272 Erwin Ysewijn, President, Semikron Danfoss Japan
Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Release Date: 10/31/2025
Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“The amount of time you need to spend listening in Japan is very high.” “You have to turn up your EQ sensitivity or your EQ radar very, very high.” “No matter what, love it.” “Feedback should be ninety percent positive.” “Leadership is achieving the organisation’s goal by maximising the potential of your team.” Paul Kraft is the Country Manager for Haribo in Japan and a seasoned food and beverage executive whose career has crossed global brands, entrepreneurial ventures, and distributor-led market development. His relationship with Japan began when he first visited in...
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“Leadership is really like leading by example.” “I come in. I listen a lot.” “Do what you say.” “You need to gain the trust of the people and show that you actually care.” “Everything can be trained.” Wolfgang Bierer is the President of Endeavor SBC and a long-term Japan business builder whose career has moved across engineering, consulting, retail, fashion, medical devices, software, and interim executive leadership. Originally from Germany, he studied electrical engineering at the University of Stuttgart and first came to Japan through a German government youth leader...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“Very few people in finance can make a declarative sentence.” “If you can scale your message from thirty seconds to three minutes, you’ve got it made.” “We want to only do legal business, it has to be rewarding, and it has to be fun.” You have to sit on your hands in Japan — silence doesn’t mean failure.” "The Japanese want to be recognised as individuals, not as ‘we Japanese’.” Frank Packard is the Founder and President of AAA Partners Japan, a Tokyo-based firm specialising in fund placement and financial advisory. Born in Japan and educated in the United States,...
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“The team’s the most important thing.” “I didn’t listen very well.” “I thought I had most of the answers when I didn’t even know the problem.” “Treat them as they want to be treated.” “If I screwed up, it’s also my job to go to the team and say, ‘Hey, I screwed up and we’re going to change.’” Jim Weisser is President and co-founder of SignTime in Japan, a serial entrepreneur, angel investor and long-time participant in the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan. He arrived in Japan in 1993 after studying chemical engineering and briefly working in a chemical...
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“Trust is really the only currency that is the beginning and the end of pretty much every human relation.” “You give trust first, before you get trust.” “I want to make sure that the least empowered person in the room can have a great idea and the best idea will win.” “You need to be the fuel for their sparks.” “If you give them permission and you will never punish them for honesty.” Brief Bio Wolfgang Angyal is President of Riedel Japan and one of the rare foreign executives who has built a long leadership career in Japan from the ground up. Originally from Austria and...
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“the most important thing, I mean in Japan, for business, is to hire the right people” “the keyword is gaining trust” “you need to allow people to make mistakes” “the personal relationship in Japan are extremely important” “learn the language” Lorenzo Scrimizzi is the President of Carpigiani Japan and an Italian executive whose career in Japan spans more than two decades across multiple industries. Originally trained as an engineer, he first arrived in Japan on a two-year assignment connected to precision equipment for the automotive sector. What began as a...
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“Japan is different and hard.” “It’s consistency, it’s sustainability of the vision and the theme that’s going to matter.” “You couldn’t be the super-God sits up in the ivory tower.” “Leadership is about inspiring people to go somewhere that they wouldn’t necessarily go on their own.” “Respect the history and the culture that is Japan.” Brief Bio Bob Noddin is the CEO of AIG Japan and a long-time Asia business leader whose career reflects deep adaptability across cultures, industries, and operating environments. His connection with Japan began in 1982 as a college...
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“Everyone wants to play for a winning team.” “You’ve got to go to war with the army you’ve got, not the army you wish you had.” “In Japan, talk is cheap. Nobody really pays attention to what people say. They pay attention to what people do.” “My philosophy is every employee should be a shareholder in the firm.” “This is a marathon, not a sprint.” Mike Alfant is the CEO of Fusion Systems and one of the more established foreign founders in Japan’s technology sector. Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, he studied computer science and spent roughly a decade on Wall...
info_outlineJapan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
“this job is really primarily a people job” “if you get the right people, you don’t have to spend a lot of time micromanaging; get out of their way and let them do their thing” “you have to be the type of boss that people are not afraid to bring bad news” “you all have everything you need to be successful at Dow” “if you treat Japanese people with integrity, trust, respect, like you would want to be treated like anywhere else in the world, you’re going to be fine” Brief Bio Peter Jennings is President of Dow in Japan and Korea, overseeing a multi-billion-dollar business...
