Rudlin Consulting Rudlin Consulting
  • About
  • Services
  • Blog
  • Clients
  • Publications
  • Contact us
  • Privacy
  • English
  • About
  • Services
  • Blog
  • Clients
  • Publications
  • Contact us
  • Privacy
  • English
  •  

Globalization

Home / Archive by Category "Globalization" ( - Page 13)

Category: Globalization

6 reasons Japan is behind as a global brand

Prof Noboru Sato, of Nagoya University and formerly of Honda Motors and Samsung gave the following 6 reasons (article in Japanese) that Japan is behind, not only in the globalization of business, but in terms of global cultural influence – in the arts and sports and also the strength of “Brand Japan”.  Many will come as no surprise to Japan watchers:

1.  Education

Fewer Japanese students are studying abroad and Japanese universities are slow in increasing the number of foreign academics they hire.  As Sato acknowledges, Japanese universities need to make their academic staffing more meritocratic if they want to attract the best in the world.

2.  Young Japanese not working abroad

Sato points to how Japanese companies have not been proactive in hiring “returnees” – Japanese graduates who have spent part of their education overseas.  However, and I would concur, he acknowledges this has changed recently, and many companies have been taking steps to hire foreign employees and returnees in Japan.  But, as Sato points out, Japanese companies do not make any distinction in terms of pay or promotion prospects for people who have Masters degrees.  This makes them an unattractive prospect for returnees and foreign graduates.

3.  Uncompetitive education

Although Japan has very high literacy and numeracy rates, its educational spending as a proportion of GDP is one of the lowest in the world.  In other words parents in Japan are footing the bill.  Computer literacy is lower than most developed countries.

4. Industry’s lack of global competitiveness

All the famous names in electronics have been suffering recently – however Sato sees some grounds for optimism that they may regain their strength.

5. The penetration of Japanese food culture

Sato gives the first 4 reasons a fairly cursory explanation but really goes to town on this one – he’s clearly had one too many bad “Japanese” meals abroad.  In Sato’s view, the “fake” Japanese restaurants, run by non-Japanese, in Europe, North America and South Korea, are ruining the Japan brand, as are the recent scandals in Japan’s own restaurants and department stores, where lower grade foods were passed off as higher grade, or wrongly stated to be from specific regions.

6. Tourism

Japan ranks #33 in the world for tourist numbers, and South Korea, with half the population of Japan, ranks 23rd.  Japan should be attracting more tourists given the richness of its culture and food.

Sato concludes that much of this could be solved if there was more sense of a need for competitiveness, from primary education onwards, in Japan.  There needs to be more external stimulus and awareness of the need to be competitive relative to other countries.  He does not give any concrete proposals on how this is to be achieved, however.  In a sense Japan has got itself in a virtuous (or vicious) circle, in that it has become one of the nicest places to live in the world, so why would Japanese people feel any sense of urgency to compete with or live in other countries, which seem more dangerous and insecure – and as for the food…

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Hitachi’s new President, Toshiaki Higashihara Q&A

As blogged previously, Hitachi announced their new President and COO Toshiaki Higashihara, on January 8th.  The Nikkei Business magazine’s Q&A with him in the 20th January edition asked him for his views on how Hitachi was going to grow, and what would change.

Higashihara emphasised “One Hitachi”, bringing together services, products and solutions to address customer needs such as energy saving and improving productivity.  The differentiator for Hitachi against Siemens and GE being that in the infrastructure business, Hitachi can also bring ICT skills and solutions around cloud computing and  big data.

A sense of speed is needed, he added, and this means that not all decisions should be made in Tokyo headquarters.  R&D, purchasing and ICT systems should be looked at in a global context.  He also made positive noises about further acquisitions.

What will remain constant is Hitachi’s 100 years of “monozukuri” (making things/craftsmanship) and SQDC: Safety, Quality, Delivery Time and Cost.

It seems Higashihara was close to current President Nakanishi (who becomes Chairman and CEO), as a kohai (protege) and also brings global experience – a masters’ degree in computer science from Boston University and was President of Hitachi Power Europe.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
First non-Japanese CEO in Takeda’s 230 year history

Takeda, Asia’s largest pharmaceutical company, caused a sensation in November when it announced that it intended to appoint Christophe Weber, a French 47 year old outsider from GlaxoSmithKline, as its next CEO, subject to board approval. Not only is he not Japanese, but he is much younger than the average Japanese President, and he is the 20 year old veteran of another rival company.

