loader from loading.io

Four Superheroes Of Coaching For Leaders

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Release Date: 05/14/2025

The Five Drivers of Leadership Success show art The Five Drivers of Leadership Success

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

When markets are kind, anyone can look like a genius. The test arrives when conditions turn—your systems, skills, and character decide what happens next.  What are the five drivers every leader must master? The five drivers are: Self Direction, People Skills, Process Skills, Communication, and Accountability. Mastering all five creates resilient performance across cycles. In boom times (think pre-pandemic luxury hotels in Japan) tailwinds mask weak leadership; in shocks (closed borders, supply chain crunches) only strong drivers keep teams delivering. As of 2025, executives in...

info_outline
Balancing People and Process—and Leading and Doing show art Balancing People and Process—and Leading and Doing

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Newly promoted and still stuck in “super-doer” mode? Here’s how to rebalance control, culture, and delegation so the whole team scales—safely and fast.  Why do new managers struggle when they’re promoted from “star doer” to “leader”? Because your brain stays in production mode while your job has shifted to people, culture, and systems. After promotion, you’re accountable not only for your own KPIs but for the entire team’s outcomes. It’s tempting to cling to tasks you control—dashboards, sequencing, reporting—because they’re tangible and quick wins. But...

info_outline
How to Stop Forgetting Things show art How to Stop Forgetting Things

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Feeling busier and more distracted than last year? You’re not imagining it—and you’re not powerless. This guide turns a simple “peg” memory method into a fast, executive-friendly workflow you can use on the spot. Why do we forget more at work—and what actually helps right now? We forget because working memory is tiny and modern work shreds attention; the fix is to externalise what you can and anchor what you can’t. As channels multiply—email, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Line, Telegram—messages blur and retrieval costs explode. First, move details out of your head and into...

info_outline
The Right Japan Workplace Culture show art The Right Japan Workplace Culture

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

How to reshape culture in Japan without breaking what already works.  What is the first question leaders should ask when inheriting a Japanese workplace? Start by asking better questions, not hunting faster answers. Before imposing a global “fix,” map what already works in the Japan business and why. In post-pandemic 2025, multinationals from Toyota to Rakuten show that culture is a system of trade-offs—language, seniority, risk appetite, client expectations—not a slogan. Western playbooks prize decisive answers; Japan prizes deciding the right questions. That shift...

info_outline
How To Remember People’s Names at Networking and Business Events show art How To Remember People’s Names at Networking and Business Events

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Short intro: Forgetting names kills first impressions. The good news: a few simple, repeatable techniques can make you memorable and help you recall others—consistently, even in noisy, post-pandemic mixers and business events.  Is there a simple way to say my name so people actually remember it? Yes: use “Pause, Part, Punch.” Pause before you speak, insert a brief “part” between your first and last name, then punch (emphasise) your surname. The pause stops the mental scroll, the parting creates a clean boundary (helpful in loud rooms or across accents), and...

info_outline
The Boss Must Become the Human Alternative to AI show art The Boss Must Become the Human Alternative to AI

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why authentic leadership is vital in 2025, when AI is everywhere Back in 2021, the big conversation was about chatbots and holograms. Today, in 2025, AI has gone far beyond that. Tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and countless others are now part of daily life—at home and at work. They generate reports, answer questions, and even simulate empathy in conversation. For many, they feel like a companion. But there is a dark side. We now read disturbing stories of unstable people encouraged by AI interactions to harm themselves or take their own lives. This isn’t science fiction. It’s...

info_outline
No Change Agents Needed in Japan show art No Change Agents Needed in Japan

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why foreign “hammers” fail and what leaders must do differently in 2025 For decades, foreign companies entering Japan have repeated the same mistake: dispatching a “change agent” from HQ to shake things up. The scenario often ends in disaster. Relationships are broken, trust collapses, and revenues fall. In 2025, the lesson is clear—Japan doesn’t need hammers. It needs builders who listen, localise, and lead with respect. Why do foreign change agents so often fail in Japan? Most fail because they arrive as “hammers,” assuming Japanese organisations are nails to be pounded....

info_outline
Should the Leader Concede? show art Should the Leader Concede?

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Balancing strength and flexibility in leadership in 2025 Leaders are often told to “never surrender” and “winners don’t quit.” At the same time, they are also expected to be flexible, adaptable, and open to change. These opposing demands resemble the yin-yang symbol—two seemingly contradictory forces that must coexist. As of 2025, when Japanese and global organisations face complex challenges from AI disruption to demographic decline, the real question is: should leaders concede, and if so, when? Why are leaders expected to be both tough and flexible? Leadership has long been...

info_outline
Leaders Sensing Versus Managers Knowing show art Leaders Sensing Versus Managers Knowing

