• 571 Joe Biden’s Lessons On Destroying Your Leadership Credibility For Japan CEOs
    2024/08/07
    Being an Aussie I don’t have the right to select the next US President or get involved in American politics. I will steer clear of this minefield and concentrate on what we can all learn from the Biden train wreck. One moment he is a contender and in an instant he is struggling to hold on to power. Why? Because he gave a rambling speech in his debate with Donald Trump, viewed by over 50 million Americans. He was prepped for this debate by his handlers and yet it was a debacle. What happens in business? If you are the CEO of a listed company, there is a lot of public scrutiny of what you say and how well you say it. If the company is not listed, then the internal team are studying the CEO to gauge how the firm is faring and if their jobs safe or what are the chances to do well within this company. One of the young people I know who has just finished university and has entered his company mentioned how shocked he was to hear the President speak in public for the first time. Usually new entrants are vetted by HR and their initial supervisor, so their opportunities to hear the big boss are few and far between, until they have joined up. His feedback was an instant concern that he had chosen the wrong firm. The President’s inability to make a competent professional speech was a coffee stain moment. We all know that old saw about if the tray you pull down on your flight has coffee stains left there from a previous flight, it means this airline can’t be trusted and they are probably not maintaining the engines properly. We judge firms by what we see. If the leader is a shambles on their feet speaking to the troops, then doubts light up immediately. What is remarkable, though, is how few CEOs are excellent speakers. I attend a lot of public speeches by corporate leaders here, covering a range of nationalities, and it is rare to hear a leader acquit themselves professionally. Recently, I was shocked to see a local leader of a major global firm have to read his self-introduction to convince the voting audience to elect him to the organisation’s committee. This gentleman wasn’t some fresh faced kid. I am guessing early fifties. That means he has been in business for around thirty years and yet he can’t even get up and promote himself for selection to a prestigious position on the committee. I doubt he is anymore effective in rallying the staff around his vision for the future of the organisation. He was bad, but the other contenders weren’t impressive either. All of us in Japan face a growing nightmare of Darwinian proportions as we compete for a diminishing resource of capable staff, in particular those who can speak English. Being able to rally the team is only going to become more critical as the recruiters start hitting our people like sharks in a feeding frenzy. They will be luring people way and picking up 40% placement fees of first year salaries on the way through. The substantial financial rewards for this very average group of individuals is way out of proportion to their actual business competencies and abilities. That doesn’t matter though, because all they have to do is be a better siren to your people than you are and lure them across to greener pastures. Most CEOs are in that position because they were technical people who made it to the top or they have been in management positions and have shown capabilities to get things done in their previous postings. Japan is different and a track record overseas is not a real currency here. The ability to adapt yourself to how things are done here and to be effective with a Japanese workforce are the critical make or break skills. Communication skills are at a premium and it is more difficult here because the number of people who can understand English at a high level is limited. Few of these foreign CEOs have sufficient Japanese skills to be effective. To get a combo of Japanese fluency and high level speaking skills is an even more demanding recipe for local success. I know plenty of foreigners here who are fluent in Japanese, but I don’t know so many who can carry a crowd, who can be persuasive and effective in Japanese. Nevertheless, as Joe Biden has demonstrated, if you can’t make it as an effective communicator, your whole claim to the crown is in doubt. What do I do about the unfortunate CEO who had to read his own self-introduction? I would like to suggest that he do High Impact Presentations with us and learn how to give a talk and be a success. This is a sensitive conversation, because I am saying he is a dud and we all have ego. The key for CEOs is to realise that there is no point in letting your ego restrain your ability to become better as a presenter. Communication skills are only going to get more important, particularly storytelling. None of us want to be on the wrong side of the demarcation line between competency and longevity and train wreck and removal.
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  • 570 Navigating Going For It And Blowing Yourself Up In Japan