He was not unknown to Takeda however, as he was key member in the collaboration between Takeda and GSK on a vaccine joint venture.  However, when I discussed this appointment with the President of a Japanese start up company in the same healthcare sector he was not impressed – “a paucity of management” on the current CEO Yasukichi Hasegawa’s part, he harrumphed.

Hasegawa himself had been appointed by Kunio Takeda, scion of the founding family, in 2003, with Takeda stating “I’ve reached the limit of what I can do to globalize the company”.  Hasegawa took up the baton, acquiring US cancer R&D company Millennium Pharmaceutical in 2008 and Swiss biotech company Nycomed in 2011.  He tried to retain many of Millennium’s executives such as CEO Deborah Dunsire, who also joined Takeda’s unusually “diverse” board which includes Japanese American “Tachi” Yamada, President of Global Health at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Frank Morich, ex Bayer.  However she resigned in 2013 as a result of the restructuring that Hasegawa pushed through, to integrate Millennium more fully into Takeda and streamline operations.

Apparently, a couple of years’ ago, Hasegawa said he wanted to have a Japanese person succeed him.  He felt that diversifying the structure and bringing in non-Japanese was going to take time to show results, and he would have to pass the baton on before then.

Although my healthcare industry CEO used “paucity” to describe Hasegawa’s management capability, it seems from this that there is a paucity of internationally capable management within the Takeda home country organisation to carry on and support the bold moves that are being made – a situation many globalizing Japanese companies are facing.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
5 conditions for successful Japanese cross border M&A

SoftBank’s acquisition of Finnish mobile games maker Supercell in 2013 for $1.5bn did not grab the headlines to the extent its $21.6bn acquisition of Sprint did, but Nikkei Business in its December series on cross border M&A points to it as evidence of the final characteristic necessary for successful acquisitions – “animal spirits” – a hunger for growth with the acquisition showing the direction in which Masayoshi Son wants to take the company.

The Nikkei Business magazine goes on to conclude the series with “Five Conditions for Success” in cross border M&As:

1. Do not go near M&As without a concrete and detailed management strategy for what will happen after the merger

2. Set up a specialist team within the company, which investigates target companies and draws up shortlists

3. Be very strict on the contents of the agreement.  It will be vital when unforeseen problems occur after the acquisition.

4. For cross border acquisitions, the key is to motivate the management team in the acquired company.  However a proper agreement must be put in place regarding switching to other companies and performance based compensation.

5. Make preparations in advance for all kinds of scenarios.  Although it’s hard to predict events like the Lehman shock, preparations will help with coping with change.

I would add a few to that.  For example, whilst it might be best to take some time before making radical changes to the acquired company, symbolic changes such as taking the parent company name relatively early on help focus the two companies on “what is different now” and “what we have in common” and stop both companies from sliding back into their pre merger habits, with the acquired company feeling neglected and directionless.

Try to bring the acquired company executives into the HQ fold as soon as possible.  Even though it’s best to delegate to them the authority they are used to, it’s also important for them to understand how to socialise their proposals through nemawashi with their peers in the headquarters.  Actually moving to Japan seems to have been a step too far for many non-Japanese executives, but frequent business trips should be encouraged and supported.  Perhaps even a mentor could be appointed.

Finally, as the Nikkei Business itself points out, it’s actually the Japan HQ that needs to change if their acquisitons are to succeed.

If you are being acquired by a Japanese company, you may be interested in Japan Intercultural Consulting’s (represented by Rudlin Consulting in EMEA) post merger integration services.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Successes of cross border M&A #6 – Terumo

When Terumo, Japan’s biggest medical device maker bought CaridianBCT from Gambro AB for $2.63bn  in 2011, it was expected that the head of Terumo’s BCT unit, Hiroshi Nagumo, would take over as CEO of the new Terumo BCT company.  However Nagumo decided to appoint the CEO of CaridianBCT, David Perez, as CEO instead, with Nagumo reporting into him as SVP and GM for Japan. Perezalso became an executive officer on Terumo’s main board and the headquarters of Terumo’s blood management unit was moved to CaridianBCT’s base in Colorado.

