Measuring innovation in New Zealand construction organisations : developing a measurement tool for medium and large companies : a thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Civil Engineering, School of Built Environment, Massey University, New Zealand
| dc.confidential | Embargo : No | |
| dc.contributor.advisor | Wilkinson, Suzanne | |
| dc.contributor.author | Sadeghzadeh Fasaghandis, Hossein | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-06-08T00:02:22Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2026-05-30 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Innovation is increasingly recognised as a crucial driver of productivity, competitiveness, and sustainability in the construction industry. Despite its importance, the construction industry has been lagging behind other sectors in this field and is characterised as a weak innovator due to many factors such as its project-based nature, fragmentation, and resistance to change. In New Zealand, these challenges are further exacerbated due to the absence of a comprehensive, context-specific tool for measuring innovation in medium and large construction organisations. Addressing this gap, the aim of this research was to develop a comprehensive diagnostic tool to effectively measure innovation within medium and large construction organisations in New Zealand. A sequential exploratory mixed-methods design guided this research, comprising three interconnected stages. Stage one involved a comprehensive literature review, a rigorous inductive content analysis, and an expert-informed thematic categorisation, leading to the identification of innovation indicators structured under five categories of Innovation Potential: Workforce Skills and Human Resources Management, Organisational Structure, Business Strategy, Technology, and External Influences. This tool was further complemented by 36 questions for assessing the Business Innovation Score. Stage two applied the tool in two case study organisations, enabling empirical testing, refinement, and comparative analysis of innovation potential and performance. Stage three validated the tool through interviews with construction industry experts, further refining the tool, confirming its relevance, completeness, and applicability. The research findings demonstrate that the developed tool is theoretically grounded, practically usable, and capable of providing diagnostic insights into organisational innovation capabilities. The tool highlights strengths and weaknesses across its categories, facilitates benchmarking, and offers a foundation for targeted strategies to improve innovation. By connecting a theoretical framework with empirical validation, this research contributes a robust innovation measurement tool tailored to the unique characteristics of the New Zealand construction industry. The developed tool has implications for both academic advancement and industry practice. This research provides a platform for policymakers, industry leaders, and organisations to systematically measure, monitor, and improve innovation within the New Zealand construction industry. | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/74541 | |
| dc.rights | © The Author | |
| dc.subject | innovation measurement | |
| dc.subject | construction industry | |
| dc.subject | New Zealand | |
| dc.subject | innovation management | |
| dc.subject | construction innovation | |
| dc.subject | innovation assessment | |
| dc.subject | diagnostic tool | |
| dc.subject | medium and large construction organisations | |
| dc.subject | organisational innovation | |
| dc.subject | business innovation | |
| dc.subject | tool | |
| dc.subject | measurement tool | |
| dc.subject | Construction industry | |
| dc.subject | Technological innovations | |
| dc.subject | Management | |
| dc.subject | Industrial productivity | |
| dc.subject | Project management | |
| dc.subject | New Zealand | |
| dc.subject | Evaluation | |
| dc.subject.anzsrc | 33 Built environment and design::3302 Building | |
| dc.subject.anzsrc | 40 Engineering::4005 Civil engineering | |
| dc.subject.anzsrc | 350705 Innovation management | |
| dc.title | Measuring innovation in New Zealand construction organisations : developing a measurement tool for medium and large companies : a thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Civil Engineering, School of Built Environment, Massey University, New Zealand | |
| thesis.degree.discipline | Construction Management | |
| thesis.degree.name | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) | |
| thesis.description.doctoral-citation-abridged | The New Zealand construction industry lacked a tool to measure innovation within organisations. Mr Sadeghzadeh Fasaghandis developed and validated a diagnostic tool for medium and large construction companies using expert input and real case studies. The tool enables organisations to benchmark their innovation performance, and for the leaders and policymakers to take targeted steps to improve. | |
| thesis.description.doctoral-citation-long | The New Zealand construction industry has long lacked a reliable tool for measuring how innovative medium and large companies are. This gap limited the ability of organisations, leaders, and policymakers to understand and improve their innovation capabilities. Mr Sadeghzadeh Fasaghandis investigated this problem by developing a comprehensive diagnostic tool to measure innovation within medium and large New Zealand construction organisations. Using a mixed-methods approach, he identified key innovation indicators, tested the tool across two case study companies, and validated it with industry experts. The resulting tool enables organisations to benchmark their innovation performance and develop targeted strategies for improvement. | |
| thesis.description.name-pronounciation | HO – SAY – N ––––– SAA – DEGH – ZAA – DEH ––––– FA – SA – GHAN – DEES |