    2024/07/31
    I am a maniac. A less charged descriptor might be an “enthusiast”. Now Japan is a country chock full of enthusiasts. They win best pizza maker, best sommelier, best hula dancer, best shoe maker awards, etc., out gunning the Westerners who supposedly should be winning these home town advantage awards. This is a country where work is taken very seriously. Growing up in laid back Brisbane, we didn’t live to work, we worked to live. At 5.30pm most people were in the pub, the gym, the ocean, or at home getting ready for dinner. Japan took a different track. Back in the day, working late wasn’t about productivity, because it was all about devotion, being part of the team, pulling your weight, in order to be taken seriously. In the late 1970s, I taught English at night while I was a student here at Jochi University, usually from 6.30pm – 9.30pm. I was always amazed to finish the classes and walking out see all of these people still there working. Many of them, though, I observed, were seemingly engrossed in reading the sports newspapers or magazines, rather than doing anything productive. But they were there, waiting for the boss to go home so that they could do the same thing, demonstrating their solidarity with the others, also in wait to depart. Thirteen years later, I was going through piles of resumes for salespeople here in Japan looking to join our organisation. This resume review process of mine has been going on for the last thirty-two years now. I noticed people would have blank periods in their employ. Job mobility today is better, but that is a fairly recent phenomenon after the collapse of Yamaichi Securities (1999), the Lehman Shock (2008) and the pandemic (2020) had all thrown people out on to the street and over time, allowed the mid-career hire to become acceptable. Back in the day, leaving a job meant a steady spiral down in socio-economic terms and so most people hung in there, no matter how bad it was. When I would ask about these blanks in their resumes, a surprising number of people, particularly women, said they got physically sick from working until the last train every night and had to quit to recover their health. These were not isolated cases and many of the blanks were for months at a time, which made me really wonder about the cost of getting a salary and holding down a job in Japan. We have made a lot of progress since then and I think that there is much higher awareness about getting the work done in less time and allowing people to have a life outside of work. Young people are now all the equivalent of baseball free agents and can sell their services to the highest bidder, including demanding and getting, better work/life balance. We should all be throwing rose petals in front of them and waving palm fronds above them, to thank them for allowing the rest of us to be more clever about how we work. The problem we face now is not externally induced pressure for working long hours, but the internally driven ambition to get ahead and in the process work like Trojans. Thanks to technology, there is now no longer a clear “work/non-work” break in the day, because we are checking our emails all day and night. We are addicted to being in constant contact with our work demands. I mentioned I am a maniac and this constant checking of emails is what I am doing, too. I could try to manufacture the justification that because we are a global organisation, email is arriving all the time and I need to be on top of what is happening in other time zones, but is that really true? Would a few hours delay really make that big a difference? Are there actually real fires occurring which require me to don my big coat and grab the fire hose? What is happening is habit formation and combined with screen addiction, creating a toxic cocktail for all of us. One of Dale Carnegie’s stress management principes is “rest before you get tired”. On first blush, it sounds ridiculous. What are we wimps? Do we lack ambition, the guts to pay the price for success? No, we have to push through the pain barrier and keep driving. Allow no indulgence, no mercy, no regrets, no stopping. If we hit the pause button though and consider how much more we know today about psychosomatic illnesses than he did back in his day, we can see the prescient wisdom of his advice. It doesn’t mean goofing off; it doesn’t mean delinquent behaviour and work avoidance. He was talking about monitoring our condition to always aim for maximum productivity, and that means sustained productivity. I think I have improved now, but I would work like crazy and drive myself hard, get sick, then be off work for days and once recovered, rinse and repeat. What if I had taken his advice and rested before I got tired? Now I have broken that cycle and placed myself in a better position to have sustained productivity, rather than manic bursts followed by zero. Japan keeps us busy, the ...
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  • 569 Delegate Or Disappear In Business In Japan
    2024/07/24

