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309 English Speaking Japanese Staff Have Disappeared

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

Release Date: 02/25/2024

How To Defeat Imposter Syndrome As A Presenter show art How To Defeat Imposter Syndrome As A Presenter

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

We don’t get the chance to do so many public presentations in business, so it becomes a hard skill set to build or maintain.  The internal presentations we give at work tend to be very mundane. Often we are just reporting on the numbers and why they aren’t where they are supposed to be or where we to date are with the project.   These are normally rather informal affairs and we are not in highly persuade mode when we give them.  We should be clear and concise, but we probably don’t really get out of first gear as a presenter. Obviously, giving public talks is a lot...

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Create Raving Fans When Presenting In Japan show art Create Raving Fans When Presenting In Japan

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

We can speak to a group. Then there is another level, where we try to totally captivate our audience.  What makes the difference?  The content could even be the same, but in the hands of one person it is dry and delivered in a boring manner.  Someone else can take the same basic materials and really bring it to life.  We see this with music.  The same lyrics, but with a different arrangement and something magical happens. This new version becomes a smash hit.  Speeches are similar.  A boring rendition is given a delivery make over and suddenly has the...

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Real World Business Negotiating In Japan show art Real World Business Negotiating In Japan

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

We have many images of negotiation thanks to the media.  It could be movie scenes of tough negotiators or reports on political negotiations with lunatic led rogue states.  Most of these representations however have very little relevance in the real world of business.  A lot of the work done on negotiations focuses on “tactics”.  This is completely understandable for any transactional based negotiations.  Those are usually one off deals, where there is no great likelihood of any on-going relationship continuing between buyer and seller. This is false flag.  The...

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Be Careful of Client White Noise show art Be Careful of Client White Noise

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

Sales people are always under pressure to meet their targets.  In high pressure situations, this creates certain behaviours that are not in tune with 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” or “we haven’t planned for that” reaction at best.  At worst, at least they know whether we have a solution for them or...

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Spellbinding Speech Endings show art Spellbinding Speech Endings

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

It is rare to see a presentation completed well, be it inside the organization, to the client or to a larger audience.  The energy often quickly drops away, the voice just fades right out and there is no clear signal that this is the end.  The audience is unsure whether to applaud or if there is more coming.  Everyone is stuck in limbo wondering what to do next.  The narrative arc seems to go missing in action at the final stage and the subsequent silence becomes strained.  It sometimes reminds me of classical music performances, when I am not sure if this is the time...

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Selling Into Each Region Is Different In Japan show art Selling Into Each Region Is Different In Japan

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

Japan is a big small place.  It is about the same size as the UK, but is covered in mountains, the latter making up 70% of the land area.  We have very few of those horizon stretching field vistas like they have in England.  This mountainous aspect has led to quite strong sub-regional differences here, especially reflected in language, customs and cuisine.  England has these too, but I think Japan is more pronounced in this regard.  These differences pop up when you are selling here as well.  The following are my experiences having sold in all of these cites and...

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How To Present As A Team When Selling show art How To Present As A Team When Selling

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

In business, we are asked to present as a team.  We may be pitching for new business and the presentation requires different specialist areas of expertise.  This is quite different to doing something on your own, where you are the star and have full control over what is going on.  One of the big mistakes with amateur presenters is they don’t rehearse.  They just turn up and fluff it.  They blow up their personal and organisational brands.  When in a team environment, you absolutely cannot neglect the rehearsal component.  There will be many sessions needed...

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313 Taking Questions When Presenting In Japan show art 313 Taking Questions When Presenting In Japan

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

 The Question and Answer component of talks are a fixture that we don’t normally analyse for structure possibilities. Having an audience interested enough in your topic to ask questions is a heartening occurrence.  When we are planning the talk though, we may just neglect to factor this Q&A element into our planning. We may have considered what some potential questions might be, so that we are prepared for them, but maybe that is the extent of the planning.  We need to go a bit broader though in our thinking about the full extent of the talk we are going to give. ...

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312 Productivity Will  Determine Japan's Future show art 312 Productivity Will  Determine Japan's Future

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

During the “bubble years” of surging economic growth, Japan could not keep up with the supply of workers for the 3K jobs – kitsui, kitanai, kiken or difficult, dirty, dangerous undertakings. The 1985 Plaza Accord released a genie out of the bottle in the form of a very strong yen, which made everything, everywhere seems dirt cheap. Japanese people traveled abroad as tourists in mass numbers for the first time. They often created havoc in international destinations, because they were so gauche – a bit like we have been experiencing with mass Chinese tourism. Companies bought up foreign...

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311 Value Triumphs All In Sales In Japan show art 311 Value Triumphs All In Sales In Japan

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

We believe in our product and we are very knowledgeable about the facts, details, specs, etc.  We launch straight into our presentation of the details with the buyer.  Next, they want to negotiate the price.  Do we see the connection here, between our sales approach and the result, the entire catastrophe?  The reality is often salespeople are slogging it out, lowering the price, hurting their positioning of the brand, lowering their own commission. Unfortunately, in Japan, once we have established a discounted price for the product or service, it is very difficult to move...