Nagumo says he made himself “Number Two” after objectively considering whether he could really perform as “Number One”. At the time Terumo’s total turnover was Y328bn,of which the blood management unit represented around Y25bn.  CaridianBCT’s turnover was double that at around Y50bn.  A third of the combined company’s sales were to the USA, and around 20% to Japan.

“When I thought about appointing myself as the CEO, and leaving the headquarters in Japan, I realised that I would always end up thinking about the customers that I had known the longest, the doctors in Japan” and that this would be counter to the objective of the acquisition, which was to develop new products and expand market share globally.

In 2012, the sales of the combined company’s blood management business actually fell in Japan, but thanks to growth overseas, the total turnover rose 4.1%.

As Nikkei Business points out in their series on cross border M&A last month, in the past when Japanese multinationals acquired companies overeas, they tended to send in Japanese managers to run them, but this does not work so well if, as in this case, the acquired company is larger than the acquiring company’s own business in that sector. It can lead to the demotivation of the staff in the acquired company and loss of customers.

However Terumo did reshuffle the management, and had a strong sense of how they wanted to proceed after the acquisition.  Nagumo had been preparing a project called “Unite” from a year before the acquisition – it aimed to integrate sales, customer service and logistics across the two companies.  Terumo fitted itself to CaridianBCT’s structures, except in Asia, where Terumo was stronger than Caridian, so a different structure, where Terumo’s operations there became TerumoBCT’s representative dealers.

It took a year to discuss, and then in 2012 it was announced as a one “fell swoop” integration – “we did not want to take so long that customers became confused” says Nagumo.

Production is taking longer to integrate.  Decisions have to be made about what products will be made in the factories in the USA, Japan and Northern Ireland.  On the other hand, Terumo’s quality control management has been introduced into Caridian’s operations already.  As a result, claims have dropped to a quarter of the level before the acquisition.

Not everything went smoothly – Perez was amazed at the number of meetings deemed necessary by Terumo before a decision was made.  At the same time, Terumo was puzzled as to when a decision was made, when it had not been properly “socialised” within the company.  “A certain amount of time has to be allowed to understand what is different, culturally”, says Nagumo.  In 2013, former Terumo staff will be posted long term to the USA and in 2014, former Caridian staff will be posted to the Japan office.

As a result of the success of the BCT business, Terumo has also moved its artificial heart business to the USA, a unit it purchased from 3M in 1990.  As the Nikkei comments – it’s a nice illustration of how to make sure a post merger management structure fits market and customer needs.

If you are being acquired by a Japanese company, you may be interested in Japan Intercultural Consulting’s (represented by Rudlin Consulting in EMEA) post merger integration services.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Japan’s M&A boom – a way of forcing globalization?

I was reading the last chapter of a book (The 1990s and beyond (pdf)) I wrote which was published in 2000 about the history of Mitsubishi Corporation in London, and was reminded that I had come up with a concept of “forced globalization” to describe what Japanese companies might need to do to truly globalize, based on their experiences up to the 1990s.  Much of what I said still holds true, but what I had not anticipated was the surge in cross border acquisitions by Japanese companies as another route into globalization these past ten years.

My view then was that Japanese companies will not “naturally” globalize, in a business-led pursuit of profitable growth, because of the “representing Japan” mindset of companies such as Mitsubishi Corporation, and the fact that so much knowledge creation and business creation is in Japanese and the Japanese staff feel most comfortable with keeping it that way.

I proposed that human resource-led “forced” globalization – starting with globalizing the management, might be the only way to break the mould.The graphic I produced to illustrate this is not in the pdf, so I have reproduced it here:

“Natural” globalization:

'Natural' Globalization

“Forced” globalization:

forced globalization

 

 

 

 

I was imagining Japanese companies would continue doing what we attempted at Mitsubishi Corporation in the 1990s, which was to hire and develop more non-Japanese people, in the hope that they would then create more global business.  This strategy still continues for many Japanese companies, but as I predicted, takes time, and often the non-Japanese employees quit before it bears fruit, through frustration.

Acquiring an overseas company is an instant way to globalize the business, and in theory should instantly globalize the management.  But as described in previous posts, often the overseas managers are kept at an arm’s length.

