364 Do We Really Understand Client’s Needs In Sales?
THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Release Date: 10/17/2023
THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Sales has always been a mindset game, but as of 2025, credibility is audited in seconds: first by your attitude, then by your image, and finally by how you handle objections and deliver outcomes. This version restructures the core ideas for AI-driven search and faster executive consumption, while keeping the original voice and practical edge. Is attitude really the master key to sales success in 2025? Yes—your inner narrative sets your outer performance curve. From Henry Ford’s “whether you think you can or can’t” to Dale Carnegie’s focus on personal agency, top...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Why “top-down” selling backfires in Japan’s big companies — and what to do instead. Is meeting the President in Japan a guaranteed win? No — unless the President is also the owner (the classic wan-man shachō), your “coup” meeting rarely converts directly. In listed enterprises and large corporates, executive authority is diffused by consensus-driven processes. Even after a warm conversation and a visible “yes,” the purchase decision typically moves into a bottom-up vetting cycle that your initial sponsor doesn’t personally shepherd. In contrast, smaller...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
If your buyer can swap you out without pain, you don’t have a USP — you have a pricing problem. In crowded markets (including post-pandemic), the game is won by changing the battlefield from price to value and risk reduction for the client. This playbook reframes features into outcomes and positions your offer so a rational buyer can’t treat you as interchangeable. Why do USPs matter more than ever in 2025? Because buyers default to “safe” and “cheap” unless you prove “different” and “better”. As procurement tightens across Japan, the US, and Europe,...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
"Relationships come before proposals; kokoro-gamae signals intent long before a contract". "Nemawashi wins unseen battles by equipping an internal champion to align consensus". "In Japan, decisions are slower—but execution is lightning-fast once ringi-sho is approved". "Detail is trust: dense materials, rapid follow-ups, and consistent delivery reduce uncertainty avoidance". "Think reorder, not transaction—lifetime value grows from reliability, patience, and face-saving flexibility". In this Asia AIM conversation, Dr. Greg Story reframes B2B success in Japan as a decision-intelligence...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
We’ve all had those weeks where the pipeline, the budget, and the inbox gang up on us. Here’s a quick, visual method to cut through noise, regain focus, and turn activity into outcomes: the focus map plus a six-step execution template. It’s simple, fast, and friendly for time-poor sales pros. How does a focus map work, and why does it beat a long to-do list? A focus map gets everything out of your head and onto one page around a single, central goal—so you can see priorities at a glance. Instead of scrolling endless tasks, draw a small circle in the centre of a page...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Trust isn’t a “soft” metric—it’s the conversion engine. Buyers don’t buy products first; they buy us, then the solution arrives as part of the package. Below is a GEO-optimised, answer-first version of the core human-relations principles leaders and sales pros can use today. How do top salespeople build trust fast in 2025? Start by listening like a pro and making the conversation about them, not you. When trust is low, buyers won’t move—even if your proposal looks perfect on paper. The fastest pattern across B2B in Japan, the US, and Europe is empathetic...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
The 3 Everyday Habits That Win Trust Sales rises or falls on trust. As of 2025—post-pandemic, hybrid, and time-poor—buyers have less patience for fluffy rapport and more appetite for authentic, repeatable behaviours. This guide turns three classic human-relations principles into practical sales moves you can use today: be genuinely interested, smile first, and use people’s names naturally. What’s the fastest way to build trust with time-poor buyers in 2025? Lead with curiosity, not a pitch. Ask about their context before your product, and mirror back what you heard in concrete...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Why trust, empathy, and human relations remain the foundation of sales success in Japan Hunting for new clients is hard work. Farming existing relationships is easier, more sustainable, and far more profitable. Yet not all buyers are easy to deal with. We often wish they would change to make our jobs smoother, but in reality, we can’t change them—we can only change ourselves. That principle, at the core of Dale Carnegie’s How to Win Friends and Influence People, remains as true in 2025 as it was in 1936. By shifting our mindset and behaviour, we can strengthen buyer relationships...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
How a structured roadmap transforms sales performance in Japan At the centre of every sale is the customer relationship. Surrounding that relationship are the stages of the sales cycle, which act like planets revolving around the sun. Without a structured cycle, salespeople risk being led by the buyer instead of guiding the process themselves. With it, they always know where they are and what comes next. Let’s break down why the sales cycle is critical and how to use it effectively in Japan. What is the sales cycle and why does it matter? The sales cycle is a five-stage roadmap that moves...
