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303 Leaders Need To Recognise Their People's Work In Japan

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Release Date: 01/14/2024

381 Why Japan’s Talent Crunch Makes Retention a Core Strategy show art 381 Why Japan’s Talent Crunch Makes Retention a Core Strategy

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why is “recruit and retain” becoming the central talent strategy in Japan? Japan faces a demographic crunch: too few young people can meet employer demand, and this shortage has persisted for years. Since 2015, the shrinking youth population has pushed competition for early-career talent higher. With a smaller talent pool, every hiring decision carries more risk, and every resignation hits harder. Turnover among new recruits has started climbing again. A few years ago, more than 40% of new recruits left after training; the figure now sits around 34%, and it may rise further. Companies...

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380 Control the Narrative: What Buyers See Before You Meet show art 380 Control the Narrative: What Buyers See Before You Meet

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why do clients “check you out” online before the first sales meeting? Buyers now assume that everything about us is only a few mouse clicks away, so online “checking you out” happens before the calendar invite becomes real. Because this scrutiny is routine and increasing, therefore your credibility is being scored before you speak a word in the meeting. The script frames this as a certainty for salespeople: prospects will look at your social media and search results to decide who you are and whether you are worth their time. Because the check happens before the conversation, therefore...

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379 Why Your Posture Is Important When Presenting show art 379 Why Your Posture Is Important When Presenting

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why does posture matter for presenters on stage and on camera? Answer: Posture shapes both breathing and perception. A straighter posture aids airflow and spinal alignment, while signalling confidence and credibility. Because audiences often equate height and upright stance with leadership, slouching erodes trust before you say a word. Mini-summary: Straight posture helps you breathe better and look more credible. What posture choices project confidence in the room? Answer: Stand tall with your chin up so your gaze is level. Use intentional forward lean and chin drop only when...

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378 The Foreign Leader In Japan show art 378 The Foreign Leader In Japan

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

  Why do “crash-through” leadership styles fail in Japan?  Force does not embed change. Employees hold a social contract with their firms, and client relationships are prized. Attempts to push damaging directives meet stiff resistance, and status alone cannot compel people whose careers outlast the expatriate’s assignment. Mini-summary: Pressure triggers pushback; relationships and continuity beat status. What happens when a foreign boss vents or shows anger? Answer: It backfires. Losing one’s temper is seen as childish and out of control. Credible leaders stay...

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377 Curiosity, Then Context: The Smart Short Pitch show art 377 Curiosity, Then Context: The Smart Short Pitch

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Why use a one-minute pitch when you dislike pitching? Answer: In settings with almost no face-to-face time—especially networking—you cannot ask deep questions to uncover needs. A one-minute pitch becomes a bridge to a follow-up meeting rather than a full sales push, avoiding the “bludgeon with data” approach. Mini-summary: Use a short bridge pitch when time is scarce; aim for the meeting, not the sale. When is a one-minute pitch most useful? Answer: At events where you are filtering many brief conversations to find prospects worth a longer office meeting. You do not want...

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376 In Japan, Should Presenters Recycle Content Between Talks? show art 376 In Japan, Should Presenters Recycle Content Between Talks?

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

 Yes—recycling is iteration, not repetition. Each audience, venue and timing change what lands, so a second delivery becomes an upgrade: trim what dragged, expand what sparked questions, and replace weaker examples. The result is safer and stronger than untested, wholly new content. Mini-summary: Recycle to refine—familiar structure, higher quality. How can you create opportunities to repeat a talk? Answer: Negotiate for tailoring rather than exclusivity. Many hosts want “unique” content; offer contextualised examples, revised emphasis and organisation-specific language...

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375 Mentoring Under Pressure: How Bosses in Japan Make Change Work show art 375 Mentoring Under Pressure: How Bosses in Japan Make Change Work

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

In Japan, why is “capable and loyal” no longer enough? Answer: Technology, the post-1990 restructuring of management layers, and globalisation have reshaped how work moves in Japan. Because hierarchies compressed and expectations widened, teams now face faster cycles and more frequent transitions. AI will add further disruption, so stability must be created by leadership rather than assumed from tenure. Mini-summary: Hierarchy compression + globalisation + AI = persistent change; leadership provides the rhythm that tenure used to provide. In Japan, what should managers do first...

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374 Selling in Japan: Why Two Out of Six Is a Win show art 374 Selling in Japan: Why Two Out of Six Is a Win

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Salespeople worldwide use frameworks to measure meeting success, but Japan’s unique business culture challenges many Western methods. Let’s explore the BANTER model—Budget, Authority, Need, Timing, Engagement, Request—and see how it fits into Japan’s sales environment. 1. What is the BANTER model in sales? BANTER is a simple six-point scoring system for sales calls. Each letter stands for a key factor: Budget, Authority, Need, Timing, Engagement, and Request. A salesperson assigns one point for each element successfully confirmed. A perfect score means six out of six, showing a...

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373 From Scripted to Authentic- How Leaders Win on Stage show art 373 From Scripted to Authentic- How Leaders Win on Stage

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

In high-stakes business events, especially in Japan, executives are often forced to deliver presentations crafted by others. This creates a dangerous disconnect between speaker and message. Let’s explore how leaders can reclaim authenticity and impact, even when the material is not their own. Why is speaking from a borrowed script so risky? Executives frequently inherit content from PR or marketing teams. These materials may be polished, but they are rarely authentic. Japan’s perfection-driven corporate culture magnifies the stress, where even a small misstep can harm reputations. When...

