reflection (M) of problem situations (P) in the
concrete causal organizational context (P ==> Q),
see Figure 2.
However, the quality and innovativeness of the
Beham solutions depended on more than just the
implementation of knowledge component M by way
of a management team; extended involvement of the
content of the other three knowledge components of
the LIR scheme allow comprehensive knowledge of
the enterprise to be taken into account. The precise
selection of the members of the management team
has ensured that they also convey the particular
perspectives and challenges generated by their
various departments (in terms of E) to the decision-
making process. In addition to this, these experts
have provided an excellent interface with other
employees, whose aspirations and opinions
(knowledge component F) could thus be said to have
been represented at team meetings. Finally, through
the special use of a sophisticated information system
K and the extensive experience of an IT specialist as
a one of the eight members of the management team,
even more significant information has been shared.
Further, the members of the management team may
also perform and even adjust the various knowledge
roles that form the essential theoretical backbone of
the LIR scheme. When addressing the topic
discussed and the situation, they play a number of
roles: they may be specialists – experts; they can
provide general knowledge and life experience; they
may think and argue in both procedural and
regulatory terms; and they may provide certain
reflective external perspectives.
This kind of thinking together and learning from
each other is explained by, and rests upon, the LIR
framework initiated at Beham GmbH as a theoretical
backbone for sustainably effective organizational
performance. This framework provides guidance for
the actions, evaluation and understanding on the part
of the employees. However, although the specific
direction the enterprise should take is indicated, the
employees themselves are granted local autonomy to
find ways of maintaining that course.
From the corporate-financial point of view, the
positive effects of the re-modelling at Beham GmbH
may be selectively summarised after eight years.
The company turnover has increased threefold;
Beham has been listed as the most successful
enterprise of those in which the participating private
equity-fund had ever invested (proportional to size);
and the capital invested by outside parties has been
superseded by internal equity capital generated over
the eight years. Moreover, after the re-modelling
Beham has been the recipient of several business
awards, among them the international Best Business
Award for Sustainable Management, Europaregion
Donau-Moldau, in 2014. The rating criteria were
economic success, uniqueness, employee status,
innovative power, sustainability and social
responsibility.
Although space dictates that the Beham case is
not covered in more detail, the case study can
nevertheless be used to highlight that any re-
modelling of an enterprise via LIR requires, inter
alia, outstanding attitudes on the parts of the
managers and employees and an appropriate
corporate culture. These are vital to the reflective
transfer of the analysed approach to other
enterprises.
4 REFLECTIVE CONCLUSIONS
The light was thrown on that it is important not only
to describe the rites of rationality in an organization,
but also to understand the processes going on there
to be able to induce change both in theory as well as
in practice.
In the case study it was the implementation of
the management team as an enactment of the fourth,
explanatory knowledge component M from the
framework LIR.
However, it must also be pointed out that it is not
just the enactment of M which can lead to success.
What is important to take into account is the
population of M and the way in which it can help to
give meaning to documentations, existing or implicit
rules K and to transfer knowledge from experience
and expertise E into an episteme for decision
support via management.
Due to the systemic and model theoretic
background of the framework LIR it might be
summarized and pointed out:
(1) The adding up of the local optimization of
expertise, competence, and capabilities is
suboptimal for the success of the whole (an
organization as such).
(2) In many cases (although not in all) effective
organizational performance does not only
depend on strictly or stubbornly obeying or
applying rules, practices and theories, but on
knowledge about the coming about of
expertise, and about the limits of the
application of those rules, and thus on a
reflective and corrective collective practice.
(3) To reflect the limits of following a rule might
well help to understand constraints and