The bottom line from all of this, which has not changed at all in the past decades, is that Japanese companies will only do what the Japanese employees of that company see the need to do.  The majority of Japanese employees are not likely to want to become global themselves – it is too far out of their comfort zone.  Nor do they want to bring non-Japanese into their circles as this would be a threat to their own careers and status in the company.  Nor do they want to be actively involved in the management of the overseas subsidiaries – the risks of being associated with any failure are too great.

The constructive message of this, however, is it is therefore up to the employees and management of the acquired company to take the initiative and ask to integrate with the Japan parent – just as the Brazilian employees and managers at Schincariol asked Kirin to change the company name to Brazil Kirin.  Japanese executives are familiar and happy with complying with requests that come from “bottom up” and represent the consensus views of a group of employees.

If you are being acquired by a Japanese company, you may be interested in Japan Intercultural Consulting’s (represented by Rudlin Consulting in EMEA) post merger integration services.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Successes & Failures of Japanese cross border M&A (#3 Ricoh and Ikon)

Ricoh undertook a “10,000 person restructuring” in 2011, using the usual method in Japan of trying to force into early retirement or transfer to subsidiaries their unwanted staff.  This resulted in a judgement in the Tokyo courts in favour of two Japanese Ricoh employees on their claim that they had been unfairly forced to transfer to a subsidiary.

The Nikkei Business magazine, in its recent series on the successes and failures of Japanese cross-border M&A links this domestic issue to Ricoh’s acquisition of the US office equipment distributor Ikon Office Solutions in 2008 for $1.6bn.  Ricoh acquired Ikon in order to compete with Canon, particularly in trying to enter the office tablet and projector markets in developed countries.  However, just as with Nippon Sheet Glass/Pilkington and Daiichi Sankyo/Ranbaxy, the sudden change in operating environment from the Lehman Shock meant that Ricoh’s resulting bloated structure with many overlaps following the acquisition became a far more acute problem.

As the Nikkei points out, Japanese companies need to recognise that following a major M&A, their own Japan headquarters needs to change its structure in order to remain strong in everchanging global business environments.

On that point, during my recent visit to Japan, I was surprised how often the idea of setting up a separate, global headquarters, possibly not even based in Japan, was brought up by Japanese executives at the various blue chip companies I visited.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Successes and failures of Japanese cross border M&A (2 – Daiichi Sankyo and Ranbaxy)

In September 2013 the US Federal Drug Agency issued an import alert, prohibiting further manufacture of FDA regulated drugs at one of Ranbaxy Laboratories’ Indian factories, causing shockwaves at Daiichi Sankyo, who had bought 64% of Ranbaxy in 2008.  This was the second time an alert had been issued in the past 5 years.

Nikkei Business, in their series on Japanese cross border M&As, draws parallels with the NSG/Pilkington case blogged previously  saying that the same mistakes had been made by the Japanese acquiring company, in failing to do enough analysis beforehand.

Daiichi Sankyo thought it had fixed the quality problems which were exposed by the FDA in 2009, by firing the Ranbaxy former owner and CEO and sending a director from Japan as well as a quality control officer from the US subsidiary.

Daiichi Sankyo has not disclosed to the Nikkei the cause of the quality problems – apparently this is not even shared widely within the company.  The Nikkei supposes that Daiichi Sankyo lacked understanding of Ranbaxy’s organisational structure and corporate culture.  A supplier to Ranbaxy explains that “Indian companies do not work in a team the way Japanese companies do.  There is a lack of solidarity, and a lack of trust between the boss and subordinates.  There is just the hierarchical link between directors and employees.  Orders from above are obeyed unquestioningly, and even if juniors sense there are problems, they do not say anything.”

Another comments “Employees in Indian companies are different from Japanese companies in that if they are asked for data and documentation from the authorities, they do not put the information together very thoroughly.  There is also not the atmosphere where issues can be openly disclosed.”

If this is the case, it is therefore difficult to understand what is going on from the outside, and the word of the people on the ground cannot be 100% relied on, notes the Nikkei.  What is needed for successful M&A is a strengthening of governance – management must be given the structures to understand exactly what is going on on the shopfloor.