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why leadership requires sensing and feeling, not just knowing, in 2025 Managers often prioritise what they “know,” while leaders rely more on what they “sense” and “feel.” This distinction, popularised by executive coach Marcel Danne, is more than semantics—it highlights a profound difference in mindset. As of 2025, with Japan navigating demographic challenges, digital disruption, and global uncertainty, the ability to sense and adapt has become more critical than simply knowing facts. What’s the difference between managers and leaders in decision-making? Managers tend to...

info_outline
Leaders Having Visions Were Disparaged show art Leaders Having Visions Were Disparaged

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why vision, mission, and values still matter in 2025—if leaders make them real Not long ago, talking about “vision” often invited sneers. Leaders who spoke about visions were mocked as spouting psychobabble. Part of the cynicism came from the poor quality of early vision statements—trite platitudes that could double as sleeping aids. But times have changed. In 2025, vision, mission, and values are essential leadership tools, yet most organisations still struggle to make them resonate with staff. Why were visions mocked in the past? In the 1980s and 1990s, many vision statements were...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

We have seen Hollywood pumping out comic heroes as movie franchises to get the money flowing into the studios.  The premise is always the same.  The super hero comes to the rescue and saves everyone.  What about for leaders when coaching their team members?  Fortunately, we have four super heroes we can rely on to help us do a better job as the leader. They are Encourage, Focus, Elevate and Empower.

Encouraging our team sounds pretty unheralded and straightforward. But do we actually do it?  Leaders are busy people and have tons of pressure on their shoulders.  Life is a whirlwind of meetings and pushing the plan’s execution.  Expecting people to do what they are being paid to do, can easily supplant the encouragement vibe from the leader.  Telling people you recognise their strengths, means taking the time to audit and then communicate those strengths.  Being supportive means taking the time to be across what is happening at the individual level.  Do we do that?  Giving positive reinforcement means having the right conversations at the right time.  The word “time” keeps popping up, because that is the deadly enemy of good intentions.

If we flipped open your calendar from last week and we added up how much one-on-one encouragement you gave to the members your team, would we be talking in terms of hours or milliseconds of conversation?  Time management is a key to people management.  You can’t manage people if you are not in control of your time and if you have not made certain choices about where you will prioritise your time.  We see this in family time being sacrificed on the alter of getting the results.  The employees can easily be in the same group as the family, missing out on the leader’s attention.

The second super hero of leadership coaching is Focus.  Managers manage processes, budgets, timelines and the execution of results.  The machinery of the firm runs flawlessly.  There are no defects and no delays.  Leaders do all of that, plus they set the direction for the firm and they build the people.  The building the people part is where there has to be intentional focus on the individual.  All of the other components of executing and gaining results can means the focus is not on the people development. We need to track the assignments we have given people, to make sure that we are there for them, if they need help.  We need to offer up our undivided attention to listen to our people. No thoughts of what needs to be done scrambling around in our brain, while we sit there half listening to what we are being told. 

Elevate is probably the most difficult of the super hero leader coaching efforts to pull off.  We can tell everyone what to do and how to it.  We can do it all by ourselves.  Neither of these choices develop our people though.  We must coach them by asking what they need to do. We need to push them to operate with the mindset of the leader.  We need them to self discover things that will guide them around what needs to be done and how they should be done.

We have to challenge them in ways that inspire, as opposed to crushing them.  There is a fine line between applying the right dimension of push and crushing someone. We all get into a rut in our work. As the leader coach if we can have our people challenge typical ways of thinking or doing, then that potentially unleashes a tremendous opportunity for creativity.  It means we need to allocate the time to interact with our team and that time may not be very easy to find.  We can also suggest they do less of or more of something.  We can challenge them to consider doing the opposite of what they are currently doing. All of these “more”, “less”, “opposite” alternatives are there to get the team thinking in a different way about our business.  If we see an opportunity for improvement, we can push for immediate change.  This can become an issue though if we push too hard at the wrong time.  Getting the balance right is the equation we need to solve.

Our fourth super hero is to Empower.  There is no word in Japanese which can easily capture this idea.  That makes the communication of the idea a bit tricky. We know that the Johari Window describes leadership blindspots.  We need to work on our high potential’s awareness of what everyone knows, but they don’t know about themselves.  Doing 360 surveys and educating them on how to get feedback are positive actions that will build the leadership bench.  Having an improved perspective enables them to make the changes necessary to become a more effective leader.

Getting them to think about how to transfer experiences from one environment to another is a stretch that is needed.  We all tend to be trapped by the limitations of our previous experiences.  The issue becomes that, “to a hammer everything looks like a nail”.  We need to educate our people about not falling into that leadership trap. 

Engaging emotions is a powerful driver of commitment and accountability.  Understanding what is important to each person is the necessary key to the door of change.  That means spending the time and making the communication effort to uncover the trigger emotions, the drivers for positive change.  We need to model it for them and then encourage them to do the same, when they have the responsibility of leadership.

The four drivers of coaching composed of Encourage, Focus, Elevate and Empower make for powerful leadership precepts.  These take time and the best time to start using them was yesterday.  The second best time is today.