    They are not making as many Japanese as they used to. Every year we get these headlines about the new lows in numbers of births in Japan. The demographic trend is obvious to everyone. What is not obvious is how this is going to force a change in the way we lead. Until now, we have all applied the like it or lump philosophy to staff working for us. They were infinitely replaceable – lose one and go get another one. Not anymore.

    It is hard to understand, really. The economy is not doing remarkably well. The prospects for future growth are also not looking great, so why is it we are not seeing a parallel step down in business needs which translates into less need for staff? I am not sure and I will let the economists duke that one out, but it is an interesting question to ponder.

    We are certainly seeing an uptick in demand for people and a corresponding downturn in their availability. That translates into higher costs, which is only starting to happen now and increased competition for people. This isn’t only related to the hiring, it also covers the retaining bit as well. The recruiters are having a field day with the revenues being generated from us for hiring staff and there isn’t much we can do about that in a staff bull market.

    What we can control is the retaining piece of the puzzle. Delegating work to staff is a critical part of that effort. Young people want to advance in their careers and they want to be given responsibility for their work. Delegation serves both purposes well. The issue with delegation is that when done poorly, it can lead to problems.

    The biggest failure is selling the delegation to the person receiving it. This sounds simple, but so often this is not done at all or not done very professionally. Usually, the delegation process is a series of orders – do this and do that type of thing. The person on the receiving end already has a job and may be thinking, “wait a minute, I am already busy and why do I need to do your job as well?”. That would be a legitimate and logical conclusion of having your boss dump their work on your desk.

    The selling component is making clear the benefit to the person receiving the delegation. There is usually a selection process for internal promotions and the people making the decision want to know the new person can handle the tasks and are not going to blow anything up. If we are changing companies, when we get to the interview stage, they will ask about our experience. We are trying to step up and being able to reference completion of work at a level above where we are now is an advantage. When it is put like this, people can understand how they can leverage these tasks at a future point and make it an advantage to themselves.

    The other negative aspect of delegation is boss abandonment. You are handed a bunch of tasks by your superior and that is the last you hear about it until the completion deadline. This is very dangerous because if the person takes the project off on an incorrect tangent and you hit the deadline, then there is little which can be done to salvage the wreckage.

    Now there is a balance between the boss interfering and micro-managing the delegated project and keeping an eye on how things are going. The latter is obviously the way to go, but where is the line between them? One good idea is to discuss how they are going to approach the task. Get them to tell us what they think about running this part of the work. We want their ideas because that is where the ownership is located. We still need to monitor progress, though.

    Agreeing a regular check in is a good practice. All the boss is looking for is whether the project is on track. There are many ways to the top of the mountain and we have to let the delegated person find that out for themselves, as part of the learning process, rather than being proscriptive about how to get there.

    If we get both the sell the delegation part and the shepherding component right, then the delegation will be successful and help us to retain staff. The team member will feel empowered, trusted, and valuable. These are all brilliant and required elements to keep people with us and not straying off to greener pastures. We must deny the siren call of ravenous recruiters trying to lift our people out of our companies. If we don’t start delegating, we will lose staff, find it hard to get new staff and gradually shrink in size. In turn, this will make us less attractive as a work destination, as we become too flat to be able to accommodate ambitious people. It is a cycle which ultimately leads to oblivion.

