protest against outsourcing by university workers in selected South African universities pointed out that the public institutions achieved a reduction in their spending by retrenching the workers and outsourcing the support services, including maintenance, security, cleaning, and catering. Also, this is in line with Akbari et al (2017) and Heires (2014) who found that organisations choose to outsource to reduce operational costs and the contractors achieve their savings by dropping the workers' wages and benefits in order to maximise their gains. The findings are also barely distinguishable from the work of Alonso et al (2015) which found that the application of outsourcing in public services cannot be said to have yielded the intended objective of reducing public sector size and its decentralisation objective seems to be merely political.…”
Section: Outsourced Workers' Views For or Against Outsourcingsupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The authors in the study that investigated the riotous protest against outsourcing by university workers in selected South African universities pointed out that the public institutions achieved a reduction in their spending by retrenching the workers and outsourcing the support services, including maintenance, security, cleaning, and catering. Also, this is in line with Akbari et al (2017) and Heires (2014) who found that organisations choose to outsource to reduce operational costs and the contractors achieve their savings by dropping the workers' wages and benefits in order to maximise their gains. The findings are also barely distinguishable from the work of Alonso et al (2015) which found that the application of outsourcing in public services cannot be said to have yielded the intended objective of reducing public sector size and its decentralisation objective seems to be merely political.…”
Section: Outsourced Workers' Views For or Against Outsourcingsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…However, the study has demonstrated that savings are temporary and after some time they diminish because of the dearth of competition and some other issues. Furthermore, Akbari, Clarke, and Maleki (2017) conducted a case study that investigates the best practice of outsourcing in the construction industry. Their research focuses on four characteristics of outsourcing.…”
Section: Review Of Literature: Contextualising Outsourcingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over the last century, the efficient management of global supply chains has become the main strategic point for any firm (König & Spinler, 2016). SC systems that cross international borders have played a key role in driving the globalization trend (Akbari et al, 2017;. Consequently, SCs have had to be more resilient, sophisticated, and, as a result, more costly (Akbari and Do, 2021).…”
Section: Supply Chains and Regionalizationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The term last mile was mainly used by the telecommunications industry (Phuong, 2020) and initially refers to the final hurdle of delivering telecommunications services to end-users (Barton, 2016). Overtime, with the development of the business landscape and globalization of supply chains (Akbari et al ., 2017), last mile becomes prevalent in the field of logistics and supply chain management (LSCM) representing the final stage of the supply chain where the goods are delivered to end-customers (Aljohani and Thompson, 2020; Zeng et al ., 2019). In the context of LSCM, last mile delivery can be generally understood as the final step of transiting orders to the right customers (Akbari and Ha, 2020).…”
Section: Theoretical Background Of Last Mile Deliverymentioning
confidence: 99%