Sunday, July 20, 2008

Japanese Odyssey Continues

Every visit to Japan you come back more humbled with the experiences you encounter in Japan about how inward focussed and complex the business environment is . The very traditional and orthodox organizations are trying to breakaway from being typecast in that mould at-least at the Leadership levels. But will the rest of the fabric support a leader with unconventional thinking is highly questionable.
Chances are that there is surely a ray of hope in organizations where substantial part of the revenues are derived from outside the domestic japanese market. Organizations such as Nissan , Sony  and Toyota are  prime examples of movement in the direction of becoming more Global in there mindset. My earlier post on the contradictions at Toyota delineates a similar point. 

The Nuances and subtleties while conducting business are so many,that at times  it is just impossible to judge and  conclude with any patterns. Very often Non japanese teams get exasperated with the japanese using   the word "problem" ( "mondai" in Japanese)at every step or at every discussion point.

Actually the nuance of the word "problem" is much stronger in English then the word "mondai" which they actually mean . Mondai just means it needs to be looked into .....

"Hai" or "Hai Wakarimashita" are words you can not get of japan with out hearing to a couple of hundred times. " Yes or Yes i Understand" signifies comprehension or it just means what has been communicated by you has been received but in no way can be interpreted as the idea or suggestion you have given is understood and accepted. 

While conducting discussions and at times in formal gatherings it is very difficult to judge who the real leader or decision maker is . The ceremonial structure or the people with bigger titles at times might have very little to do with the decision making process.  A few titles terminologies which i got to understand are "bucho" means a division manager and "Kacho" the lowest level is a section manager . Most cases the high ranking official is a director who is "toroshimariyuko", who could also be a Divisional General Manager "honbucho". Most cases the ceremonial structure could be very different from the actual power structure.

It will also be very difficult to identify the real Leader in japanese team and it is important to be able to do this because even though japanese make decisions on a group and consensus basis , the nominal leader could be some what of a "maverick" and therefore delay the progress or depending on how favorable he is to you can speeden the progress. 

Another factor to take into consideration is that leadership can swing from one member to another depending on the situation and issue at hand. At times the Leader can be very silent and at other times he might do most of the talking.

Welcome to the land of  Ambiguity !  "Japan" 

Japan is an Exonym for "Nippon or Nihon"  which means the "Land of the Rising Sun"

Sunday, July 13, 2008

The Naniwabushi Strategy

Naniwabushi would be the most typical Japanese way of resolving or avoiding disputes . In business it will go as follows , suppose you  wish to negotiate revised payment terms for your contract due to the real sad business climate . Then you would approach your Lender or Customer by giving a "Kikkake"

Kikkake is setting the base , give a background ,how good a partner you have been through the thick and thin talk about all the good points of the relationship both of you have enjoyed etc etc.

Once the Stage is set move towards "Seme" talk about the disastrous effects the recession is doing on your business , how u have been cutting costs , how you are making your ends meet etc . But despite all the cost control , you will be able to survive only if some more leniency is given to your payment terms etc .

In the "Urei"  , you will need to explain what will happen if the request is not granted ... you and your family will be on the streets .. make it as melodramatic as possible ... Pleading is ok 

Naniwabushi is artful , premeditated , calculated and in Japan it will work . The  more tragic and melodramatic , it is easier for Japanese listeners to forget contracts or commitments . People who do not show compassion in such circumstances will be condemned as being cold hearted or mercenary .

"Nemawashi" : This is a practice of preliminary and informal sounding out of people's ideas or course of action before a formal proposal is drawn up .  Nemawashi is more akin to binding the roots before re-planting the tree. If people have strong objections to a proposal , nemawashi enables this to be discovered in advance and there by making the acceptance of the formal proposal more certain.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Do you need a Marketing Department ?

Each one in a company is responsible for Marketing , a Single arrogant statement by the CEO or CFO or a person who is the touch point time to the company  can create a very damaging impact for the company . More then half of all Japanese companies do not even bother to have a marketing department , because they feel everyone in the company is responsible for marketing and Marketing is not a department but it is the  business. A few elements are delineated below from the book i have been recently reading about by Harry Beckwith .

Marketing Myopia : Very often we tend not to see the most obvious , asking for external help at times is the best solution. "So much of what passes for brilliant insight in helping a company is reporting what everyone in that company could see , if only they could see it clearly . It is hard to see the real scope of your business ask for help ....

Tunnel Vision : People talk about what they know and what people know is their company and hence when companies discuss there problems they talk about themselves, But what people really need to know - is your customers and prospective ones .... Get out ! Climb out , have some one pull you out of the tunnel .

Start with every Employee and review every step ... don't start a company if you do not know how to Smile is a famous saying .. and similarly every step means how does the receptionist greet to what is written at the bottom of the invoice.