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372 From Ritz-Carlton to Pasona: What Leaders Can Learn About Mood Making show art 372 From Ritz-Carlton to Pasona: What Leaders Can Learn About Mood Making

The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

What does it mean for a leader to be the “mood maker”? A mood maker is someone who sets the emotional tone of the team. When leaders stay isolated in plush executive offices, they risk losing contact with their people. Research and experience show that a leader’s visibility directly affects engagement, loyalty, and performance. Leaders who project energy and conviction, day after day, create the emotional climate that shapes culture. Mini-summary: Leaders set the emotional temperature—visibility and energy are non-negotiable. Why does visibility matter so much? Japanese business...

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The Spa magazine in Japan previously released the results of a survey of 1,140 male full-time employees in their 40s, about what they hated about their jobs.  The top four complaints were salaries have not risen because of decades of deflation; a sense of being underappreciated and undervalued and a lost sense of purpose. Salaries are a function of deflation and commercial success, as well as the tightness of the labour market. Feeling unappreciated and underevaluated though are both boss failings unrelated to the economy and cannot be esily dismissed.  This outcome is the direct result of decades of neglect of the soft skills of leadership.  

How do we improve on this situation?  We need better leader eduation. The feeling of being valued by the boss and the organisation is the trigger to producing high levels of engagement for your work.  Japan is renown for always scoring poorly on international comparative engagement surveys.  APAC as a region usually trails last across the world and Japan is usually situated at the very bottom for engagement scores in APAC. The global study on engagement by Dale Carnegie showed that feeling valued was the key factor.  The results for Japan were the same.

Good to know that we have the answer at hand to improve levels of engagement.  By the way, disengaged or hardly engaged staff are not going to add any additional extras to their work or be motivated to come up with a better way of doing things.  Innovation requires some sense of caring about the organization.  So work productivity and innovation both need higher levels of engagement to help us get anywhere.  In any competitive business environment, the abilty to out innovate your rivals has to be a very high value to the firm. 

Fine, but so what?  How do we get leaders who were raised in a different world of work – the bishibishi(relentlessly super strict) school of leading to now switch to becoming more warm and fuzzy?  Telling them to do so is an interesting intervention by senior management that will go precisely nowhere.  This requires re-education on what we need from our leaders.  The most widespread system of education in corporate Japan is OJT (On The Job Training).  How does your bishibishi boss change mindset alone?  They can’t. That is why training is required to better inform bosses about how to gain willing cooperation from subordinates, instead of just pulling rank on them to drive their obedience.

In the modern era, young people have all become free-agents, like the baseball stars.  In their parent’s time, staff were fearful of being able to get another job, if they strayed from the beaten path and quit where they worked.  Not today.  There is an army of hungry recruiters scouring firms to lift people out and place them in another company.  They can click the ticket for 40% of the first year salary on the way through this change of employ. By the way, the individual recruiter gets 50% of the fee.  It is a highly lucrative profession and relatively young, unremarkable people make a lot of money so the incentives to take your people and place them somewhere else is super high.  In this circumstance, there is no need to make it any easier for the recruiters by treating your staff badly.

How to deal with mistakes is a key to the future in a society that hasn’t worked out that mistakes are the glide path to learning.  Japan is a mistake free zone and this is a big disincentive to experiment, to try the new.  Locating oneself in the middle of your comfort zone makes the best sense, so you want to avoid all change efforts.  Here is the contradiction. If you want innovation, progress, creativity, then change must be embraced.  That also means embracing risk - the risk of error.

If the internal evaluation process for promotion is used to focus all the failings and insufficiencies of the staff - the dreaded HR little black book of staff mistakes - then don’t expect your shop to become a hotbed of innovation anytime soon.  What should we be doing? Leaders need to be helping staff lead intentional lives.  Goals, strategies to achieve the goals, milestones, targets all come as part of the package.  This is different from being Mr. or Ms. Perfect and holding the team to standards you yourself can never possibly achieve.

Encouraging people to come out of their comfort zones, take some risks and try new things requires a lot of communication skills.  It requires feedback, but not critique.  Telling people they are wrong, may make the boss feel superior and good, but it kills staff motivation and interest in doing things any differently.  Good/better feedback is a better strategy.  Tell them what they are doing that is going well and praise them for that.  Tell them what they could do to make things go even better.  The point is still communicated, but in a much better way and will be received in a more positive frame. 

Because of the old fashioned style of management in vogue here, Japanese bosses are actually untrained in how to give praise.  Telling staff “Good  Job” is not praise by the way.  That comment is a very vague reflection on a piece of work.  Tasks have many facets, the staff know that and so which part of that project did they do well?  We need bosses to be very specific about which bit was done well and how it was done well.  Leader then need to explain how that task fits into the big picture of the organization and encourage the staff member to keep doing that. 

Clearly, the leader in Japan has to do better.  The soft skills area is where the greatest productivity gains will come from, because hard skills education in Japan is already maximised.  This is the next frontier of leadership. If Japan can unlock the full potential of the working population, we are in for an exciting future.  If it can’t, then things look bleak. 

What is happening in your organisation at the moment?  What are your leaders focused on?  What is current your staff attrition rate?  How long does it take to hire in new people and what is ther quality like? How expensive is it to replace people?  Do you have strategy for all of this?  The best time to start was yesterday.