What Integrated Facilities Management Should Include
IFMS Explained: What Integrated Facilities Management Should Include
Integrated Facilities Management Services (IFMS) is not just about fixing what breaks. Done properly, IFMS is a
structured way to manage buildings, workplaces, and support services so facilities run reliably, safely, and cost
effectively across their full lifecycle.
Whether you manage an office, retail portfolio, industrial site, public sector facility, or multi-site operation,
IFMS helps you reduce downtime, improve compliance, and gain control of your operational spend through one integrated
management approach.
Ocean Sounds supports facilities by aligning IFMS delivery with practical controls, clear reporting,
and specialist service coordination. This guide explains what IFMS should include, what to watch out for in contracts
and service levels, and how to choose the right IFMS partner.
What is IFMS?
Integrated Facilities Management Services (IFMS) is a model where multiple facilities-related
services are managed under one integrated framework. Instead of managing several separate suppliers, you have one
coordinated approach that standardises service levels, reporting, and performance across your facilities.
The goal is simple: improve uptime, reduce operational friction, strengthen compliance, and make costs more predictable
through better coordination and accountability.
Why organisations choose IFMS
IFMS is often adopted when facilities become complex or multi-site, when compliance requirements increase, or when
operational spend needs stronger control.
- Single point of accountability: clearer ownership and less supplier fragmentation.
- Improved uptime and response: coordinated processes reduce downtime and repeat issues.
- Standardised service levels: consistent delivery across sites and teams.
- Better cost control: improved visibility of spend and fewer unplanned call-outs.
- Stronger compliance: documentation, audits, and maintenance planning are easier to manage.
- Better workplace experience: facilities support services align with operational needs.
What integrated facilities management should include
The exact scope depends on your facility type and risk profile, but a complete IFMS offering usually includes a
combination of technical services, workplace services, and enabling management systems.
1) Core IFMS management and coordination
Integration requires management structure. Your IFMS scope should include:
- Helpdesk or service desk (logging, triage, dispatch, escalation)
- Planned maintenance scheduling and compliance tracking
- Vendor and subcontractor management
- Site inspections and performance assurance
- Reporting cadence, dashboards, and governance meetings
- Change control and variation management
Without these controls, “integrated” becomes a marketing word instead of a delivery model.
2) Technical facilities services (maintenance and reliability)
For most facilities, technical services are the heart of IFMS. Typical components include:
- Preventative maintenance planning (PPM) and reactive maintenance
- Asset management, including asset tagging and verification
- Work order management and close-out documentation
- Condition assessments and lifecycle planning
- Minor works coordination and refurbishment support
The key is moving from reactive fixes to structured maintenance that reduces repeat failures.
3) Asset management, registers, and verification
IFMS should include an accurate view of your assets, not assumptions. This typically covers:
- Asset register creation or clean-up
- Asset tagging and verification (audit-ready records)
- Lifecycle planning (repair vs replace decisions)
- Critical asset identification and risk prioritisation
Accurate asset data improves budgeting, reduces downtime, and supports compliance reporting.
4) Workplace planning and space optimisation
Facilities management increasingly includes space and workplace performance. An IFMS scope can include:
- Workplace planning for layout efficiency and operational flow
- Move management and space utilisation improvements
- Support for reconfigurations, expansions, and re-stacks
- Workplace standards and practical guidelines
This is particularly valuable for offices, public buildings, and multi-tenant sites.
5) Document and records management
IFMS should include clear control of facility documentation, especially where compliance matters. This can include:
- Document and records management services for facilities documentation
- O&M manuals, certificates, and compliance files
- Document retention rules and controlled access
- Structured handover packs for upgrades and minor works
6) Printing and telephony services (support services)
Depending on the organisation, IFMS can include operational support functions such as:
- Printing services management (devices, consumables, service tickets)
- Telephony services coordination and support
- Supplier coordination and SLA tracking
7) IT and systems solutions (coordination where required)
Some facilities require systems integration for smoother operations. An IFMS scope may include:
- IT and systems solutions coordination (where relevant to facilities operations)
- Service desk alignment with operational systems
- Technology support for reporting and work order visibility
8) Furniture management and space assets
Large offices and multi-site organisations benefit from structured control of furniture and workplace assets:
- Furniture management (inventory, moves, replacements, standards)
- Workspace setup and change requests coordination
- Asset tracking aligned with workplace planning
9) Parking management and signage
Operational flow matters. IFMS can include:
- Parking management processes and coordination
- Signage planning, installation coordination, and maintenance
For public-facing sites, these are high-impact services that affect user experience and safety.
10) Audio and visual services (workplace enablement)
Modern workplaces depend on reliable meeting and communications technology. IFMS can include:
- Audio and visual support for meeting rooms and collaboration spaces
- Planned support and rapid response for failures
- Coordination of upgrades, replacements, and consumables
11) Consumables and stationery supply
Where appropriate, IFMS can include supply management to reduce ad-hoc purchasing and stock-outs:
- Consumables supply (site-required items)
- Stationery and consumables supply management
- Usage tracking and controlled ordering
Governance, SLAs, and reporting
A strong IFMS contract is clear on service levels, reporting, and accountability. At minimum, your IFMS setup should
define:
- Service scope and exclusions (what is included, what is not)
- Response times and resolution times (by issue priority)
- Planned maintenance frequency and compliance tasks
- KPIs (uptime, repeat failures, backlog, customer satisfaction)
- Reporting format and meeting cadence
- Variation process (approval steps, cost control)
- Supplier and subcontractor governance (if multiple vendors are used)
The best IFMS partners will show you a practical reporting rhythm, not just a list of services.
Common IFMS gaps to avoid
- IFMS without integration: multiple services listed, but no service desk or coordination structure.
- No asset register: maintenance is reactive because the asset base is unknown or inaccurate.
- Weak documentation control: compliance records are scattered and audit readiness suffers.
- Undefined SLAs: service quality becomes subjective and disputes increase.
- No lifecycle view: costs rise because failures repeat and replacements are not planned.
How Ocean Sounds supports IFMS delivery
Ocean Sounds supports integrated facilities management through structured coordination and a practical delivery model.
Depending on the facility and scope, support may include:
- Audio and visual support
- Consumables supply
- Document management and records control
- Furniture management
- Stationery and consumables supply
- Asset management (including asset tagging and verification)
- IT and systems solutions coordination
- Parking management and signage coordination
- Workplace planning and space optimisation
- Printing and telephony services coordination
The objective is consistent service, clear reporting, and reduced operational friction so your facilities perform
reliably and predictably.
FAQ
1) What does IFMS stand for?
IFMS stands for Integrated Facilities Management Services. It is an approach that coordinates multiple facilities
services under one management framework with standardised reporting and service levels.
2) What is the difference between facilities management and IFMS?
Facilities management can refer to a single service or internal function. IFMS is a structured model that integrates
multiple services with a service desk, governance, KPIs, and coordinated delivery across the facility or portfolio.
3) What should be included in an IFMS contract?
Scope, exclusions, SLAs, KPIs, reporting cadence, variation process, compliance responsibilities, and asset and
documentation management requirements.
4) Is IFMS only for large organisations?
No. IFMS can be scaled. The key is matching scope and controls to the facility size, risk profile, and operational
needs.
5) How does asset tagging and verification help IFMS?
It creates accurate records of what assets exist, where they are, and their condition. This supports better planned
maintenance, budgeting, and compliance reporting.


