Authors:
Eva Gatarik
1
;
Viktor Kulhavy
1
and
Rainer Born
2
Affiliations:
1
Faculty of Economics and Administration and Masaryk University, Czech Republic
;
2
Johannes Kepler University, Austria
Keyword(s):
Organizational Performance, Organizational Epistemology, Organizational Resilience, LIR (Language - Information - Reality) Framework of Analysis, Business Continuity Management (Case Study).
Related
Ontology
Subjects/Areas/Topics:
Artificial Intelligence
;
Communication, Collaboration and Information Sharing
;
Innovation Facilitation
;
KM Strategies and Implementations
;
Knowledge Management and Information Sharing
;
Knowledge Management Projects
;
Knowledge-Based Systems
;
Learning Organization & Organizational Learning
;
Symbolic Systems
Abstract:
Pointing out flaws and errors can be a risky pastime for those employees, whose information conflicts with theories and rules held dear by management. However, effective performance does not consist in strictly adhering to established rules. Instead, it is driven by a continuous search for meaning within organizational environments, which are, in turn, enacted upon emerging and redrafted meaning. Meaning based upon lived and reflected experience provides a corrective use of rules and, hence, more appropriate, effective results. Effective performance arises out of plausibility rather than accuracy. In the event of uncertainty, equivocation and doubt, people in organizations claiming resilience should jointly classify and interpret observed data into new knowledge so that subsequent action can tap into the prevailing business climate, reduce ambiguity, and offer more exciting prospects. A framework is introduced and applied to justify an organizational epistemology to assist the constr
uction, processing and justification of meaning within organizations.
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