Irrespective of the Business , get to the core - Know what you are good at and what you specialize ? We all thought Federal Express was a courier company and just delivered mail quickly but when there core management team put their heads together they realized they are much more then that and they could manage logistics with extreme efficiency which included procuring ,Optimizing transportation costs  storing and forwarding and hence they are now known as the best in Logistics Management. Similarly Anderson consulting where always thought to be known as books auditors , but they realized very quickly that they knew the details to the core on information flow and systems which resulted in the setting up of the Management consultancy practice

What are you Selling ? Do Customers go to Star bucks for the Coffee at an exorbitant price or for the experience they can get from Star bucks .. focus on what the clients are actually buying .

If you are selling a service , you are selling a relationship and not necessarily a Expertise : how often do you go to your regular medical practitioner for expertise ?

The best Strategy in a War is to win without a Fight ! : Go to unchartered territories ! The Big Six accounting firms were only in the Metros and big cities .. the Eight largest one focused on the 2nd Tier and 3rd Tier Cities and ended up being positioned as the brand name accounting firm in that area .

Study all your touch Points : Your business card , your receptionist , your sales person , your project execution specialists who are all capable of living an impression on your customers ! Focus on all of them !! 

The Adapters Edge : Have we considered innovative ways that new technology can be used to improve our service and grow our business ? Making technology a key part of our Marketing plan is crucial ... are we ahead in terms of leveraging technology and have we thought of it as we will be second to none two years ahead ? 

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Contradictions @ Toyota's - The Japanese Odyssey

Came across this interesting article in HBR about Toyota's interesting outlook to how they look at both "Soft innovation" and "Hard Innovation" when it comes to the organization DNA . It goes without a doubt that the organization has mastered both and it seeps down to grass root levels.
"Soft" is all about the organization management style and how it breeds effectiveness at all levels despite being a huge and gives a feeling of huge mammoth which is going to come down in troubled times.
The company views employees as knowledge workers and not just a pair of hands and hence at all levels they accumulate immense amount of "Chie" -the wisdom of experience. Six major contradictory tendencies were noticed in a research by the authors of this article , which influence this organization culture.
  1. Toyota moves slowly yet it take big leaps 
  2. Toyota grows steadily , yet it is a paranoid company 
  3. Toyota  operations are efficient , but it uses employee's time in seemingly wasteful ways
  4. Toyota is frugal but it splurges on key areas 
  5. Toyota insists on internal communications to be simple , yet it builds complex networks
  6. Toyota has a strict hierarchy, but it gives freedom to push back 
While in most organizations Goals are very clearly thought out and debated and set with an intent to achieve it with as much precision as possible , In Toyota the contradiction is the Goal is set more with an intent of direction and again most times it is fairly "impossible" to achieve . This trait could be pushing most managers to stretch as much as possible and prevents rigidity from creeping in.

Also another important aspect being when you are doing business beyond Japan the home country the culture which it  has imbibed is to ensure that in each country it customizes vehicles to the extent it is required in that country . It is not about tinkering with one type fits all. In-fact this aspect led to the organization replacing " Made in Japan" label with "Made by Toyota".

Experimentation : The concept of setting near impossible goals is well mitigated with the culture of experimentation. That is break down the major Goal into smaller packets of manageable challenges and then experiment using strict routines . It has refined the Plan Do Check Act (PDCA) model into Eight stepped Toyota business process . Many a times it helps the employees to break the status Quo; 
  • Clarify the problem
  • break down the problem
  • Set a Target
  • Analyze the root cause 
  • develop the counter measures 
  • see counter measures through 
  • monitor both results and processes
  • Standardize the successful process
Similarly the A-3 report is a standard in Toyota and forces all to capture the most essential information needed to solve a problem and it is proliferated across the organization.

As Toyota expands rapidly new products new markets  , challenges any organization is bound to come across is how do the ethos percolate across the organization down to root levels and across all levels . Again the when it comes to Toyota and the research done by the authors of this article clearly found patterns about the organization behavior which could be articulated by usage of the following terminologies :
Genchi Genbutsu , which essentially means "Have you seen it yourself?" Toyota encourages each of its senior executives to go down to the factory line, the dealerships etc and experience the same.
A few others like the conventional aspects like "Teamwork" , Positive mindset and Customer focus are also practiced with great deal of sincerity across the organization. 
However, a few aspects which need to be admired and other organizations need to try and emulate are the ones related to how you treat under performers . The focus which is there on re-skilling people and literally having a statement etched that Toyota does not believe in Job cuts even in a poorly performing market situation.
During Evaluation ,Toyota gives lot more emphasis to process performance and learning over results. The company looks at how the person has achieved the goals rather then the goal itself.  A few of the unique criteria it adopts which are very fuzzy and subjective  :
  • Jinbo : How you command respect amongst your peers , juniors and seniors. Very difficult to judge this unless you have worked very deeply with the person
  • nebari tsuyosa : Adhesives strength , how resolute or persistent are you ?
Despite being a very large and mammoth Enterprise , it still functions like a small town company , there are many other subtle aspects which help in achieving the same. All about the emphasis given Human networks or what Toyota describes as the Nerve System.

