Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department

Aside from the real estate sector, all businesses including universities-tend to incorporate CREM knowledge into managing their resources to increase revenues and support their primary business functions. An ideal CREM department in an organisation strives to assist core business operations by align...

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Published in:Journal of Design and Built Environment
Main Author: Bakhir A.; Nawawi A.H.; Basrah N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Malaya 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85203514910&partnerID=40&md5=4aa8bfc788c08f49e285bfb80df483d7
id 2-s2.0-85203514910
spelling 2-s2.0-85203514910
Bakhir A.; Nawawi A.H.; Basrah N.
Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
2024
Journal of Design and Built Environment
24
2

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85203514910&partnerID=40&md5=4aa8bfc788c08f49e285bfb80df483d7
Aside from the real estate sector, all businesses including universities-tend to incorporate CREM knowledge into managing their resources to increase revenues and support their primary business functions. An ideal CREM department in an organisation strives to assist core business operations by aligning its physical resources with its strategic goals and fostering organisational success. The roles of the CREM Department include maximising shareholder wealth through cost minimisation initiatives and leveraging real estate as a competitive enabler to capitalise on setbacks and turn them into opportunities for organisational advantages. This study investigated the existence of CREM portfolios in Malaysian public universities and their current job functions, considering the ideal CREM department from the literature. The study adopts a qualitative approach that involves thematic extraction and analysis of secondary data from the official websites of all 20 public universities. In addition, the investigation was supported by the results from an online survey. The findings suggest that few universities have established an adequate structure for strategically managing campus real estate. Most universities have separate departments responsible for each role, making up an ideal CREM portfolio. Despite being viewed as crucial to the digital revolution of teaching and learning in higher education, the ICT Division is not included in the CREM portfolio. This paper concludes that the CREM Department must be seen as indispensable to the institution and function as a stand-alone business unit that plays a pivotal role in real estate decision-making. A better understanding of CREM knowledge has proven beneficial to organisational success and aids in empowering higher education institutions. Therefore, findings could be significant in directing public universities and government officials to manage campus real estate towards maximising the higher education sector’s overall efficacy. © 2024, University of Malaya. All rights reserved.
University of Malaya
18234208
English
Article

author Bakhir A.; Nawawi A.H.; Basrah N.
spellingShingle Bakhir A.; Nawawi A.H.; Basrah N.
Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
author_facet Bakhir A.; Nawawi A.H.; Basrah N.
author_sort Bakhir A.; Nawawi A.H.; Basrah N.
title Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
title_short Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
title_full Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
title_fullStr Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
title_full_unstemmed Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
title_sort Managing Campus Real Estate in Malaysian Public Universities: The Plausible Role of the CREM Department
publishDate 2024
container_title Journal of Design and Built Environment
container_volume 24
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85203514910&partnerID=40&md5=4aa8bfc788c08f49e285bfb80df483d7
description Aside from the real estate sector, all businesses including universities-tend to incorporate CREM knowledge into managing their resources to increase revenues and support their primary business functions. An ideal CREM department in an organisation strives to assist core business operations by aligning its physical resources with its strategic goals and fostering organisational success. The roles of the CREM Department include maximising shareholder wealth through cost minimisation initiatives and leveraging real estate as a competitive enabler to capitalise on setbacks and turn them into opportunities for organisational advantages. This study investigated the existence of CREM portfolios in Malaysian public universities and their current job functions, considering the ideal CREM department from the literature. The study adopts a qualitative approach that involves thematic extraction and analysis of secondary data from the official websites of all 20 public universities. In addition, the investigation was supported by the results from an online survey. The findings suggest that few universities have established an adequate structure for strategically managing campus real estate. Most universities have separate departments responsible for each role, making up an ideal CREM portfolio. Despite being viewed as crucial to the digital revolution of teaching and learning in higher education, the ICT Division is not included in the CREM portfolio. This paper concludes that the CREM Department must be seen as indispensable to the institution and function as a stand-alone business unit that plays a pivotal role in real estate decision-making. A better understanding of CREM knowledge has proven beneficial to organisational success and aids in empowering higher education institutions. Therefore, findings could be significant in directing public universities and government officials to manage campus real estate towards maximising the higher education sector’s overall efficacy. © 2024, University of Malaya. All rights reserved.
publisher University of Malaya
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