The Leadership Japan Series

By: Dr. Greg Story
  • Summary

  • Leading in Japan is distinct and different from other countries. The language, culture and size of the economy make sure of that. We can learn by trial and error or we can draw on real world practical experience and save ourselves a lot of friction, wear and tear. This podcasts offers hundreds of episodes packed with value, insights and perspectives on leading here. The only other podcast on Japan which can match the depth and breadth of this Leadership Japan Series podcast is the Japan's Top Business interviews podcast.
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Episodes
  • Micro Leadership Techniques In Japan
    Apr 2 2025

    Time is the enemy of good leadership. It takes time to develop a team of individuals. A common metaphor is the orchestra conductor. Each instrument player has a specific role and it is the job of the leader to meld them together to work harmoniously and effectively. The conductor takes a significant amount of time to get this working correctly. That is their sole purpose. They make the best of the talent in the team, get them working well together and develop the individual talents of those involved. In business, we have to do all of these things and worry about the P&L, the Balance Sheet, the competition, quarterly earnings, changes in Government regulations, the media, shareholders, where the market is heading and the latest developments in technology. We are kept pretty busy.

    Consequently we are time poor from the moment our eyes open until we drift off to into slumber at night. There is a tension between the time needed to work with our team members to work effectively together and the time we have available to do just that. So we cut corners. We start to lead from a macro perspective. We are prone to broadcast emails to the whole team, mass Town Halls where we download what is going on, Zoom calls to the whole team where we pontificate on how things should be. It is terribly efficient but is it particularly effective?

    We know from sports that all the modern coaches coach each individual based on who they are and what they are capable of doing. The old style game half-time coach thunderous moments of inspired oratory are the thing of Hollywood movie celluloid relics of a past long passed. Leaders need to focus on each person, one by one.

    Some players are easy going, amazingly talented athletes who can perform the most unexpected feats of spontaneous physical dexterity, that a coach can never teach. They are Amiables who like people and are understated. They don’t speak in a loud voice, in fact they are laconic to the extreme. Loud incandescent outbursts about the requirement for getting the numbers are lost on them. We have people like that on our business teams. They are the solid quiet performers, often the social glue inside the team, holding all the superstructure together.

    The opposite stye are the Drivers. They are highly numbers and outcome oriented. They want the big bucks which comes with producing results. They don’t need external motivation, because the fire burns deep inside them and it is permanently self-igniting. They don’t need public acclaim or affirmation, because they march to the beat of their own drummer. They don’t listen to any praise because they are sceptical and they don’t feel any need of it. They can handle extreme pressure from above to perform. They have no problem with straight talk about getting the numbers or getting out of Dodge. They need to be strongly corralled to play as a team member, because they are oriented as an individual player and believe they rise or fall on their own efforts. They have severe outcome focus, rather than people focus, so often they can be limited in application as the leader. That doesn’t stop organisations putting them in charge though, because they produce results.

    Analyticals are data freaks. They only react to proof and evidence. They suspect any opinions which cannot be backed up with the statistics, expert testimonials, key numbers or facts. They are very well organised and thorough in their approach to everything. You have to persuade them with the data. They are not stirred by emotional calls to action. “Do it for the Gipper” doesn't do anything for them. Whether in sport or in the office, they need to be convinced by proof of the right course of action and once on board, they then knuckle down and get right behind the effort.

    The opposite style is the Expressive. They are outgoing, like being with people and are very confident, often too confident. They are usually the pranksters inside the team, making the jokes, geeing everyone up. They are flamboyant and enjoy the accolades, public acclaim and attention. Titles, prizes, trophies, incentives – bring them on they say. Inside the company they are the “hail fellow well met” crew, who work hard and play harder. Pumping up their ego has no bounds. The less fizzy, more sensible variety are often the most attractive leaders inside the organisation.

    As leaders we need to know which style we are and what are our own strengths and weaknesses. We need to know the same detail about our team members. We should spend time with them individually. Time constraints push us away from doing this, but we have to fight against the unrelenting drive to harmonised mediocrity. There is no point in being a macro leader in a modern micro world.

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    12 mins
  • The Leadership Equation
    Mar 19 2025

    I remember reading once about a President reflecting on the cost controls he had instituted inside his organisation. The industry had emerged from a recession and even though the economy and the company had recovered, he had forgotten to ease the strict controls he had instituted to protect the company. Covid-19 has forced many of us to institute strict controls in order to survive the business disruption caused by the virus. When should we release some of those stringent controls?

    This is a tricky subject at any time, but it becomes more pungent when you are coming out of a long tunnel. As Winston Churchill once remarked ,“If you are going through hell, keep going”. Very clever and witty, but when we have come out the other side of Covid-19 hell exactly at what point do we need to ease off the vice like pressure we have been applying to expenses and investment?

    In any business there is always tension around a couple of staples. Control and innovation can be in contradiction. Compliance, regulations, controls are there to protect the business. Systems have to work at scale, regardless of who is employed in the business. There has to be consistency and production sequences need to work to make deadlines or to ensure the required quality. When I worked in retail banking, there were so many regulations and audits, regarding what we were doing. Every process had to be documented and followed according to the letter of the specified designation.

    People didn’t get into trouble for varying from the procedures. It was hiding the variation that proved to be career ending. They were too scared to admit they had not followed the procedures and so tried to hide the fact away. Unfortunately, that doesn’t work and at some point it all comes rolling out and rolls right over the top of the individual and they are summarily fired for hiding the offence.

