{"title":"Resurrected, recovered, but still didn’t survive? A case study on the viability of employee-owned companies","authors":"O. Kranz, T. Steger","doi":"10.5771/0935-9915-2016-4-234","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"While there have been high hopes about democratic governance structures in organizations recently, the empirical record of employee-owned companies (EOC) is rather bleak. Correspondingly, in the long-standing literature about EOCs, there seems to be a consensus regarding the rather limited viability of democratic organizational forms. Although the explanations, mainly based on microeconomic models, differ in the causal mechanisms explaining EOCs’ short average lifespan. In this paper, we challenge the conventional wisdom about the reasons for the limited viability of democratic organizational forms. We develop an alternative explanation for their normal failure by means of an in-depth case study that corresponds with the transformation expectation about EOCs into conventional firms. We analyze a German case which we were able to study over a long period of time including the end of the EOC (while the company survived the changes in ownership and corporate governance structures). Firstly, we show that classical explanations do not seem to be valid for this particular failure of democratic governance structures. Secondly, we try to explore alternative explanations for the institutionalized transformation expectation regarding EOCs. In order to overcome the shortcomings of microeconomic models of EOCs, we deploy a social-constructivist heuristic framework that is derived from the organizational theories of Niklas Luhmann und Karl E. Weick. Thus we focus on dynamic social sensemaking processes and decision-making processes at the organizational level at the same time. We stress the role organizational cognitive routines in EOCs play especially in their organizational environment, pointing to the social embedding of EOCs and to the historical trajectories of individual organizations as potential sources to explain the normal failure of EOCs. Our study also confirms the significance of both the ambivalence and ambiguity of sensemaking and the contingency in the decision-making process for the explanation of a phenomenon that looks, at first glance, rather causally determined.","PeriodicalId":422075,"journal":{"name":"management revue. Socio-economic Studies","volume":"255 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"management revue. Socio-economic Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5771/0935-9915-2016-4-234","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
While there have been high hopes about democratic governance structures in organizations recently, the empirical record of employee-owned companies (EOC) is rather bleak. Correspondingly, in the long-standing literature about EOCs, there seems to be a consensus regarding the rather limited viability of democratic organizational forms. Although the explanations, mainly based on microeconomic models, differ in the causal mechanisms explaining EOCs’ short average lifespan. In this paper, we challenge the conventional wisdom about the reasons for the limited viability of democratic organizational forms. We develop an alternative explanation for their normal failure by means of an in-depth case study that corresponds with the transformation expectation about EOCs into conventional firms. We analyze a German case which we were able to study over a long period of time including the end of the EOC (while the company survived the changes in ownership and corporate governance structures). Firstly, we show that classical explanations do not seem to be valid for this particular failure of democratic governance structures. Secondly, we try to explore alternative explanations for the institutionalized transformation expectation regarding EOCs. In order to overcome the shortcomings of microeconomic models of EOCs, we deploy a social-constructivist heuristic framework that is derived from the organizational theories of Niklas Luhmann und Karl E. Weick. Thus we focus on dynamic social sensemaking processes and decision-making processes at the organizational level at the same time. We stress the role organizational cognitive routines in EOCs play especially in their organizational environment, pointing to the social embedding of EOCs and to the historical trajectories of individual organizations as potential sources to explain the normal failure of EOCs. Our study also confirms the significance of both the ambivalence and ambiguity of sensemaking and the contingency in the decision-making process for the explanation of a phenomenon that looks, at first glance, rather causally determined.
虽然最近人们对组织中的民主治理结构寄予厚望,但员工所有公司(EOC)的经验记录却相当黯淡。相应地,在关于民主组织的长期文献中,人们似乎一致认为民主组织形式的可行性相当有限。尽管这些解释主要基于微观经济模型,但在解释eoc平均寿命短的因果机制上存在差异。在本文中,我们挑战关于民主组织形式可行性有限的原因的传统智慧。通过深入的案例研究,我们对它们的正常失败提出了另一种解释,该解释符合对eoc向传统企业转型的期望。我们分析了一个德国案例,我们能够在很长一段时间内研究这个案例,包括EOC的结束(而公司在所有权和公司治理结构的变化中幸存下来)。首先,我们表明,经典的解释似乎并不适用于民主治理结构的这种特殊失败。其次,我们试图探索企业经营者制度化转型预期的其他解释。为了克服EOCs微观经济模型的不足,我们采用了一个源自Niklas Luhmann和Karl E. Weick的组织理论的社会建构主义启发式框架。因此,我们同时关注动态的社会感知过程和组织层面的决策过程。我们强调了组织认知惯例在企业员工中的作用,特别是在其组织环境中,指出企业员工的社会嵌入和个体组织的历史轨迹是解释企业员工正常失败的潜在来源。我们的研究也证实了模棱两可和模棱两可的意义,以及决策过程中的偶然性对于解释一种乍一看相当因果决定的现象的重要性。