263 Glen Argyle, President Baxter Japan
Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Release Date: 08/29/2025
Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“Don’t be the loud foreigner who just says we do this and this and this.” “It’s okay to make mistakes if you identify them, if you learn from them in the future.” “If you have an open mind, just listen first.” “You cannot spend enough time on just talking and communicating with people.” “For me, right now a leader is somebody who helps employees to achieve the potential, their mission.” Beat Kraehenmann is a Swiss-born electrical engineer who moved to Japan to change the trajectory of his life and immerse himself in Asia. After studying at a technical university and...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“If we can sell it in Japan, we can sell it also in other countries.” “The first thing I believe is honesty, especially in difficult situations.” “The word “musukashi” is not allowed anymore in our company.” “When an engineer is working at the customer and he cannot solve the problem… even if time is up, he would not walk away.” “You need to give them… a safety rope.” Joerg Bauer is the Representative Director of Heidelberg Japan, leading a business that provides industrial printing and packaging solutions across software, machinery, and consumables. Trained in...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“The purpose of my business is not only bake and sell, because we are introducing… culture or food habits of France to the Japanese people.” “Japanese people don't buy baguettes because they don't know how to eat it.” “After twenty shops, I needed to change my mentality to be the new type leaders.” “I have responsibility for the life of the workers.” Shu Kimura is the founder of Boulangerie Maison Kayser Japan and a fellow Rotarian. Born into the Kimura family, whose ancestors helped introduce bread-making techniques to Japan via Nagasaki (Dejima) in the 1600s, he chose to...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“I listen and I also am always very transparent.” “Who cares about what people think about me?” “If my boss, my future boss, thinks that I’m capable, I must be.” “Leadership is really defining where we’re going, whether it’s the end state or whether it’s a goal.” Mika Matsuo is a Japan-based executive and former AIG Japan CHRO known for repeatedly stepping into unfamiliar roles and delivering change. Born and raised in Japan but educated in an international school environment in Yokohama, she took an early decision to build a global career, studying at Tufts University...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“I think curiosity is very important. When you’re curious about something, you listen.” “You have to be at the forefront, not the back. You can’t, hide behind and say, ‘hey, you know, guys solve it’, right?” “When they trust you, beautiful things happen.” “Ideas are welcome. You know, ideas are free. But it’s got be data driven.” Tomo Kamiya is President Japan at PTC, a company known for parametric design and CAD-driven simulation that helps engineers model, test, and refine...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“Leading a team is every time challenging, to be honest.” “We need to make a small success every time.” “There is no official language of the company. The most important is communication.” “It’s not if we will do or not. It is how we will do it.” “Only people who are not doing nothing are not taking risk.” Benjamin Costa is the Representative Director and Managing Director of La Maison du Chocolat Japan, overseeing a luxury chocolate brand founded in Paris in 1977. Trained in civil engineering, he moved early into action sports retail, becoming a pioneer in European...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“If you trust people, your life is very nice.” “The bringing people together with one common objective needs to be carefully thought out and defining the processes very carefully needs to be thought out and don’t imagine that the process will be figured out by the people themselves.” “They are looking for a leader who is responsible, who can make the decision.” “Be transparent.” Brief Bio Armel Cahierre is a French-trained engineer who built a multi-country career across R&D, turnaround management, consulting, private equity-adjacent deal work, and consumer retail....
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“Leadership is staying ahead of change without losing authenticity”. “Trust is the real currency of sales, teams, and Japan’s business culture”. “Zeiss’s foundation model is a rare advantage: patient capital reinvested into R&D”. “Japan is less “risk-averse” than “uncertainty-avoidant” when decisions lack clarity and consensus”. “Language is helpful for connection, but not the primary qualification for leading in Japan”. Brief Bio Vincent Mathieu is the CEO of Carl Zeiss Japan, leading a multi-division portfolio spanning semiconductors, medical devices,...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“Come as you are works in Japan when leaders are also willing to read the air and meet people where they are”. “Japan isn’t as risk-averse as people think; it is uncertainty avoidance and consensus norms like nemawashi and ringi-sho that slow decisions”. “In Japan, numbers are universal, but how people feel about those numbers is where real leadership begins”. “For foreign leaders, kindness, patience, and genuine curiosity are far more powerful than charisma or title”. “Women leaders who embrace their own style, instead of copying male role models, can quietly...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Deliver the win, then ring the bell. Make small mistakes fast; make big learnings faster. Think global, act local — but don’t go native. Do the nemawashi before the meeting, not during it. Your salary is earned in the stores: go to the gemba. A 28-year Domino’s veteran, Martin Steenks began at 16 as a delivery expert in the Netherlands. He rose to store manager, multi-unit supervisor, then franchisee, building his operation to eight stores by 2019. After selling his stores, he became Head of Operations for Domino’s Netherlands, then CEO of Domino’s Taiwan in 2021, and subsequently...
