Conceptual Framework for the Service-Oriented Management of Construction Labor Resource

Author(s):  
Hanbin Luo ◽  
Da Sheng ◽  
Botao Zhong ◽  
Ke Chen ◽  
Samad M. E. Sepasgozar ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Angelo Bonfanti

This chapter aims to theoretically examine effective surveillance management (ESM) during service encounters within the servicescape and provide a conceptual framework for the study of this topic in a service management perspective. It analyses antecedents, dimensions and effects of ESM. This study especially proposes as antecedents both improving customer service experience along with meeting customers' need for security and implementing a surveillance service-oriented strategy that includes secure and safe servicescape design, deterrent communication, and trained and motivated security staff. This chapter suggests also that the dimensions of ESM (customer-physical service environment encounters, customer-technological surveillance systems encounters, and customer-security staff encounters) contribute to enhancing service quality, experience quality, and staff productivity. The integration of these dimensions, antecedents, and effects create a theoretically grounded framework that can serve as a starting point for future studies about this topic in the field of service management.


Author(s):  
Sikha Bagui ◽  
Richard Sweetman

In this paper the authors present a conceptual framework for translating Service Data Objects (SDOs) and XML’s SDOs to the Entity Relational (ER) Model. With the increasing dependence on service oriented architectures and the increasing need for SDOs in service oriented architectures (SOA), it is important to have a good understanding of SDOs in terms of the ER model so that SDOs can be easily converted to the relational model. In this paper they show how common SDO constructs and XML’s SDO constructs conceptually map to the ER model.


2009 ◽  
Vol 16-19 ◽  
pp. 665-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fu Qiang Zhang ◽  
Ping Yu Jiang

Service-oriented manufacturing is a new manufacturing paradigm in workshop level. To clarify configuration issues of service-oriented manufacturing executive system (so-MES), a conceptual framework and hierarchical structure model are put forward. The framework consists of three modules: the manufacturing resource distribution, the process-flow planning, the sensor and inspection planning. And then, methodology for enabling the framework is presented in detail. Finally, a simple example is provided to verify the proposed method.


Author(s):  
Angelo Bonfanti

This chapter aims to theoretically examine effective surveillance management (ESM) during service encounters within the servicescape and provide a conceptual framework for the study of this topic in a service management perspective. It analyses antecedents, dimensions and effects of ESM. This study especially proposes as antecedents both improving customer service experience along with meeting customers' need for security and implementing a surveillance service-oriented strategy that includes secure and safe servicescape design, deterrent communication, and trained and motivated security staff. This chapter suggests also that the dimensions of ESM (customer-physical service environment encounters, customer-technological surveillance systems encounters, and customer-security staff encounters) contribute to enhancing service quality, experience quality, and staff productivity. The integration of these dimensions, antecedents, and effects create a theoretically grounded framework that can serve as a starting point for future studies about this topic in the field of service management.


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