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Japan seems to be going in opposing directions at the same time, when it comes to the supply of internationalised staff suitable for foreign companies.  The statistics show a peak in 2004 of 83,000 Japanese students venturing off-shore.  This dropped to a low of 57,500 in 2011 and since that point has climbed back above 60,000.  Just to put that in context, Korea has over 117,000 students studying overseas but has half the population of Japan.  Today, with many international companies looking to hire English speaking, internationalised Japanese staff, the supply situation is looking grim. 

Some Japanese domestic companies are becoming strong competitors because they need more international Japanese as well.  These firms are branching out overseas because they fear the decline in the Japanese consumer population will stunt their future growth.  Once upon a time, this meant shipping Japanese expats off overseas to be forgotten for five years, before sending the next one.  The shortage of staff in Japan makes this proposition harder these days, because they are needed here as the boomer generation retires.  Also with the increasing integration of overseas enterprise purchases into the Japanese mother ship, the internationalisation of the local headquarters staff is also becoming more important.

So we have less Japanese youth going overseas and an increasing demand at home for those with good English and international experience.  Previously the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) had been attempting to address this shortage. In 2013, the Japan Revitalization Strategy announced a government target of doubling the number of students studying abroad to 120,000 by 2020. There have been previous programmes introduced such as the “Reinventing Japan” project (2011), the “Tobitate!” (Leap for Tomorrow!) study abroad campaign (2013), and the TeamUp campaign (2015).  Looking at the numbers though, none of these has had much impact to date.

The current Government target of increasing the overseas Japanese student varsity population to 150,000 by 2030 sounds like an education bureaucrat’s wild fantasy, but at least there is an effort being made to address the shortage.  I won’t be holding my breath in anticipation that their programmes will be producing the numbers needed in the immediate future.

Why aren’t this generation heading overseas to study?  A British Council study found four key reasons: 1. Don’t have the language skills  2. Too expensive, 3. Unsafe and 4. Courses abroad are too difficult. 

There has been a lot of discussion also about the inward looking nature of this generation.  The Lehman Shock put loyal staff out on the street and shook up their kid’s assumptions about following the same lifetime employment path of their fathers and mothers.  Consequently, like Millennials elsewhere, they seem very focused on themselves. They don’t have much patience for things which are mendokusai or troublesome. That particularly includes studying English and dealing with pesky foreigners. 

The 3/11 triple whammy of earthquake, tsunami and triple nuclear reactor core meltdown refocused everyone on family, staying close (kizuna) and personal safety.  Going overseas doesn’t really fit into that picture.  Having said that though, the British Council study concluded that the interest in studying abroad is still strong.  The interest may be there, but their actions are not matching the needs of business here.

The risk aversion of the Japanese mentality also operates against going overseas.  Their perfectionist qualities also make the mastery of English seem like the impossible dream.  Getting a job when you get back is an issue because of the inflexible nature of Japanese company hiring practices.  Being older than your sempai (seniors) who entered the company before you, is confusing for the company hierarchical culture.  Fitting in is also harder because now because they no longer think the same as everyone else.  They have dared to be different and this is not a formula for career success in Japan.  Fitting in and being just like everyone else is preferred

There are a couple of things we can do.  Larger companies can look at providing scholarships, with golden handcuff clauses, to assist the motivated who want to study overseas, but may be financially restrained from doing so. 

Related to that is the issue of keeping internationalised youth in the company after hiring them.  This is where company culture becomes a winner, if you are smart about it.   Conditions of employ can be a lot more flexible than in competitor Japanese companies.  With a declining youth population, (the number of those aged zero to thirty-four, halves over the next 40 years) employers will have to become a lot more flexible anyway, if they want to retain staff. 

These graduates often want to work in an international environment.  However, they find themselves surrounded by local Japanese colleagues and they can’t get to use that English they worked so hard to improve.  If you are running a multi-national company, why not create opportunities for them to use their English by making English the real language of the office.  Monday and Wednesday can be designated Japanese day and Tuesday and Thursday English day.  Friday is your free choice.

Getting middle managers properly trained to lead the young is going to be a key to retention and even more so with those international youth returned from study overseas.  Coaching and communication skills are going to be at a premium, because in the coming free agent world of work, the young will walk out the door to the competitor without hesitation. 

Recruiters will be ringing their cash registers hard as they pick up fees for luring your young away by painting a glowing picture of the greener grass at your rival’s firm.  Your managers have to preclude that possibility by knowing how to provide the young a style of leadership they themselves never experienced.  Tough love leading is definitely out. If your leaders pursue that route all that will be left will be tough times, as staff shortages hit companies hard.  Our hiring Armageddon winter has well and truly arrived and hungry recruiters are the White Walkers taking our young English speakers away from us.