Decentralising flow conversations: improving productivity through collaboration with site operatives

Manu, E ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9002-3681, Raiden, A ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7176-1139 and Akwerigbe, EE ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0006-7237-3975, 2025. Decentralising flow conversations: improving productivity through collaboration with site operatives. CIB Conferences: Proceedings of the 23rd CIB World Building Congress (WBC2025), 1: 53. ISSN 3067-4883

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Abstract

Low productivity remains a persistent challenge in the construction industry, often stemming from fragmented workflows, poor integration, and collaboration across the supply chain. This study aimed to investigate how site operatives can be actively engaged in identifying and resolving constraints to site workflow through a structured collaborative practice using the eight-flow model as a framework. The study adopts an Ethnographic Action Research (EAR) methodology, encompassing three iterative stages—observation, action, and reflection. EAR was applied through 3 rounds of workshops with 30 site operatives on a live construction site in the UK focusing on collaborative risk management using a flow activity. Data was collected using observation notes, the output of the flow activity and post-workshop feedback comments and analysed using content analysis. Findings reveal that constraints relating to information, materials, and equipment flows were often compounded by poor communication, unrealistic programming, and inefficiencies in material logistics, while collaboration with site operatives is central to success. By embedding site operatives into flow conversations, the study emphasises the transformative potential of leveraging the expertise and insights of operatives at the workface to address workflow inefficiencies and improve productivity. As a wider implication, tools like WhatsApp and site-level flow task boards were suggested as potential platforms for ongoing engagements with site operatives in conversations about flow on the site using the eight-flow framework. Further research is needed to embed flow conversations as part of standard practice, through toolbox meetings and daily hurdles, to create a culture of proactive engagement that fosters shared understanding.

Item Type: Journal article
Description: Paper presented at the 23rd CIB World Building Congress (WBC2025), Purdue University, West Lafayette, United States, 19-23 May 2025.
Publication Title: CIB Conferences: Proceedings of the 23rd CIB World Building Congress (WBC2025)
Creators: Manu, E., Raiden, A. and Akwerigbe, E.E.
Publisher: International Council for Research and Innovation in Building and Construction (CIB)
Date: 19 June 2025
Volume: 1
ISSN: 3067-4883
Identifiers:
Number
Type
10.7771/3067-4883.2065
DOI
2460384
Other
Divisions: Schools > Nottingham Business School
Schools > School of Architecture, Design and the Built Environment
Record created by: Jonathan Gallacher
Date Added: 30 Jun 2025 14:12
Last Modified: 30 Jun 2025 14:12
URI: https://irep.ntu.ac.uk/id/eprint/53856

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