283 Beat Kraehenmann — Managing Director, Levitronix Japan
Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Release Date: 01/30/2026
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“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 working in network engineering at Swiss Railways, he relocated to Japan independently, began full-time language study, and built early career momentum through contract roles before securing permanent employment as a network engineer. A long-time university friend working at Levitronix connected him to the company when the Swiss headquarters needed someone who could bridge Japan and Switzerland across language, culture, and technical detail.
He joined Levitronix Japan around twelve and a half years ago and became Managing Director roughly a year later—his first formal management role. Under his leadership, the organisation expanded from four people in one location to a thirteen-person team spread across five offices (from Tokyo through Ogaki, Kyoto, Fukuoka and Kumamoto), supporting demanding customers in semiconductor and life sciences manufacturing with magnetic levitation pump technology designed to reduce particle contamination in ultra-fine production environments.
Beat Kraehenmann leads Levitronix Japan at the intersection of Swiss engineering precision, Japan’s uncompromising quality expectations, and the realities of scaling a specialist business across multiple regional offices. Levitronix is a Swiss company producing fluid control devices—especially pumps for semiconductor manufacturing and life science production—where particle avoidance is mission-critical. As chip structures push deeper into nanometre ranges, even microscopic contamination can become catastrophic, and the firm’s magnetic levitation approach is positioned as a practical advantage in an industry that prizes stability and repeatability.
Kraehenmann’s leadership story begins with a deliberate personal disruption: he chose Japan because it felt safe enough to navigate while still offering a gateway to broader Asia, and he committed to language learning on the ground. That same pattern—commit, learn, adapt—shapes his approach as Managing Director. He describes leadership less as command-and-control and more as enabling others: providing the means, information, and training so employees can succeed without dependency on him.
In Japan, where consensus-building (nemawashi, ringi-sho) and uncertainty avoidance often influence decision velocity, he emphasises communication discipline: listening, checking understanding, and creating the time to align—especially across non-native English environments where misunderstandings compound quickly. He also frames long-term commitment as a trust accelerator, both for customers and for employees: staying power matters in Japan, and reliability is read as intent.
A defining cultural bridge in his management is psychological safety around learning. Levitronix’s stance that mistakes are acceptable when identified and learned from runs counter to “no defect” instincts that can dominate Japanese quality mindsets. Kraehenmann doesn’t dismiss that instinct; instead, he contextualises it with real-world examples of fast growth, supplier constraints, and even customer admissions that quality issues are a daily struggle. The message is not “mistakes don’t matter,” but “learning matters more than denial”—a practical compromise that maintains credibility with Japanese expectations while keeping a smaller, faster-moving organisation functional.
As the company expanded geographically, he encountered the classic distributed-team problem: “frogs in wells” with limited visibility into each other’s context. His solution is deliberately flexible—more meetings when communication gaps appear, fewer when the system stabilises—paired with careful hiring for autonomy.
He also differentiates customer engagement from template-driven “Japanese” presentations, pushing teams to stand out through demonstrations and tactile proof, while still respecting relationship norms. And while AI dominates headlines, he notes semiconductor’s conservatism: innovation must serve stable mass manufacturing, not disrupt it for fashion—though decision intelligence, digital twins, and data-driven reliability will increasingly shape how suppliers prove value without threatening uptime.
Q&A Summary
What makes leadership in Japan unique?
Leadership in Japan is shaped by long-term orientation, relationship continuity, and high expectations for reliability. Consensus processes (nemawashi, ringi-sho) can be invisible to outsiders yet decisive in outcomes, and leaders must work with cultural uncertainty avoidance rather than against it. For Kraehenmann, the practical implication is time: time to listen, time to confirm understanding, and time to build trust through consistent behaviour.
Why do global executives struggle?
Many global executives arrive expecting headquarters logic to translate directly, then get frustrated by different rhythms of decision-making, communication, and customer expectations. Kraehenmann’s warning is straightforward: don’t arrive as “the loud foreigner.” Respect is conveyed through curiosity, patience, and willingness to adapt the approach to local reality—especially before trying to “fix” anything.
Is Japan truly risk-averse?
Japan often appears risk-averse because the cost of defects is treated as existential, particularly in high-precision industries. But Kraehenmann frames the nuance: once trust exists and the learning story is clear, improvement is expected and experimentation is possible. Risk is not rejected; it is managed through process, narrative clarity, and demonstrated commitment to not repeating errors.
What leadership style actually works?
A credible, team-embedded style works: being “part of the team,” leading from the front, and doing whatever needs doing. Kraehenmann positions himself as a counsellor and mentor—helping employees prepare, equipping them with case studies, training, and presentation skills—rather than obsessing over targets and directives. This balances authority with approachability and reinforces “same boat” solidarity.
How can technology help?
Technology helps when it improves stability and learning without threatening continuity. In conservative manufacturing environments, tools that support reliability—analytics, decision intelligence, simulation, and digital twins—tend to be more acceptable than disruptive experimentation. AI may have value, but only when it strengthens repeatability, quality, and uptime rather than becoming a buzzword project.
Does language proficiency matter?
Yes, because language is trust and speed. Kraehenmann notes that multilingual environments are often “non-native on both sides,” which increases misunderstanding risk. Investing time in communication—speaking, listening, re-checking meaning—matters as much as vocabulary. Japanese proficiency also improves daily work enjoyment and strengthens customer and employee rapport, even if fluency takes years.
What’s the ultimate leadership lesson?
The ultimate lesson is enabling others: leadership is helping employees fulfil their potential and mission, and doing the quiet work of communication and trust-building that makes that possible. In Japan, that means commitment, humility, and consistent follow-through—paired with a learning mindset that treats mistakes as data, not shame.
Author Credentials
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.