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Real Listening Skills In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Release Date: 09/19/2024

245 Boss Genius Coaching show art 245 Boss Genius Coaching

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Bosses get this wrong. The younger generation demands a new type of boss—someone persuasive, focused on their career development, and who is skilled as a communicator and coach. Japan’s demographic crisis makes meeting these demands even more critical. With fewer young people entering the workforce, competition for their loyalty is fierce. Employers unable to satisfy their expectations will lose talent to competitors or rely increasingly on non-Japanese workers to fill the gap. Statistics reveal the challenge: 35% of young Japanese graduates quit their jobs within three years. One key...

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244 Be Careful Using Your Hands When Presenting In Japan show art 244 Be Careful Using Your Hands When Presenting In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Don’t get this wrong. Good posture never goes out of style, yet many presenters struggle with it. Standing straight projects confidence, enables better breath control, and conveys energy. However, the presenting environment often tempts us into poor habits. Even seasoned performers—actors and singers—struggle with posture during award acceptance speeches. Instead of standing tall, they hunch over microphones, giving audiences an unflattering view of their bowed heads. These professionals, familiar with microphone technology, should excel at its use but often fail to adapt to the setup....

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243 Setting the Foundations For Making The Sale In Japan show art 243 Setting the Foundations For Making The Sale In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Nemawashi, translates to “groundwork” and is rooted in the practice of moving large trees. This intricate process—preparing roots, wrapping them, and relocating the tree—serves as a metaphor for meticulous preparation before decisions in business. In Japan, decisions are typically made before meetings, with the gathering itself serving as a formality to approve prior agreements. The groundwork involves engaging stakeholders individually, securing their buy-in, and addressing potential concerns. In contrast, Western decision-making often occurs during meetings, with open discussions and...

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242 Mood Control In Japan show art 242 Mood Control In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Don’t be delusional. Do you consider yourself moody? Perhaps not, but as a boss, your team may perceive you differently. Employees are keenly attuned to your every movement, tone, body language and expression, constantly evaluating your mood to gauge whether it's a good time to approach you with work-related matters. Your ability to mask emotions or maintain equilibrium amidst challenges significantly influences the workplace atmosphere. As the leader, your mood sets the tone for the day. A positive attitude can uplift the team, while a negative one can drag them down. The challenge lies in...

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241  Open The Kimono When Presenting In Japan show art 241  Open The Kimono When Presenting In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Stop wrecking your presentations. When delivering talks, many speakers separate their personal identities from the content, focusing solely on facts, data, and evidence. This approach, often favored by technical individuals, misses the opportunity to create deeper engagement with the audience. As an introvert, I understand the hesitation to share personal stories. However, keeping oneself out of the narrative is a significant mistake. Injecting personal experiences and insights into a presentation transforms it from theoretical to practical, resonating more deeply with the audience. Audiences...

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240 Buyer Styles In Japan show art 240 Buyer Styles In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Salespeople are ignorant. When interacting with Japanese buyers, personality differences play a more critical role than cultural differences. Understanding personality styles can help improve communication and sales success. A two-axis framework categorizes personality types: a horizontal axis measures from low assertion on the left across to high assertion on the right, and a vertical axis measuring people orientation at the top vs. outcome focus down below. Bottom right, the Driver type is highly assertive and outcome-driven. Often business founders, they value results over...

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239 Taking Accountabilty In Japan show art 239 Taking Accountabilty In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Stop being weak. The beauty, weight loss, fashion, and entertainment industries inundate us with images of unattainable perfection, leaving many feeling inadequate—too tall, short, fat, thin, or unsuccessful. It’s easy to fall into the trap of wishing for better circumstances: wealthier parents, a better education, or a more favorable start in life. But wishing changes nothing; the past cannot be undone. While mistakes, poor choices, and misfortunes may weigh us down, the key is to stop dwelling on what lies behind us and channel that energy into moving forward. To progress, we must act as...

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238 How To Quieten the Crowd In Japan show art 238 How To Quieten the Crowd In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Some MCs are idiots. At a sports related event filled with free-flowing drinks, idle chatter, and hundreds of attendees, the presentations quickly unraveled into a comedy of errors. The MC, tasked with introducing the main speaker, faced an uninterested crowd more captivated by their own conversations than the proceedings on stage. In a desperate bid for attention, the MC resorted to shooshing the audience, first gently, then with exaggerated, strident authority, as if addressing unruly schoolchildren. This tactic only drew ridicule, amplifying the noise and making the atmosphere even more...