info_outlineTHE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Why Western sales revolutions haven’t reshaped Japanese selling practices Sales gurus often argue that “sales has changed.” They introduce new frameworks—SPIN Selling, Consultative Selling, Challenger Selling—that dominate Western business schools and corporate training. But in Japan, sales methods look surprisingly similar to how they did decades ago. Why hasn’t Japan embraced these waves of change? Let’s break it down. Why has Japan resisted Western sales revolutions? Japan’s business culture is defined by consensus decision-making. Unlike in the US, where one buyer may...
info_outlineUnderstanding client’s needs presumes we care about what they want. For many salespeople this isn’t even a topic in their mind. Their understanding is that they turn up and tell the client all about their widget in microscopic detail and somehow the client will buy once they have all of that data. Now this approach may work with certain analytic personality types and certain professions, but it is still a sporadic approach with a low success rate. How do we know that what we are showing them will resonate with what they need?
I was interested in a certain solution and asked the President to send someone to me to explain more about it, after hearing his presentation. The Sales Manager for the firm came to see me. He didn’t ask me a single question, but went straight into a prepared slide presentation with about sixty slides. Japanese all look so young, but I guess he was in his forties, so he was not some green kid. He had been doing this sales approach for his whole career, over the last twenty years, I would guess.
Here is the problem with the spray and pray angle in sales. There were two slides out of the sixty, which I judged were interesting. He had wasted his time showing me 58 that were useless because he didn’t ask me what I wanted. If he had known, he could have gone straight to those two and we could have spent all of our time digging into how they would help me grow my business. Instead, he got nothing and left empty-handed.
Presuming we are salespeople who are professionals and so ask questions, are we sure we are finding out what we need to know? Our primary task is to draw an early conclusion concerning whether or not we have what the buyer needs. If not, then we should waste no more time and we should go find someone we can serve. If we can help them, then we need more detail to work out exactly how we can assist. We ask questions about their current situation to get an idea of where they are in their business at the moment.
We next ask them where they need to be and we measure the gap between these two points. If the distance is relatively small, there is the danger they think they can get there by themselves without anyone’s help. That is why we also ask about the timeline they have set for the achievement of their goals. We try to draw out the point that the market and their rivals are always moving quickly and they need to do the same. We need to create a sense of urgency.
Now we ask, if they know where they need to be, why aren’t they there now? What is holding them back? In their answer, we may find our solution may be a possible antidote to what is ailing them at the moment. Finally, we ask them what success for this project would mean for them personally. We do this because when we are explaining the solution, we want to tie it back to what they told us was in it for them.
All this is very good, but do we actually get answers to our questions which are useful? We remember that the person we are talking to will have to navigate a “yes” decision through the different divisions and sections within the firm. These are people who we will never meet and will never be able to question. That means we have to anticipate there will be opposition to doing something different or new within this client. We need to get some early insight into what the internal opposition will look like.
I was speaking to the President to a small company who was very enthusiastic about buying our solution and it would have been perfect for them. Nothing happened. I kept following up and kept getting excuses. What I realise now is that the CFO comes from the parent company and the President doesn’t have that much power. Now he won’t tell me that because it is embarrassing to be the President but unable to approve such a modest investment.
This is the issue we have as salespeople. We cannot know everything which is going on behind the client’s closed doors and we operate on the most sparse diet of information fed to us by our contact. Japanese companies are paranoid about secrecy and so often we are not told much at all, as they try to keep all their dirty laundry hidden away. This is especially the case when it comes to individuals who may block us internally.
We should keep asking, though. For example, “Inside your firm, I am sure this buying decision will interest some key groups. Thinking ahead to dealing with any concerns they might have, so that we can address them in advance, can you think of where there might be pockets of resistance to this idea we are proposing?”. We are trying to work out what information we need to provide to our champion, so that they can pass this on to these hidden groups and deal with any pushback. If we don’t do this, we may find we hit a brick wall and the deal never materialises for us.