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“The key thing is that the leader needs to be able to identify where those turning points or tipping points are so that they don't become a bottleneck in that process.” “In most cases, I feel like I only have about 30% of the necessary information to make me comfortable to make that decision.” “Consensus in a Japanese sense is that a little bit of everyone's idea is taken and included in the final solution so that everyone feels that they've been part of the final solution.” “If you want to be successful in business in Japan… it’s patience, persistence, and politeness.”...
info_outline“Get your hands dirty: credibility in Japan is built in the field, not the boardroom”.
“Bridges beat barriers: headquarters alignment turns local problems into solvable projects”.
“Make people proud: structured “poster sessions” spark ownership, ideas and nemawashi”.
“Decisions at the edge: push market choices to those closest to customers, then coach”.
“Trust travels: clear logic, calm feedback, and consistency convert caution into commitment”.
Belgian-born power-electronics engineer turned global executive, Erwin Yseijin leads Semikron Danfoss in Japan with more than three decades across Japan, Germany, and Taiwan. Beginning as a hardware engineer in switch-mode power supplies and motor drives, he joined a Japanese semiconductor firm in Munich in 1989 and relocated to Japan in 1992, learning operations, production planning, quotations, and logistics from the inside. Subsequent leadership roles at Infineon included Japan and a five-year post-merger integration in Taiwan overseeing ~50 R&D engineers and close OEM relationships across PCs, routers, and wireless. After a gallium-nitride startup stint in Dresden, he joined Semikron, later Semikron Danfoss, leading APAC reorganisation, factory consolidation, and a direct-plus-distribution sales model, before becoming Japan President. Fluent in the technical, commercial, and cultural languages of the region, he specialises in aligning headquarters and local teams, and in building pragmatic, customer-led organisations in Japan.
Erwin Yasvin exemplifies the hands-on leader who earns trust in Japan by showing up where problems live. His credo—“get your hands dirty”—is not metaphorical. When customers escalate issues, he goes with sales to uncover root causes and secure head-office commitments on the spot. That credibility shortens cycles in a market where 100% quality is table stakes and where the service “extra mile” extends even a decade beyond a nominal warranty.
A European by training and temperament, he learned Japanese corporate practice from the inside in the early 1990s, when multilayered hierarchies still defined decision flow. Rather than railing against the pyramid, he mined its upside: leaders who rise through layers bring practical judgement and empathy for shop-floor realities. Yet he also streamlined speed by bridging headquarters and Japan—translating commercial logic, technical constraints, and customer detail into decisions the field can act on.
He builds voice and pride through “poster sessions”: monthly forums where team members present customers, markets, wins, and bottlenecks to peers. That design triggers nemawashi—quiet pre-alignment—and fosters cross-functional curiosity. By picking one or two ideas from each session and ensuring execution, he turns speaking up into visible impact.
Decision rights sit with those closest to the market. Each salesperson owns one or two verticals—motor drives, wind, solar, energy storage, UPS—with accountability for target customers, competitive intel, product needs, and pricing. Headquarters supports with budgets for samples and after-warranty analysis, signalling trust with money. Where ambiguity or urgency is high—such as the 2022 exchange-rate shock—he decomposes the “working package” into digestible actions, avoiding paralysis.
Mistakes are coached privately and framed as leadership accountability: if an error occurred, expectations weren’t clear enough. Monthly one-on-ones, written agendas, and evidence-led conversations establish a durable logic chain that travels across language boundaries. Culture-wise, he neither copies a Japanese firm nor imposes a foreign pace. Instead, he articulates values—efficient workdays, transparent processes, skill development—while adapting compensation to local norms through a hybrid bonus model that blends guaranteed and performance-tied elements.