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  • 568 Business Opportunities in Japan
    1 時間 8 分
  • 567 Tough Love Or Fake Praise To Motivate Staff In Japan
    2024/07/10
    Tough Love Or Fake Praise To Motivate Staff In Japan This tough love or fake praise alternative is a dubious construct. Are these two alternatives really the only options? For some leaders they may feel that the staff are getting paid to do a professional job and their corresponding need is to get on with it. The boss doesn’t need to be pandering to their needs. This is especially the case toward these self-indulgent, coddled, spoiled brats who are now entering the workforce. Giving this lot praise is fake and not needed, is the view. I certainly grew up in the “tough love” era of business leadership. Praise wasn’t heard, and all you got was a hard time about not doing things well enough or fast enough. They weren’t singling me out for a hard time, because this is what we all got. In that sense, it was very democratic. When you are raised that way in business, you think that is normal and how things are done, because the most experienced leaders in the company all operated that way. Today, the problems arise thick and fast when you take this as your own operating standard and start handing out tough love to your own people. Combining this mindset with youthful ambition is a powerful and potentially highly toxic cocktail which can end in disaster. Today, Japanese young people are in short supply and they are not interested in tough love or fake praise. It sounds silly to raise the question about “how to praise people”, but if you are not raised that way in business, it is not natural to you. The danger is you try too hard and it comes across as completely fake. Flattery is instantly dismissed. Your standing goes down the drain too, as you are perceived to be an idiot. There are many opportunities where we can look to praise our staff. One is “things” and although it looks easy, it is actually the most tricky. Frankly, I would avoid this one altogether, even though it looks like the simplest thing to do. They may have in their possession something very impressive or nice. Today, men commenting on how women are dressed or do their hair or whatever is bound to be seen the wrong way from what you intend. The next thing you know HR is involved concerned about your “sexual harassment” of the female staff. You might comment on your staff’s watch or pen or briefcase or some object they have chosen. This is definitely on the cusp of fake praise, so it has to be handled very delicately. For example, I am not particularly into watches, so me praising someone for their watch may easily be revealed for what it is – desperation to find something to be positive about. Better to find something you are knowledgeable about and recognise they have done well with acquiring an object you can recognise. Praise it and be able to back it up with some insider knowledge. Recognising people’s achievements is safer ground and more relevant in the workplace. The point is “good job” is highly dubious, as praise and reeks of flattery and insincerity. You might think this passes muster, but believe me, it does not. Every person has multiple projects underway, and their job content is incredibly various. “Good job” is by no means specific enough to get anyone excited about receiving that style of praise. Exactly what was it they did that you want to recognise? Call out the precise achievement, such as a report they prepared or a contribution in the meeting or anything solid and concrete. Personal strengths and characteristics are powerful fodder for praise, but again, be very careful about wandering into what sounds like flattery. “You are very intelligent” will set off alarm bells immediately in the recipient. It is like “good job” and so is broad and fuzzy. No one has a clue regarding what you are talking about. We have to link the praise to the action. They may have come up with an insight in the meeting and it may have been a very intelligent observation. When you connect the dots like that, then the praise will land. If you say, “you are resilient” that again is tremendously vague. What did they do which demonstrated their resilience? How did this come to your attention? Why do you know they are resilient? Bring the evidence and paste it to the praise. Otherwise, the whole effort will be tossed out as fake. In fact, you wind up creating more problems for yourself than if you had just kept your head down and concentrated on doing your own work and praised no one. In all of these cases, we need to relate the recognition to something we have witnessed, describe it and then encourage them to keep doing it. Tough love won’t fly anymore and trying to replace it with “praise light and fluffy” will be a train wreck. We need to be very careful to make sure we do praise our people and be particularly careful about how we do that.
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    11 分
  • 566 How To Influence Engagement In Japan
    2024/07/03
    APAC always ranks low in global engagement surveys. At the very bottom of the APAC calculation sits Japan. Part of the reasons are language and cultural. The translations from English can sometimes be off the mark and lead the Japanese to score lower. I always recommend carefully checking the translations to try to tighten them up and make the meanings clearer. Other hurdles can be cultural. One question often asked is “would you recommend the company to your family and friends as a place to work”. This is a straightforward question in most countries, but not in Japan. The sense of responsibility and accountability here is high and those taking the survey will answer this question with a low score. It isn’t because they don’t like the company, but they are risk averse. They worry if they recommend the company, their family or friends may complain to them and quit the company because it is not a match. Alternatively, they worry the company will complain to them about the person they recommended. They see no upside here and so the best course of action is to score low on this question. There is hope, though, to see those scores go up. They may never reach the zenith of your Brazilian or Indian colleagues, who always seem to shoot the lights out when answering these engagement surveys. There are three leverage points for gaining greater engagement amongst employees. 1. Relationship With the Supervisor This is obvious as it covers one of the most high contact relationships inside the company and, as we say, we don’t quit companies – we quit bosses. Has the leader made clear the purpose of the business? This is often assumed to be understood, so there is no conversation on this point. Let’s not assume anything and make it clear. The goals and objectives are critical to the organisation’s success, so let’s make sure we keep repeating what they are. The leader’s job is to understand how the staff feel about their work and the company, and the only way to do that is through conversation. Sounds simple except that time is so limited and we are all cutting corners and being “efficient” with our time, which means not a lot of opportunity to ask staff about how they are feeling. Taking orders from the boss makes for a dull day and a dull work environment. Not many people want to be micro-managed that way. As the leader, we need to give people direction and the freedom to decide how to achieve the goals. 2. Confidence In Senior Leadership Business is a cutthroat struggle for survival. In the days of sail, everyone entrusted their lives to the skill, knowledge and experience of the captain to deliver them safely to their destination. In 1834, my ancestors sailed for months across the raging seas from Bristol to Tasmania. Luckily they made it or I wouldn’t be here writing this blog. Today, our sailing ships have been replaced with company formats to make sure our job security and therefore our livelihoods are protected and made safe. Do the big bosses walk the talk about the values they promulgate? Are they communicating changes and constantly reinforcing the purpose? Do we feel like cogs in the wheel as the organisation grinds out shareholder value and enriches the bosses? Or do we feel valued as a priority in the success of the enterprise? Are they competent enough to make sure the company can survive and even better prosper so that we have career opportunities to grow and flourish? If the answers to these fundamental questions are not positive, then our people will not be engaged and, in fact, may be actively seeking greener pastures. 3. Pride in the Organisation In Japan, when people think about joining a company or changing companies, their spouse, parents, in-laws and grandparents will all have opinions about the decision. This becomes even more important as a consideration when we are talking about foreign enterprises. The gold standard are the biggest, safest Japanese companies, then comes the less big, but still safe middle size Japanese companies and bringing up the rear are the foreign companies. Knowing this, as leaders we have to work hard to make sure everyone is motivated and proud to work in our organisation. Purpose has to be stressed over and over to smooth out the bumps which confront every company. The public persona pf the company has to be one of a good citizen adding value to Japan. Japanese staff are very focused on their relationship with customers and the company has to respect that. Foreign based CFOs come up with crazy ideas which destroy that trust. A common idea is that if we have a 100% no defect rate, we will make less profit than if we tolerated a 3% defect rate, so let’s go for the money. This is abhorrent to Japanese staff and is a huge demotivator. The MVP (Minimum Viable Product) idea may be popular in Silicon Valley ,but it doesn’t have a place ...
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  • 565 People-First Leadership In Japan
    2024/06/26

