• 1: Yasuaki Mori Ex-CEO Of Infinion Technologies Japan
    Jun 6 2020
    Yasuaki Mori Ex-CEO Of Infineon Technologies Japan: EPISODE #1 Japan's Top Business Interviews Yasuaki Mori is a European, Asia and North American technology growth executive in the disruptive mobility, automotive, IIoT and cyber security markets.  He has grown businesses from $200 to $700M and scaled organization from 100 to 200+ people, developed go-to market strategies and rebuilt, converted, strengthened organizations in sales, marketing, channel, system/application engineering, product quality, HR, finance. marcom, logistics and government affairs. He is a multi-lingual & multi-cultural executive (French, Japanese, English) with professional networks in Europe, US and Asia. Summary Points  Joint venture sales are tough because both parties are in the same market with a focus on synergies but occasionally you end up in a competitive situation. When the joint venture parties are from different cultures, e.g. Japanese and German, you need trust and understanding, however both are exercised differently in the different countries. For example, in Japan, harmony is exercised through Honne (real truth) and Tatemae (façade), but in Germany it is exercised by people giving their true opinion, so it can be tough for employees and clients to deal with.We used to have meetings where only the leadership spoke. After the earthquake and tsunami in Northern Japan several years ago, we held daily meetings in order to keep operations moving, and as things calmed down, we cut the meetings down to once a week and then once a month. However, when we tried to cut the meetings out altogether, the employees asked for it to be kept on as a standard part of our procedures. It become a town hall meeting where people, not just the leadership contributed.Unofficial communication in Japan is superb and it would be good to be able to tap into that to make it more corporate and help shake off the communication silos.Middle management is what tends to the blockage point, not because they wanted to block things, but because we as senior management were not paying enough attention to what feedback they were giving about our discussions about strategy etc.  What a strategy means for senior management has a totally different meaning for the lower ranks and middle management needs to be engaged and coached on how to spread the message.Push out as much information as possible unless it is strictly confidential, since unless you tell people what and why things are happening in understandable terms, it is never effective.Japanese employees traditionally ask their bosses for instructions, but I think its better to know what your value is in the company, and where you are adding value to the whole chain of the company, then you should know what you need to do – then you don`t need to ask your boss about what you should do. And by adding value to yourself, you are making yourself more valuable to the external market.Japan still works from a top-down method whereas foreign companies work in a matrix.Executives are expensive with limited time frames like 3-4 years, and because they have to get used to Japan at the beginning and settle their families, and then towards the end of their term, they need to look for a job back home, they are really only effective for 1-2 years so that is one of the problems you face by sending a novice to Japan.A good element of Japan is limited corporate greed in comparison to other countries.  Honesty is a key strength in Japan that is a good foundation to help build a business on. Although I`m not sure how it equates to taking more risk for innovation. Big data and good data analytics can relieve many efficiency and quality problems but there is limited understanding in traditional management style Japanese companies of how to use AI because it is not just about technology, its about organizational change. Japan is very weak in terms of making deliberate organizational change to suit the technology.  There is a reluctance to go digital because the Gemba (factory floor) is so strong, but people are getting older and there are fewer and fewer workers so digitization needs to happen. But this needs fast decisions and these are not a strength of traditional corporate Japanese cultures. Engaged employees are self-motivated. The self-motivated are inspired. Inspired staff grow your business but are you inspiring them? We teach leaders and organisations how to inspire their people. Want to know how we do that? Contact me at greg.story@dalecarnegie.com If you enjoy these articles, then head over to www.enjapan.dalecarnegie.com and check out our whitepapers, guidebooks, training videos, podcasts, blogs. Take a look at our Japanese and English seminars, workshops, course information and schedules. About The Author Dr. Greg Story Your Corporate Coaching And Training Guy President, Dale Carnegie Training Japan Author of “Japan Sales Mastery”, the Amazon #1 Bestseller on selling in Japan and the first book...
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    40 mins
  • 2: Harry Hill Ex-CEO Of Shop Japan
    Jun 12 2020

    When you lead people, you have to lead them in a way they are going to follow. In Japan, when you teach a class, you line people up in order of seniority and you stand in front of the class. It seems very regimented but everyone is perfectly comfortable because they know their role and where they are supposed to be so that allows for performance to be maximized. In the USA, that kind of a set up would make everyone very uncomfortable and inclined to rebel. To make people feel comfortable and improve performance in the USA, its better to put everyone in a circle so there is no feeling of unnecessary hierarchy. Now, sometimes its useful to put people in uncomfortable situations as a way to challenge them but you need to do it with a specific purpose in mind and that is a call you need as a leader need to make.

    A good culture is one where there is a shared sense of purpose and values, and being very upfront about tying that purpose to the actions you/your team are taking. You have to be consistent about that, because especially in Japan, that is the difference between creating a winning culture and a chaotic culture. A shared sense of purpose, professionalism and empowerment create sustainability, where your team can deal with the highs and lows.

    In the Shop Japan Business, I looked at our call centre staff as extensions of the customer. They understood the customer because they spent so long speaking to them every day so they took on characteristics of the customer.VOC stands for voice of the customer but really it was at least 50% the voice of the communicator (our call centre staff). It helped us turn morale around because we actively listened and heard.  Especially in Japan, if you show that the least empowered voice is going to be listened to, you create a tremendous amount of morale. It also creates innovation – if every new idea has to come from the top, then you are in big trouble.

