How can project teams develop and follow through on alliancing contracts?

Edd Burton and Tom Douglas

A new guide helps firms compose a stronger construction alliance, explain Tom Burton and Edd Douglas

The concert hall falls silent. The first notes float through the air and then the orchestra comes together creating a magnificent soundscape. Each musician plays their part, collaborating to create something spectacular

A strong alliance is like the orchestra, a group of talented people with a shared purpose working in harmony to achieve a defined common goal. For an alliance to be successful everyone must play their part.

It’s this harmonious scene that many construction projects would like to replicate, but the reality is that it’s much harder to hit the right notes.

To help, Eversheds Sutherland and Aecom have developed a guide for project teams of all shapes and sizes to support them in developing the right type of alliance for them.

 

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