    On the other hand, we want people to be innovative. We know the danger of groupthink and also of being left behind by more creative rivals. Staff witnessing the career ending variances from the established tried and true methods, are not much induced to try new stuff. How do we get innovation, when we have the system tied down so tight there is no room for mistakes?

    There has to be a different mentality around mistakes. Japan is a mistake free zone. There have been decades of bosses very publicly screaming abuse at staff for screwing up. This curtailed people’s interest in doing anything new or better. The boss has to now take the lead here. The staff need to be told clearly what can’t be played around with for compliance or regulatory purposes, but also what is up for grabs. Mistakes can be said to be tolerated but if the talk isn’t matched by the walk, the experiment in a “hundred flowers” blooming, dies on the spot.

    Sounds easy, but just where is the line? How big a mistake are you personally, as the boss, prepared to tolerate? When Lee Iacocca called in one of his marketing executives at Chrysler following a major failure on a new model launch, that executive was expecting to be fired. To his amazement Iacocca said, “Fire you! We just spent million educating you”. Can you be like that?

    We set the temperature for innovation, by how much we celebrate the learnings from failures. We might not be as big minded about losing millions like Lee baby was, but still there will be opportunities to demonstrate that we never fail, because we always learn. We are going to come out of Covid-19 in 2021, so although we can’t set a specific date to loosen the controls, we still need to set a date to remind ourselves that we need to reevaluate where we are in the business cycle. Now is also the time to look for innovations which can be implemented, once the cash flow has been stabilised. Plan now and pour in the investment when the time is right, rather than waiting for the cash to be there first and then start the planning.

    We need systems and rules to protect the company and we need innovation to take the company forward. It cannot be “either”, it has to be “and”. Striking that balance has no road map and is difficult to get right, but if we can be directionally right and at the right scale, then we are going to be on the right track.

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    13 mins
  • As A Leader How To Provide Guidance Your People Will Follow
    Mar 12 2025
    Giving people orders is fine and fun, when you are the leader. Not so great when you are on the receiving end though. Collaboration and innovation are two seismic shifts in workstyle that are fundamentally different from the way most leaders were educated. Command and control were more the order of business back in the day. Hierarchy was clear, bosses brooked no opposing ideas or opinions and everyone below knew their place. Things have moved on, but have the bosses moved on with it? Basically, the people you see in your daily purview are arraigned against a similar team in another steel and glass, high rise monstrosity somewhere across town. The quality of their teamwork and their ideas determines who wins in today’s marketplace. All the cogs have to intersect smoothly and the quality and speed of the output are the differentiators. Are your salespeople better than the opposition, is the marketing department punching above its weight, are your mid level leaders really rocking it? Clarity of purpose, inculcation into the cult of the WHY, dedication combined with smarts, make so much difference when competing with rival organisations. The leaders are what make the difference. They are hiring the people, training them and promoting them. There are so many deeper aspects to this. Is the culture profound or anaemic? Is talent recognised, rewarded and embraced as a competitive advantage or are we checking the age and seniority of the straps on the slave galley oars? What is the communication mode? Is this monologue boss city or are we engaging with a firestorm of vibrant, powerful ideas from below. Is the boss the chief know-it-all or the orchestra conductor, moulding the raw untrained troops into a stellar team? Communication is at the center piece to all of this. When the boss communication is focused on direct orders on the what and how all day long, we breed robots. Why don’t we push ourselves much higher and go for motivational leadership, where words capture souls and move mountains. The key to this pivot is to dump the olde style locker room halftime rousing call for maximum blood and guts in the second half. Today’s sports coaches are geniuses of psychology. They know their athletes’ temperaments, aspirations, fears and hot buttons at such an intimate level, that it is simply breathtaking. Bosses have to be in the same mould. Knowing each person thoroughly as an individual is the starting point. On top of that is knowing what they are trying to achieve. We become their cagy corner man in the ring, wiping away the blood and helping to focus their dizzy brains through the fog of the daily beatings going on in the marketplace. When we tell someone what to do, all we do is trigger negativity. Their cynical brains are burning with reasons why that is a bad idea. They feel the prime insult of being told what to do and consequently lack interest in executing a plan not of their own design, desire or creation. The reason they are so sceptical is that the plan is unleashed in a finished format, with no context or background attached. We need to get to the point tangentially with a short story. By the way, we don’t say, “I am going to tell you a story from my glorious past”. That would be amusing. I would love to see their reaction to that little doozy of an opener. No, instead we go straight into a place in time, to a location they can identify, with people they probably will know and we spin a yarn, a true yarn, about what happened to us and what we learnt from it. This whole narrative is short, under two minutes. We certainly don’t flag our conclusion MBA executive summary style at the start. No, we are more crafty than that. We are like Iga Ninja, luring the listener into our web of charm. We expose the background that led us to an experience and viewpoint on a topic. At the very end, we give them the order, the action we want them to take and then we finish off with the benefit to doing it that way. Next comes the hard bit for olde style leaders like me. We ask them if they can see a way of taking that idea or method further and bettering it. The old ego can take a battering at this point, when they trot out their half baked and crappy ideas, with all the aplomb of tender, ignorant youth. That is why we make an important intervention. We say, “Get together with others, you select them and then together think about what I have said and come back to me tomorrow with your best ideas”. This momentum breaker is important, otherwise only first phase, shallow musings will spill out of their mouths. We have also forced them to collaborate with their peers, giving us a better chance to reap richer alternatives. In the end, they either adopt your suggestion as the best alternative or they adapt and improve on it. Either way, they have been given ownership of the next steps and so are more likely to execute it with...
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    11 mins

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