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Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa

South Africa (SA) is classified as a middle-income emerging market, with the most resource-rich economy in Sub-Saharan Africa (SAccess, 2012). Its Research and Development (R&D) journey is characterised by a history of imbalances and oppression. Since the introduction of SA’s National R&D Strategy,...

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Main Author: Mkhize, Bahle
Other Authors: Tuan, Nien-Tsu
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Construction Economics and Management 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mkhize, Bahle
author2 Tuan, Nien-Tsu
author_browse Mkhize, Bahle
Tuan, Nien-Tsu
author_facet Tuan, Nien-Tsu
Mkhize, Bahle
author_sort Mkhize, Bahle
collection Thesis
description South Africa (SA) is classified as a middle-income emerging market, with the most resource-rich economy in Sub-Saharan Africa (SAccess, 2012). Its Research and Development (R&D) journey is characterised by a history of imbalances and oppression. Since the introduction of SA’s National R&D Strategy, recorded government R&D spending has been on the rise. However, the success rate for public-funded R&D projects has neither been satisfactory nor readily exposed for all to see. Factors considered critical for project success are largely contextual and tend to differ per project and industry. There appears to be no general consensus among scholars and authors on the common factors deemed critical in influencing the success of public-funded R&D projects. In SA, such factors still remain a mystery for further exploration. This research study sought to develop a model that will assist in achieving two key objectives, namely to identify the Critical Success Factors (CSF) of public-funded R&D projects in SA, as well as to exhume possible interrelationships between the identified critical success factors. This paper argues for a systemic and structure-based holistic approach and adopts Warfield’s Interactive Management (IM) in its endeavour to identify those factors that are deemed critical in the successful implementation of public-funded R&D projects in SA. The methodology comprises three key phases: a planning phase; a workshop phase; as well as a follow-up phase. The planning phase is a foundational phase that lays the basis and a plan for the ensuing two phases. The workshop, also known as the conversation phase, could be conceptualised as a process for building patterned interactions among the participants. It is in this phase that a relationship model, in the form of a diagraph, is constructed. The follow-up phase is the last phase and involves the implementation of the results to prove validity of solutions proposed in the workshop phase. However, since this last phase falls outside the scope of this paper, it has been excluded. Through the application of the IM methodology, a total of 35 identified CSFs were reduced to 23 key to formulate the CSF relationship model using the Interpretive Structural Model (ISM). Based on the model results, the study is concluded by identifying “Product market viability” and “Executive management support” as the two primary success factors that are most significant and have the greatest leverage to influence other factors towards the successful completion of public-funded R&D projects in SA.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:34.479Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Construction Economics and Management
publisherStr Department of Construction Economics and Management
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30147 Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa Mkhize, Bahle Tuan, Nien-Tsu Systemic Thinking Interactive Management (IM) Research &amp Development (R&D) Critical Success Facto South Africa (SA) is classified as a middle-income emerging market, with the most resource-rich economy in Sub-Saharan Africa (SAccess, 2012). Its Research and Development (R&D) journey is characterised by a history of imbalances and oppression. Since the introduction of SA’s National R&D Strategy, recorded government R&D spending has been on the rise. However, the success rate for public-funded R&D projects has neither been satisfactory nor readily exposed for all to see. Factors considered critical for project success are largely contextual and tend to differ per project and industry. There appears to be no general consensus among scholars and authors on the common factors deemed critical in influencing the success of public-funded R&D projects. In SA, such factors still remain a mystery for further exploration. This research study sought to develop a model that will assist in achieving two key objectives, namely to identify the Critical Success Factors (CSF) of public-funded R&D projects in SA, as well as to exhume possible interrelationships between the identified critical success factors. This paper argues for a systemic and structure-based holistic approach and adopts Warfield’s Interactive Management (IM) in its endeavour to identify those factors that are deemed critical in the successful implementation of public-funded R&D projects in SA. The methodology comprises three key phases: a planning phase; a workshop phase; as well as a follow-up phase. The planning phase is a foundational phase that lays the basis and a plan for the ensuing two phases. The workshop, also known as the conversation phase, could be conceptualised as a process for building patterned interactions among the participants. It is in this phase that a relationship model, in the form of a diagraph, is constructed. The follow-up phase is the last phase and involves the implementation of the results to prove validity of solutions proposed in the workshop phase. However, since this last phase falls outside the scope of this paper, it has been excluded. Through the application of the IM methodology, a total of 35 identified CSFs were reduced to 23 key to formulate the CSF relationship model using the Interpretive Structural Model (ISM). Based on the model results, the study is concluded by identifying “Product market viability” and “Executive management support” as the two primary success factors that are most significant and have the greatest leverage to influence other factors towards the successful completion of public-funded R&D projects in SA. 2019-05-16T08:04:11Z 2019-05-16T08:04:11Z 2019 2019-05-15T12:59:07Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30147 eng application/pdf Department of Construction Economics and Management Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Systemic Thinking
Interactive Management (IM)
Research &amp
Development (R&D)
Critical Success Facto
Mkhize, Bahle
Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa
title_full Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa
title_fullStr Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa
title_short Identification of the critical success factors for public-funded R&D projects in South Africa
title_sort identification of the critical success factors for public funded r d projects in south africa
topic Systemic Thinking
Interactive Management (IM)
Research &amp
Development (R&D)
Critical Success Facto
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30147
work_keys_str_mv AT mkhizebahle identificationofthecriticalsuccessfactorsforpublicfundedrdprojectsinsouthafrica