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Physical Asset Management Practices, Ethical Leadership and Operational Performance of Manufacturing Firms in Kenya

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dc.contributor.author Melly, Peninah Tanui
dc.contributor.author Kimei, Stephen
dc.contributor.author Chenuos, Nehemiah
dc.date.accessioned 2026-04-16T08:31:46Z
dc.date.available 2026-04-16T08:31:46Z
dc.date.issued 2025-09-25
dc.identifier.issn 2454-6186
dc.identifier.uri http://41.89.205.12/handle/123456789/2835
dc.description.abstract From time to time, investments in physical assets in most organizations takes the lion share. Therefore, physical asset management practices one of the paramount organizational strategies in the modern world that can lead to the optimization of asset’s lifespan and performance. In the same breadth, ethical leadership is vital in today’s business environment since ethical behavior is stimulated not only resulting in effective asset management but also performance in general. This study therefore sought to analyze the mediating effect of ethical leadership in the relationship between physical asset management practices and operational performance of manufacturing firms in Kenya. In particular, the study examined the five physical asset management practices relating to strategy and planning, risk management, lifecycle delivery, asset information, review and monitoring. Anchoring on stakeholder and stewardship theories, 367 respondents were sampled from the targeted 8064 respondents. Later, data gathered using the structured questionnaires was subjected to descriptive, correlation and regression analysis. In view of operational performance, there was a positive and significant relationships documented given the asset management strategy and planning practice (β = .213, p = .000<.05), asset risk management practice (β = .297, p = .007<.05), asset lifecycle delivery practice (β = .245, p = .002<.05), asset information management practice (β = .196, p = .000<.05) as well as the asset review and monitoring practice (β = .309, p = .001<.05). Furthermore, there was a complementary mediation effect (β = .121; CI = .254, .608) of ethical leadership in the relationship between physical asset management practices and operational performance of manufacturing firms in Kenya. To sum up therefore, manufacturing firms in Kenya could positively enhance operational performance through ethical leadership. The study further highlighted the key implications to theory, practice and future research en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH AND INNOVATION IN SOCIAL SCIENCE en_US
dc.subject Physical Asset Management Practices en_US
dc.subject Ethical Leadership en_US
dc.subject Operational Performance en_US
dc.subject Manufacturing Sector en_US
dc.title Physical Asset Management Practices, Ethical Leadership and Operational Performance of Manufacturing Firms in Kenya en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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