Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives

A company reputation solely depends on how their stakeholders perceive them and their attributes, e.g., onshore oil and gas pipeline damage; sustaining the company reputation level amidst this deadly event is a great challenge to the owner. This article aimed to prioritise the contributing indicator...

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Main Authors: Zardasti, Libriati, Valipour, Alireza, Md. Noor, Norhazilan, Yahaya, Nordin
Format: Article
Published: Taylor's University 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/85611/
http://jestec.taylors.edu.my/Vol%2013%20issue%203%20March%202018/13_3_8.pdf
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spelling my.utm.856112020-06-30T08:54:16Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/85611/ Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives Zardasti, Libriati Valipour, Alireza Md. Noor, Norhazilan Yahaya, Nordin TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) A company reputation solely depends on how their stakeholders perceive them and their attributes, e.g., onshore oil and gas pipeline damage; sustaining the company reputation level amidst this deadly event is a great challenge to the owner. This article aimed to prioritise the contributing indicators of reputation loss as influenced by the customer perspective. These indicators were identified according to the 10 major onshore oil and gas pipeline explosion case studies; about 72 respondents had participated in the survey for data collection. Fuzzy analytic hierarchy process (FAHP) method was used to prioritise the factors and produced results as follows: factor A3 “Downgraded owner’s ranking by ranking agencies”, factor B2 “Bad word-of-mouth among customer”, factor C3 “Accident facts hidden for personal interest” and factor D3 “Accident severity” were chosen to be the highest priority based on the customers’ perception. This factor prioritisation process assists the owner to attend to these matter so that the impact of reputation loss, which influenced by the customer, may be avoided. Eventually the consequence assessment for pipeline damage can be successfully applied to evaluate the level of loss to be borne by the asset owner and eventually sustain the reputation of the company. Taylor's University 2018-03 Article PeerReviewed Zardasti, Libriati and Valipour, Alireza and Md. Noor, Norhazilan and Yahaya, Nordin (2018) Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives. Journal of Engineering Science and Technology, 13 (3). pp. 665-681. ISSN 1823-4690 http://jestec.taylors.edu.my/Vol%2013%20issue%203%20March%202018/13_3_8.pdf
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
spellingShingle TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Zardasti, Libriati
Valipour, Alireza
Md. Noor, Norhazilan
Yahaya, Nordin
Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
description A company reputation solely depends on how their stakeholders perceive them and their attributes, e.g., onshore oil and gas pipeline damage; sustaining the company reputation level amidst this deadly event is a great challenge to the owner. This article aimed to prioritise the contributing indicators of reputation loss as influenced by the customer perspective. These indicators were identified according to the 10 major onshore oil and gas pipeline explosion case studies; about 72 respondents had participated in the survey for data collection. Fuzzy analytic hierarchy process (FAHP) method was used to prioritise the factors and produced results as follows: factor A3 “Downgraded owner’s ranking by ranking agencies”, factor B2 “Bad word-of-mouth among customer”, factor C3 “Accident facts hidden for personal interest” and factor D3 “Accident severity” were chosen to be the highest priority based on the customers’ perception. This factor prioritisation process assists the owner to attend to these matter so that the impact of reputation loss, which influenced by the customer, may be avoided. Eventually the consequence assessment for pipeline damage can be successfully applied to evaluate the level of loss to be borne by the asset owner and eventually sustain the reputation of the company.
format Article
author Zardasti, Libriati
Valipour, Alireza
Md. Noor, Norhazilan
Yahaya, Nordin
author_facet Zardasti, Libriati
Valipour, Alireza
Md. Noor, Norhazilan
Yahaya, Nordin
author_sort Zardasti, Libriati
title Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
title_short Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
title_full Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
title_fullStr Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
title_sort prioritization of threat factors for pipeline operator's reputation sustainability from customer's perspectives
publisher Taylor's University
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/85611/
http://jestec.taylors.edu.my/Vol%2013%20issue%203%20March%202018/13_3_8.pdf
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score 13.209306