Openness is manifested even in the way offices are designed which have no partitions (obeya ) and Mieruka ( Visualization ). The later means having posters on the wall for all of them to see . Let us Yokoten  means open side ways ! ... share among your peers as well ....

Give freedom to to voice contrary views : Confronting your boss is acceptable , bringing bad news to boss is encouraged and ignoring the boss is often excused.



Saturday, July 5, 2008

My Japanese Odyssey

The art of Negotiation is vastly different in a japanese perspective to what we consider the conventional perspective or what we are normally used to . Very often the impression/mindset we have is being articulative , forceful communicator , who wins the argument with Logic as the ideal way of going about the art of Negotiation . In Japan this might not work in most cases, a person with the above skills might be mostly regarded as rude , aggressive and at times even vulgar. 
Another aspect being in general you will not come across Japanese as self centered or being irrational , if you do come across then it is more of an exception. The trait of showing economic value to a buyer and being passionate about the company or its product in a non Japanese environment is a huge positive . But in Japan context unless it is tempered with a liberal dose of being sympathetic to the personal issues / organization will not yield the best results for you.  The truth is that the Japanese do not like negotiation . The instinct is for agreements worked back stage with give and take , harmony and long term interest. But it is still commonly accepted that if two parties trust each other , money and other details need not be discussed. Thus to this date in most industries in japan neither contracts nor invoices nor product catalogues are used . To read the fine print of the contract is sacrilege and to do so would imply a lack of trust. 

The fact that one can also meet Japanese businessmen who are manifestly self centered and cold "economic animals" is in my view, only to encounter exceptions to a still valid generalization. 
The odyssey continues......

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Collin Powell's Leadership Lessons

Lessons

 Collin Powell' Lessons on Leadership - A scintillating Talk had the opportunity to attend

Lesson 1

"Being responsible sometimes means pissing people off."

Lesson 2

"The day soldiers stop bringing you their problems is the day you have stopped leading them.  They have either lost confidence that you can help them or concluded that you do not care.  Either case is a failure of leadership."

Lesson 4

"Don't be afraid to challenge the pros, even in their own backyard." (if you have

a yes-man working for you, one of you is redundant.  Good leadership encourages everyone's evolution)

Lesson 5

"Never neglect details.  When everyone's mind is dulled or distracted the leader must be doubly vigilant."

Lesson 6

"You don't know what you can get away with until you try." Forgiveness is easier then permission

Lesson 8

"Organization doesn't really accomplish anything. Theories of management don't much matter.  Endeavors succeed or fail because of the people involved.  Only by attracting the best people will you accomplish great deeds."

Lesson 9

"Organization charts and fancy titles count for next to nothing."

Lesson 15

Part I: "Use the formula P=40 to 70, in which P stands for the probability of success and the numbers indicate the percentage of information acquired.” Part II: "Once the information is in the 40 to 70 range, go with your gut."[Excessive delays in the name of information-gathering breeds "analysis paralysis." ]

Lesson 16

"The commander in the field is always right and the rear echelon is wrong, unless proved otherwise." ….. (Too often, the reverse defines corporate culture ) `- Shift the power and the financial accountability to the folks who are bringing in the beans, not the ones who are counting or analyzing them.

 

Lesson 17

"Have fun in your command.  Don't always run at a breakneck pace.  Take leave when you've earned it:Spend time with your families.

 

Blending Technology buzzword called SOA with Business

Thanks to the development of technologies, it is no longer processes we are talking about but the business activities which make up a process. Hence it is becoming possible to design many business activities akin to kids world of Lego blocks. What is SOA ? just a new way of designing and deploying software that supports business activities and finally a process.  Each activity can be termed as a "Web Service".
What are the business Activities which can become candidates for Web Services ? This could be derived  on :
Business Value : An Activity or a process which is very critical for your company so that your efficiencies , Uniqueness and gives you competitive advantage determines the Business Value.
Current Performance : If the performance of the business activity is very poor , Will investments made on the same justify the higher performance you can derive from the same 
Predictability : If the performance of the business activity is highly unpredictable then neither can it be shared or shifted out.
More often then not When SOA is being applied with out rethinking the overall design of the business , then the full potential and the opportunity to create a much more focussed , efficient and flexible organization is lost.
Hence Building SOA or buying SOA should be the last step and not the first step in creating a New Operating Model which could be analyzed keeping in mind : 
Primary : Should be kept In-house 
Shared : Can be shared with others / divisions
Shifted : Can be outsourced to customers / specialists 
Automated : If capabilities and User interface can be automated then it can be turned into a Web service
This is a summary from HBR June 2008 issue