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Supply chain collaboration has originated from car manufacturing (Harland, 1996). Industry sectors, such as manufacturing and retailing, have made significant improvement by adopting the concept of supply chain collaboration (Briscoe & Dainty, 2005). Learning from these industry sectors, the UK construction industry has gradually realised the benefits of supply chain management (SCM). There has been an increase in the number of collaborative supply chains in construction practice (Akintoye et al., 2000). So far supply chain integration and collaboration have been widely recognised as an effective measure to address various traditional problems such as fragmented processes, adversarial relationships and poor performance (Saad et al., 2002). Government reports such as Latham (1994), Egan (1998) and Egan (2002) have played an important role in encouraging supply chain collaboration, calling for change in the whole industry. A core of the change movement is to replace traditional ways of working with collaborative ways of working (Fernie & Thorpe, 2007).
Although there is no widely accepted definition of supply chain collaboration, the customer-supplier relationship is considered by many researchers such as Emmett and Crocker (2006) in general and Fernie and Thorpe (2007) in construction to be the central to SCM. According to Blanchard (2010), for example, collaboration refers to cooperative supply chain relationships – formal or informal – between customers and suppliers, which are developed to enhance the business performance of both sides. A construction project is described by Stockdale (2000) as a series of customer-supplier relationships. In general, a construction supply chain is divided into the upstream supply chain involving project client, main contractor and project management consultancy and the downstream supply chain involving main contractor, specialist contractors and labour, materials and equipment suppliers (Beach et al., 2005). There are various forms of collaborative working approaches such as partnering and alliance (Bresnen & Marshall, 2000; Love et al., 2002). Supply chain collaboration in construction can be specific to a single project or based on a long-term programme (Bennett & Pearce, 2006; Meng, 2010).
Existing studies contribute to the identification of CSFs of supply chain collaboration. For example, Bennett and Jayes (1995) identified the three key features of construction partnering as mutual objective, problem resolution and continuous improvement. According to Black et al. (2000), the most important factors for partnering success are mutual trust, effective communication, senior management commitment, action consistent with objectives, a dedicated team, flexibility with regard to change, and a commitment to continuous improvement. Similar studies may include Cheng et al. (2000), Chan et al. (2004), Akintoye and Main (2007), etc. A consensus among many researchers such as Flick (2009) in general and Knight and Ruddock (2008) in construction is that quantitative modes have been the dominant methods of research over the years. Almost all relevant studies in construction, such as Black et al. (2000), Cheng et al. (2000), Chan et al. (2004) and Akintoye and Main (2007), have identified the CSFs through questionnaire surveys in a quantitative manner.