As the Nikkei concludes, another failing of Japanese cross border M&As often lies in not being able to appoint a trusted person who also has the necessary local and industry expertise.  The Indian executive, Atul Sobti, whom Daiichi Sankyo appointed in 2009 to replace the CEO/owner had previously been an executive at Japanese car companies, only lasted a year. In my experience, it is often the case that Japanese companies rate familiarity with Japanese corporate cultures over  industry expertise when hiring local senior management.  However Daiichi Sankyo seem to have changed their mind on this, as the successor to Sobti, Arun Sawnhey, is a pharmaceutical industry veteran.

One reason Japanese companies often give for not interfering too heavily in the newly acquired subsidiary is that they are anxious to retain the existing senior management, recognising that they do not have executives in the Japan headquarters they can despatch who have sufficient local and global industry experience and expertise.  At the same time, judging by both the Ranbaxy and Pilkington cases, the local executives complain of a lack of access, support and influence in relation to the Japan HQ to carry out their jobs, and leave, or conversely, are quickly got rid of when problems arise or financial targets are not met.

A better balance has to be found between implementing the necessary changes to governance and strengthening oversight, whilst also ensuring that the senior local executives are given the support and integrated into the network back in Japan HQ to allow them to perform their roles effectively.  Japanese executives are too ready to keep non-Japanese executives at arm’s length, so that if there are any problems, Japanese executive hands are clean.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Successes and failures of Japanese cross border M&A (Pilkington & Nippon Sheet Glass)

Softbank’s $21bn acquisition of Sprint, the merger of Tokyo Electron and Applied Materials and most recently LIXIL’s 3bn euro acquisition of German bathroom fitting manufacturer Grohe have provoked a two part series in the Nikkei Business magazine on the successes and failures of Japanese cross border M&A, starting with the article of 2nd December, which I read just as I was travelling to Japan to help with a post merger integration project.

Since 2000, domestic M&As have decreased, but cross border M&As have soared for Japanese companies, with a pause after the Lehman Shock in 2009-2011.  Of the 15 M&As noted by the Nikkei from March 2011 to October 2013, 14 were cross border, and the majority were deals of over  $1bn.

The Nikkei comments that although the reason for these acquisitions is clear (the hunt for growth outside the saturated Japanese domestic market), the post merger story has not been that rosy for many of the acquiring companies in the past decade.  The Nikkei focuses on three cases – Nippon Sheet Glass’s acquisition of Pilkington in 2006, Daiichi Sankyo’s acquisition of Ranbaxy in 2008 and Ricoh’s acquisition of US company Ikon Office Solutions in 2008, to see what lessons can be learnt.

Nippon Sheet Glass/Pilkington

NSG were worried that they might be dumped by Toyota, their key customer, if they could not match Toyota’s overseas expansion.  Before the acquisition of Pilkington, 80% of NSG’s sales were in Japan.  Pilkington’s turnover was double that of NSG, so by acquiring it, NSG was finally able to be on equal terms with Asahi (who had previously acquired Saint Gobain).  After the acquisition, the March 2008 results showed that NSG Group sales were 80% overseas, with profits at a record high.  Stuart Chambers and other Pilkington executives took over the key management positions in the group and it seemed as if the company had become global overnight.

However the good times did not last, as the Lehman Shock brought about the world economic crisis, followed by the euro debt crisis, impacting the two main businesses of automotive glass and construction glass.  The NSG management did not take any effective action “and then it hit us” says a Japanese executive at the time “that we knew nothing about Pilkington”.  They thought it would be a growth engine, so did not do anything beyond cut employees and shut down operations.

Too focused on growth and globalization

This is where Japanese M&As often come unstuck says the Nikkei – they are so focused on the growth and globalization, they do not fully develop strategies and pathways for ensuring the M&A actually bears fruit.  “We had to focus on the immediate crisis, rather than the growth of the new company” says Kazumitsu Fujii, an executive officer.

NSG did know Pilkington quite well – having held equity in the company since 2000, and collaborated on various projects together.  Howerver they had not undertaken any simulation of the financial impacts of any worsening market conditions post merger.  As one executive at the time says “we did not even have any thought that the economic situation would get so bad so quickly”.

Stuart Chambers resigned in September 2009, citing family pressures from being in Japan all the time – and it was felt that his heart was not really in the job.