Asked how outsiders should lead in Japan, Yasvin stresses credibility, example, and constancy: be present in the hard moments, don’t over-promise, and speak in clear, digestible steps. In a country where consensus and detail orientation are prized, leaders win by aligning logic with respect—turning caution into momentum without sacrificing quality.
Q&A Summary
What makes leadership in Japan unique?
Japan blends layered hierarchies with high expectations for managers to understand field-level problems. Leaders gain status less by slogan and more by track record. Consensus is built through nemawashi and formalised via ringi-sho, with detail-rich documentation that honours uncertainty avoidance while preserving quality. The upside of layers is decision empathy; the downside can be speed—unless leaders bridge across functions and headquarters.
Why do global executives struggle?
Many push headquarters logic without translating it into local realities: customer expectations of zero defects; service beyond written warranty; and process fidelity (e.g., traceability standards) that must integrate into Japanese customers’ own systems. Leaders also misread how “pride” shows up—quietly, not publicly—and miss mechanisms (like poster sessions) that let people contribute without confrontation.
Is Japan truly risk-averse?
Not exactly; it’s uncertainty-averse. When leaders clarify the “box” and broaden it gradually, teams will step forward. Decomposing problems (e.g., FX pass-through frameworks) turns ambiguity into executable steps. Decision intelligence—structured data, clear thresholds, defined triggers—reduces uncertainty and enables action without violating quality norms.
What leadership style actually works?
Lead by example; be visibly present at customer flashpoints. Push decisions to the edge (market owners), back them with budgets, and coach in private. Use structured forums to surface ideas, then implement a few to prove that speaking up matters. Keep corporate values intact (efficient workdays, skill building) while tuning incentives to local practice.
How can technology help?
Operational dashboards that tie customer issues to root-cause analytics, plus digital twins of power-module reliability and logistics flows, elevate conversations from anecdote to evidence. Traceability systems aligned to global standards reduce manual re-entry and delays, while decision thresholds (e.g., FX bands) automate price updates and ensure fair, consistent application.
Does language proficiency matter?
Helpful, not decisive. Clear logic, written agendas, data, and diagrams travel farther than perfect grammar. Leaders who frame problems visually, confirm next actions, and close the loop consistently can overcome linguistic gaps, while continuing to study Japanese accelerates trust and nuance.
What’s the ultimate leadership lesson?
Credibility compounds. Show up in the hard moments, keep promises small and solid, convert ideas into implementation, and protect quality while increasing speed through better alignment. Over time, trust becomes a structural advantage with customers and within the team.
About the Author
Dr. Greg Story, Ph.D. in Japanese Decision-Making, is President of Dale Carnegie Tokyo Training and Adjunct Professor at Griffith University. He is a two-time winner of the Dale Carnegie “One Carnegie Award” (2018, 2021) and recipient of the Griffith University Business School Outstanding Alumnus Award (2012). As a Dale Carnegie Master Trainer, Greg is certified to deliver globally across all leadership, communication, sales, and presentation programs, including Leadership Training for Results.
He has written several books, including three best-sellers — Japan Business Mastery, Japan Sales Mastery, and Japan Presentations Mastery — along with Japan Leadership Mastery and How to Stop Wasting Money on Training. His works have also been translated into Japanese, including Za Eigyō (ザ営業), Purezen no Tatsujin (プレゼンの達人), Torēningu de Okane o Muda ni Suru no wa Yamemashō (トレーニングでお金を無駄にするのはやめましょう), and Gendaiban “Hito o Ugokasu” Rīdā (現代版「人を動かす」リーダー).
In addition to his books, Greg publishes daily blogs on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter, offering practical insights on leadership, communication, and Japanese business culture. He is also the host of six weekly podcasts, including The Leadership Japan Series, The Sales Japan Series, The Presentations Japan Series, Japan Business Mastery, and Japan’s Top Business Interviews. On YouTube, he produces three weekly shows — The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show, Japan Business Mastery, and Japan’s Top Business Interviews — which have become leading resources for executives seeking strategies for success in Japan.