info_outline“Leadership is the ability to bring people to somewhere they didn’t think they could go.”
“If you want to do co-creation, you have to do co-creation—consistently. You can’t just turn it on and off.”
“Don’t focus only on your English speakers; that creates toxic politics inside the organization.”
“There’s no point being afraid of change—it’s coming anyway, so embrace it and lead from the front.”
“Your people know you better than you know them. Consistency builds credibility and trust.”
Previously Glen was Co-Founder of KGD International G.K.; Chief of Staff, President’s Office Bayer Holdings, Bayer Yakuhin Japan; Vice-President General Manager, Japan Syneos Health Clinical Solutions; Director Government & Industry affairs, Takeda Pharmaceuticals; Director, Office of President & CEO; Manager IBERICA Holdings Japan; Corporate Planning & Portfolio & Product Strategy Planning Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma.
What role does storytelling play in leadership in Japan?
Glenn emphasises that leaders must give their teams a compelling story—one that is realistic yet inspiring, stretching potential without breaking credibility. Vision alone is insufficient; it must be supported by consistent communication, regular progress updates, and visible actions that prove the leader is living the values of the organisation. In Japan, where employees often anticipate the worst if left uninformed, transparency is the most effective way to prevent negativity and build alignment.
How should leaders engage with employees in Japan?
Engagement begins with listening. When stepping into a leadership role, Glenn made a point of conducting one-on-ones, group lunches, and field visits with customers and sales teams. This was not only to introduce himself but to gather insights from staff at all levels. By synthesising these perspectives into strategic actions, he built credibility and showed respect for employees’ experience. For him, engagement is less about imposing a new narrative and more about co-creating it with the organisation.
Why is credibility so important for leadership trust in Japan?
Trust, Glenn argues, is built on credibility—the single most important factor employees look for in their leaders. Employees observe their leader’s behaviour closely and adjust accordingly. Consistency, respect, and openness are non-negotiable. Trust is also reinforced by how leaders handle mistakes. In Japan’s perfectionist culture, errors are often stigmatised, yet Glenn maintains that mistakes must be framed as learning opportunities. Instead of rejecting ideas outright, leaders should explain decisions and encourage teams to test new approaches within agreed boundaries.
How can leaders overcome silos and matrix challenges?
Japan’s business environment is marked by entrenched silos and the complexity of global matrix structures. Glenn’s approach is to create opportunities for cross-functional interaction, sparking collaboration by bringing teams together in informal settings. He sees the role of a country manager as a translator—bridging corporate headquarters’ expectations, Japan’s cultural context, and his own leadership style. Importantly, he avoids walling Japan off as a “kingdom,” instead advocating for Japan to be a proactive participant in global change initiatives.
What advice does Glenn have for foreign leaders in Japan?
He advises incoming leaders to resist steamrolling with bold directives. In his experience, such behaviour leads to surface compliance while staff quietly wait for the leader’s departure. Instead, he recommends authenticity—defined not as brash self-assertion but as inclusivity, diversity, and consideration. Being authentic in Japan means listening, asking questions, and drawing out the deep sense of ownership that employees already hold for their work.
What is Glenn’s definition of leadership?
Ultimately, Glenn defines leadership as creating change and bringing people somewhere they did not believe they could reach. It is not about individual heroics but about crafting a collective journey, enabling people to grow and succeed together. This philosophy reflects both his global career trajectory and his long immersion in Japan’s corporate culture, offering a pragmatic yet inspiring blueprint for effective leadership in one of the world’s most complex business environments.