NSG had a 4-3-3 10 year vision.  The first four years were to be about integrating the two companies’ systems and cutting down the debts.  The next three years were to expand sales in automotive and construction glass and the second 3 years were to be about investing in new businesses.

However the company has not managed to move on from the first phase yet.  It seems that the lack of understanding and knowledge between the two companies has meant that the negative financial situation has dragged on.  “We thought that once we had made the leap into being a global company, all kinds of paths would open up to us, but it was not the case” says a former employee.

The new President, Keiji Yoshikawa says “we are having to fix areas we did not see at the time of the acquisition”.  Pilkington had centralised, standardized global HR management and sales systems which looked efficient at first glance, but meant that there were regional differences which were ignored.

For example, construction glass has to take account of the different climates and lifestyles, but apparently such products were not given much priority.  So NSG have started to allocate budgets to projects such as fire resistant glass in Germany.

After 7 years, NSG have finally started to understand Pilkington, concludes Nikkei Business.

Standardization and taking the initiative

My personal thoughts on this, having conducted various cross cultural communications seminars for Pilkington and Nippon Sheet Glass at the time, was that the two companies knew each other pretty well.  The gap was more to do with differing views and levels of experience in managing globally.

Pilkington, like many Anglo Saxon multinationals, would indeed emphasise a standard unified approach to management and product development around the world, in order to ensure maximum profitability.  The Japanese view that products should be customised to suit different markets is not cost effective, in this world view.

The other issue, as is so often the case when Japanese companies acquire Western ones, is that both parties sit back and wait for the other to take the initiative – and this was amplified by the Lehman Shock – where quick and decisive action was needed.  Pilkington may well have expected NSG to take the lead, whereas NSG was expecting Pilkington to have the global experience to provide the guidance for what to do in such extreme circumstances.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More
Does having more women managers help Japanese companies globalise?

The question of whether having more women managers would help Japanese companies to globalise was raised, but not discussed in depth due to time constraints, at a dinner I attended, hosted by a delegation to the UK from Japan Women’s Innovative Network – a Japanese non profit organisation.  An impressively large number of younger women (70) had been sponsored by their companies to come to the UK for a week, visiting various UK companies such as British Telecom and AON, to study global leadership and diversity.

My view is yes, it does help Japanese companies to globalise if they have more (Japanese) women managers, for a couple of reasons.  Firstly, it helps Japanese companies and corporate culture seem less “alien” to Western companies if there are more women in management positions in the headquarters, and secondly, because the adjustments Japanese companies will have to make in order to incorporate a more diverse Japanese workforce (gender or other diversity) will help them be more inclusive of “non-Japanese” diverse groups.  Attitudes to overtime and working from home would be a couple of areas needing adjustment I would suggest.

On the first point, the question of the role of women in Japanese companies is frequently raised in the cultural awareness sessions we conduct in Europe for Japanese companies.  Japan never does well in surveys of the position of women in society – see the most recent World Economic Forum Gender Gap report, placing Japan 114th out of 144 countries (updated for 2017).  While you can question the methodology of such surveys, then along comes another one, conducted amongst Japanese women, showing that 1/3 of them want to be full time housewives.

Which leads me to point out in our training (and in the Advancing Gender Diversity day I spoke at for Hitachi’s European group companies – presentation on SlideShare here) that Confucian values remain strong in Japan – it’s not that women are seen as somehow less capable than men, more that there are expectations around the role they should fulfil in society.

Prime Minister Abe is trying to square a circle with Abenomics, by trying to raise the birthrate but at the same time encourage women to go back to work – aiming to have 30% of senior positions in all parts of society, by 2020, through improving childcare and parental leave.  But with the amount of pressure on women to be good housewives and stalwarts of the Parent Teachers Association, no amount of improved childcare and leave is going to counteract this or compensate for both parents doing overtime until late at night.

Although the Japanese government can directly change the economy with the first and second arrow of Abenomics, through fiscal and monetary actions, the third arrow of structural reform requires nudging, or even shaming Japanese companies into doing the right thing – legislation alone will be hard to push through and even harder to enforce.  So Abe launched in February the “Nadeshiko” * scheme, recognising firms which are making efforts to improve the working environment for women.