    Alan Mulally has had a very successful career at Ford and Boeing. Over his 45 years as a leader, he developed an approach called “Working Together: Principles, Practices and Management System”. His number one principles is “People first….Love them up”. This type of declaration is simple to make, but not that easy to live when you are facing quarterly reporting of results and the full glare of the stock market. We see so many cases of CEOs firing people, the stock price getting a big boost and that axing of the people turning into many millions of dollars for the CEO personally, as part of their stock-based remuneration package.

    Mulally believes that “working together” must be based on a supportive culture propping up the headline. Culture alone won’t do it, though. His system has a governance aspect directing how the leadership team should work together and which maps out how to create value. His review process is central to translating aspirations into realities. The basis of all of this is the philosophy of building a “people first” culture, which is driven by the company structure and the management processes adopted. He insisted that as part of that “people first” idea that “everyone is included”.

    He arrived at a formula in three parts, which all operate in lockstep and which generates profitable and or successful growth for all. To get to that end game, Part One is “everybody knows the plan”. When you read this idea, like me, you might be thinking “so what?. Of course, everyone knows the plan because I have told them already – end of conversation”.

    When we dig a bit deeper in our thinking, though, we recall that just because we have told people the plan doesn’t mean they accept it, agree with it, or want to execute on it. At the top levels of the company, we come up with the purpose and strategy and then we expect everyone else to deliver what we have envisaged. A Town Hall presentation and a broadcast email may have detailed the plan and we think everyone knows what to do.

    Where we fall down is in the follow-up to make sure the message actually got through. We are all business minimalists, shaving time off activities wherever we can, because we are super busy, all the time. We need to double check that what we think people know is fully understood and they are beavering away on it as we expect.

    Part Two requires that everyone knows the status of the plan. Often, though, access to sensitive information in companies can be restricted. Not everyone may see the real numbers and the full picture. My predecessor never showed the Profit and Loss numbers to the team. When I took over, I decided to make the financial situation totally transparent. The only protected numbers are salary and commission information relating to individuals. If they wish to share that information amongst themselves, then that is their choice.

    Part Three is everyone knows the areas that require special attention. Business is lumpy. Some parts of the business are flying and other parts are limping along. Again, sharing such sensitive information may be restricted. We need to keep referring back to what we stated was the purpose and strategy for the enterprise and keep measuring how well we are delivering against what we have set out for ourselves.