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237 Never Stop Selling In Japan show art 237 Never Stop Selling In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Salespeople leave money on the table. The sales process doesn’t end with a signed agreement; delivery is the critical next step. Whether immediate or delayed, it’s often handled by someone other than the salesperson—usually agents, contractors, or back-office staff. Salespeople, meanwhile, quickly shift focus on new deals, leaving follow-up with buyers neglected. This is a common mistake that can cost opportunities and relationships. Instead, it is vital to schedule post-delivery meetings with buyers to ensure satisfaction, address issues, and explore further opportunities. A...

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236 Developing Women For Leadership In Japan show art 236 Developing Women For Leadership In Japan

The Japan Business Mastery Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Japan discriminates against women in business. Former Prime Minister Abe’s modest targets for increasing female leadership numbers failed miserably. Abe’s campaign got nowhere, and with their tail between their legs, the Government significantly lowered their targets. This lack of progress is mirrored in Japan’s Rotary Clubs, traditionally male-dominated bastions within a global organization designed to foster professional connections and community contribution. Until recently, 94% of Japanese Rotary Clubs had no women members, including my own club. Since I joined in 2002, debates...

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Sales people are always under pressure to meet their targets.  In high pressure situations, this creates certain behaviours that are not in the client’s best interests.  We know we should listen carefully to what the client wants, before we attempt to suggest any solution for the buyer’s needs.  We know that by asking well designed questions, we can possibly come up with an insight that triggers a “we hadn’t thought of that” reaction at best and at worst, at least know if we have a solution for them or not.  Under pressure though, salespeople can go temporarily deaf.

Even assuming they are smart enough to ask questions in the first place, they may fall over when it comes to listening to the buyer’s answers.   They are not actually plumbing the depths of what the client is trying to achieve.  In fact, they are ignoring the hints and nuances in the sales conversation.  What are they doing?  They are fixated on their needs, their target achievement, their big bonus, their job security.

The client may have outlined what they had in mind, but that won’t scratch because the salesperson needs a bigger sale to make target.  They need to expand what the client wants regardless of whether the client needs that solution or not.   Upselling and cross selling are legitimate aspects of sales, but the purpose has to be very clear.  It is not about making the salesperson more money 

The client may not have the full view of what is possible, because they will never know the seller’s lineup of solutions as well as the salesperson.  They will also not have had deep conversations with their competitors.  They won’t have been allowed behind the velvet curtain, to see what their competitors are doing and how they are doing it.  They will not have had a broad exposure to what other firms and industries are doing in terms of best practice.

This is the value of the salesperson, because they are constantly doing all of these things.  They are collectors of stories, problems, breakthroughs, successes and can connect many dots together.  In this sense, they can see possibilities the client may not have know exist or may not have thought of.  This is where the cross-sell and the up-sell add value, because the salesperson can expand the client’s world and help them to become more successful.  That is a long way from ramping up the number value of the sale, to make target.

Nevertheless, this is what happens when the focus is on the wrong objective.  If salespeople are trying to expand the complexity of the sale, to manufacture a larger sale, at some point the client is going to drop out.  Unless they see overwhelming value in increasing the scope, they are well aware that this enlarged project is over budget.   

Now budget is just a fiction and we all know that.  It is an imaginary estimate of where expenses could be allocated and it occupies a cell in a spreadsheet line.   Many times we have seen budgets miraculously appear from nowhere, when the perceived value is great.  The “Rob Peter To Pay Paul” school of accounting. 

The point about value comes back to listening skills.  If the salesperson is focused on the client’s benefit, then they can rummage through their memory banks for best practices that could be applied to help the client achieve their aim.  In the process, this may mean increasing the investment to get a bigger return.

If the salesperson is just focused on getting their monthly number, they are not really paying attention to the client’s needs at all.   They just start padding the details of the project, so that the numbers are bumped up.  Once the client feels they are being ramped up for the salesperson’s benefit, then the trust is gone and the deal won’t happen anyway.

Salespeople need to be really listening to the needs of the client and should forget about what they want.  As Zig Ziglar said, “if you can help enough other people get what they want, then you will get what you want”.  Zig was a great listener!