Firms given the Nadeshiko “brand” in February of this year include Kao, Nissan, Fast Retailing (Uniqlo) and Daikin.  The scheme is not the only initiative taking place – various other surveys have been done of best places for women to work and the Hitachi Gender Diversity Day was partly inspired by the President of Hitachi, Hiroaki Nakanishi, declaring recently that the company aims to more than double the number of women managers by 2020.

Other recent surveys have named Benesse (no coincidence that the founder of Benesse is also the founder of J-WIN) as the most career friendly for women and companies such as Toshiba, KDDI, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ and NTT have all announced targets for women managers.  The Nikkei group has also jumped on the bandwagon, with a seminar series aimed at aspiring women managers (and even has a magazine “Nikkei Woman” ) and published its ranking last year of best places for women to work, which put foreign companies at the top (IBM Japan, Procter & Gamble) along with 2 life insurance companies, Takashimaya department store, Daiwa Securities, Sony, Panasonic, Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ, Fujitsu and Sharp.

* Nadeshiko is a type of pink danthius flower associated with women in Japan. It was adopted as a nickname by the women’s soccer team of Japan on its way to becoming the first Asian team to win the World Cup, in 2011.

The original version of this article was published in Japanese in the Teikoku Databank News in 2014.  An English version of it appears in Pernille Rudlin’s new book  “Shinrai: Japanese Corporate Integrity in a Disintegrating Europe” is available as a paperback and Kindle ebook on  Amazon.

For more content like this, subscribe to the free Rudlin Consulting Newsletter. 最新の在欧日系企業の状況については無料の月刊Rudlin Consulting ニューズレターにご登録ください。

Share Button
Read More

Search

Recent Posts

  • Largest Japan owned companies in the UK – 2024
  • Japanese companies in the UK 20 years on
  • Australia overtakes China as second largest host of Japanese nationals living overseas
  • Japanese financial services companies in the UK and EMEA after Brexit
  • The history of Japanese financial services companies in the UK and EMEA

Categories

  • Africa
  • Brexit
  • China and Japan
  • Corporate brands, values and mission
  • Corporate culture
  • Corporate Governance
  • cross cultural awareness
  • CSR
  • customer service
  • Digital Transformation
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • European companies in Japan
  • European identity
  • Foreign Direct Investment
  • Globalization
  • History of Japanese companies in UK
  • Human resources
  • Innovation
  • Internal communications
  • Japanese business etiquette
  • Japanese business in Europe
  • Japanese customers
  • M&A
  • Management and Leadership
  • Marketing
  • Middle East
  • negotiation
  • Presentation skills
  • Reputation
  • Seminars
  • speaker events
  • Sustainability
  • Trade
  • Uncategorized
  • Virtual communication
  • webinars
  • Women in Japanese companies
  • Working for a Japanese company

RSS Rudlin Consulting

  • Largest Japan owned companies in the UK – 2024
  • Japanese companies in the UK 20 years on
  • Australia overtakes China as second largest host of Japanese nationals living overseas
  • Japanese financial services companies in the UK and EMEA after Brexit
  • The history of Japanese financial services companies in the UK and EMEA
  • Reflections on the past forty years of Japanese business in the UK – what’s next? – 7
  • Reflections on the past forty years of Japanese business in the UK – what’s next? – 6
  • Reflections on the past forty years of Japanese business in the UK – what’s next? – 5
  • Kubota to build excavator factory in Germany
  • JERA and BP to merge offshore wind businesses

Search

Affiliates

Japan Intercultural Consulting

Cross cultural awareness training, coaching and consulting. 異文化研修、エグゼクティブ・コーチング と人事コンサルティング。

Subscribe to our newsletter

Recent Blogposts

  • Largest Japan owned companies in the UK – 2024
  • Japanese companies in the UK 20 years on
  • Australia overtakes China as second largest host of Japanese nationals living overseas
  • Japanese financial services companies in the UK and EMEA after Brexit
  • The history of Japanese financial services companies in the UK and EMEA

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Posts pagination

« 1 … 12 13 14 15 »
Privacy Policy

Privacy Policy

Web Development: counsell.com

We use cookies to personalize content and ads, to provide social media features, and to analyze our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising, and analytics partners.