    If things are going well, we feel motivated to do more. If things are not going well, we are motivated to try harder to turn things around. When things are not going well, this situation begs the question about how much open knowledge of the pain should be shared. There is the fear for the leader that if the full extent of the problem is made known, the more capable people, who always have options, will exercise them and leave. This is a tricky balance, and there are no clear parameters for leaders to follow. I would suggest that the leader share enough to galvanise the team to action without scaring the daylights out of everyone and people start abandoning ship.

    Mulally’s viewpoint is based on many years of hard-won experience. It is straightforward in its formulation. The daily execution against the plan, though, is another question. This is the role of the leader, to take ideas and turn them into living breathing systems which can maximise the potential of the people in the firm.

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  • 564 Handling Underperformance In Japan
    2024/06/19

    I was having lunch with an expat client who has been here about a year and a half. We were talking about people not performing. In passing conversation, I happened to mention that incompetence is not an acceptable reason, as far as the Japanese courts are concerned, to fire someone. Japanese judges believe that it is our fault, because we have people in the wrong job and we should fix that problem, rather than fire them. That was a total revelation for this client.

    Nevertheless, we still have to deal with underperformance. Here are some guidelines for doing that.

    1. Research

    Do we have all the necessary information in front of us, before we raise the issue with the person we feel is not matching expectations? Sometimes, we are the problem. We haven’t been clear enough about the KPIs or our expectations, and they are not aware that they are falling short. We have to find objective measures which we can reference to underline the gap between their current and expected performance.

    2. Begin with rapport

    Our people are never 100% perfect nor 100% imperfect. There are bound to be some areas where their performance is acceptable. In Japan, the workforce is very serious about their job and they do their best. We should start the conversation on a positive note recognising what they are doing well.

    3. Reference the Performance Deviation

    We take the personality out of the equation at this point. We are “paying the ball, not the man”. We are not saying that they are a bad person, but that their performance is not matching our needs. In some instances, this “not matching expectations” will be news to the staff member. The reason for that is we have never flagged it before, even though we have long thought it. We didn’t bring it up until now in previous performance reviews and it can be a surprise.

    We need to get their view on this issue. There may be factors we are not aware of, which are preventing or impeding their ability to do the job we want them to do. This is a “moment of truth” where if the lack of performance is measurable and a legitimate issue, we will see if they are going to take responsibility for their lack of performance. Does that happen, or do they want to argue the point and make excuses, blaming everyone else for the state of affairs?

    4. If they take the fork in the road of resistance, then we need to deal with it. We have to restate the problem and the consequences for continued underperformance, which is code for: “we will fire you if you don’t get your act together”.

    5. Continued denial, resistance and obfuscation is pointless, but that doesn’t stop people from doing it. Fortunately, in Japan, there is such a high demand for staff that the old hysteria and bias toward mid-career hires has completely vanished. They know and we know, they can easily get another job. This also dampens the court’s antagonism to us removing people who are not performing.

    6. Hopefully, they will decide to “fly straight” going forward and recover from this. Naturally, having to confront your own removal from the business is very demoralising and impacts people’s confidence to do the work. If their heart is in the right place and they have the will to succeed, then we need to work on restoring their confidence that they can do it.

    7. Reassurance must be backed up with support. This may mean individual coaching and/or being sent off to get the additional training to give them the skills they need to succeed.

    8. Retention of people is now at peak need in Japan. The population decline is creating staff shortages in many industries and a Darwinian struggle amongst companies to recruit enough people to run their businesses. We want the staff member to stay with us and overcome this gap in their performance. This requires advanced people and communication skills on the part of the boss and our efforts must be ongoing. A “one shot and we are done” approach won’t work and we need to make the time for these conversations.

    There is no doubt that dealing with poor performance will become an even more important tool in the boss toolkit. By definition, with less people to choose from, we will be voting to take ”anyone” rather than being left short staffed. Companies which can learn how to play in this new world of work will find a way through and others will fall by the wayside of either diminishing prospects or outright failure. Frankly, the prospects don’t look good for any of us in business, so buckle up for a bumpy ride.

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    12 分