    I always caution Western leaders unfamiliar with Japan is to not fill up empty space. Ask a question and hold yourself back as the silence drags and wait for an opinion. Also try to never have the first word. Let someone else conduct the meeting and then at the end bring things together.

    While the easiest way to teach in Japan is to line everyone up, the easiest way to run a meeting is to be overly attentive and give everyone the opportunity to voice their opinion.Getting buy-in from your Japanese team is really hard but when you get that buy-in, you absolutely over-perform.

    Japanese employees are looking to make a long-term emotional commitment to where they work so they look for the same level of commitment from their leaders. For foreign leaders on 3 – 5 year postings, I recommend not just speaking with your inner circle. Everyone is meaningful, so have different events where you can show that you are caring about the voice of your employees and avoid being too focused on one group over others, gives you a balanced view of what is going on in the organization.

    My acronym for leadership is VICES, which stands for vision, integrity, competency, efficiency and sustained success.

    Poor performance and good performance are easy to deal with. It is mediocre performance that is more difficult to deal with.

    Trust your people, let them know they are trusted but that it is an open process where people are also accountable.

    New leaders need to be patient. The leader that will make the biggest changes is the one that listens and truly gains insight

    Identify who are the biggest obstacles in your organization and remove them immediately and publicly. This is the only way that engagement, empathy and trust principles work.

     

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    57 mins
  • 3. Luke Verwey CEO Nielsen Japan
    Jun 19 2020

    Luke Verwey

     

    While every country has its nuances, it is about finding the calibration point between the goals of the multinational company you work for and what resonates / can be adapted to the local market and workforce.  Its about leveraging global strengths while respecting the local culture.

    Language is obviously a big challenge when it comes to communication. So even if I conduct a town hall meeting with representatives from every area of my business, and they appear to be listening and nodding does not mean that people are receiving the message in the way I intend it to be delivered. You have to communicate over and over, but also find platforms that allow for conversations with differing levels of the organization.

    I have to be cognizant that I am not a millennial and I do not think the way the core of my organization thinks so bottom up approaches are vital to engagement and innovation.

    In Japan, the `why` is extremely important. In some of the other Asian markets, you can get away with just saying that something needs to be done, but in Japan, the `why` in detail, of the matter is very necessary.

    While in Japan, hierarchy is respected, decision making is very collective, so it is a tricky thing to manage. You have to try and balance the different needs and different objectives of speed vs the in-depth consultation to really drive engagement in your organization.

    Broad sweeping statements like Japanese don`t like change are not helpful. Most people in most countries don`t like change. Its about how you communicate that change without actually talking about change. Japan loves innovation, so talk less about change and more about the positive impacts of innovation.

    We talk about what people do and how they do it. We want a high performing culture but not via driving bad behavior and individual agendas. Continuous two-way dialogue is necessary, it allows us to drive impact down the organization but also allows the employees to drive their voices up.

    Listening is vital. Feedback in Japan is given indirectly and subtly so you have to be very clued-into the high contextual element of what is being said, because you are unlikely to get more than two chances to pick up on it before the person stops saying what needs to be said. And as an international leader, you need to hear what is being said.

    There is no single Japanese playbook. Take the time to really understand people, that is much more useful than talking about doing things the `Japanese` way.

    Take every opportunity to learn. Get out on the weekends into the country so you see new things and learn new things. Try to understand what the local topics are and what people think about them. It helps you correlate more data points about the market, the country and where your organization fits.

     

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    51 mins
  • 4: Aki Kubo Representative Director of Tag Japan
    Jun 26 2020

    Akihiko Kubo: Japan Representative Director of Williams Lea Tag, leading providers of marketing and communications supply chain services

    Prior to joining Williams Lea Tag, Aki Kubo held the position of President and then Chairman of Ogilvy & Mather Group Japan. As the first local president, he managed six operating companies across advertising, digital planning, PR, activations, social media and digital media planning and buying.

    Previously, Aki Kubo spent two and a half years as CEO, President of Weber Shandwick, where he helped blue chip global and local clients to retain and enhance their corporate reputations.

    During more than 27 years at McCann Erickson, Aki Kubo worked his way up from Account Executive to Managing Director of McCann Erickson International, where he handled a wide variety of high profile clients across both the B2B and B2C space. In 2007, he moved with McCann Erickson to London to take on the role of Global Business Director.

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    48 mins
  • 5: Kervin Go Country Manager Curvature Japan
    Jul 3 2020
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        Kervin Go Country Manager Curvature Japan

        Curvature is the global leader in providing third party maintenance covering Cisco Networking and large enterprise storage systems such as Netapp andEMC to large enterprise customer and telecommunications companies.


        Senior Account Executive Curvature Japan Markets

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        Direct selling of products and maintenance service to the Japan market since 2007, successfully developed and acquired new customer who are the INCUMBENT Telco players and ISP, Major Financial (Banking) institutional customers, Fortune 500 Japanese Manufacturers in Automotive, Pharmaceutical field as well as Multinationals operating in Japan.

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    58 mins
  • 6: James Feliciano CEO of AbbVie Japan
    52 mins
  • 7: Masa Namiki CEO Interbrand Japan
    Jul 17 2020
    President and Chief Executive Officer

    Interbrand Japan

      Previously Chief Strategy Officer Interbrand  

    Serving to a wide range of clients on a broad set of management issue centered around brand while leading a strategy group.

    Senior Manager at Kurt Salmon

     

    Senior manager at global management consulting firm responsible for sales, project delivery and organization development

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    49 mins
  • 8: Dominic Carter CEO Carter Group Japan
    55 mins