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SCCIJ Annual General Meeting

Swiss Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Japan (SCCIJ)

As a new member of the Swiss Chamber of Commerce in Japan, I was invited to attend the 28th Annual General Meeting. It was my first AGM, therefore quite excited to go and join the meeting held at the Hilton Tokyo. Beside many members of Swiss companies here in Japan also His Excellency, the Ambassador of Switzerland to Japan, Mr. Paul Fivat was attending the meeting.

Before the official start, it was nice to exchange business cards and have a chat with Swiss business people in Japan. Some are here for over 25 years with lots and lots of knowledge, contacts and experience doing business in the Japanese market, but also a few newbies like me. It was great to talk some Swiss German anyway.

After the official part with various reports, the voting for the budget 2010 and for new members to the Executive Committee, there was a fine dinner with Swiss wine from Morges. It was a great evening in Shinjuku.

SCCIJ Annual General Meeting

SCCIJ Annual General Meeting

Dinner at Hilton Tokyo

Dinner at Hilton Tokyo

White Collar Efficiency in Japan

Luncheon meeting

I could attend yesterday a luncheon meeting organized by the Swiss Chamber of Commerce and Industry Japan (SCCIJ) held at the prestigious Hotel Okura in Tokyo. The view from 12th floor was stunning, also I could see the Ark Hills Towers, where we had earlier this year our temporary office at the IBSC of JETRO. So, I remembered well my beginning and start-up phase of snowflake here in Japan.

The catering was great... delicious food and Swiss wine from Morges. But the best part was for sure the exchange and talks with other participants and the great speech of Mr. Koichiro Yoshikoshi (former president of Triumph International Japan Ltd.)

View from Hotel Okura towards Ark Hills (Twin Towers)

View from Hotel Okura towards Ark Hills (Twin Towers)

Wine from Morges

Wine from Morges

Working without Overtime

In Europe...
As a newcomer in Japan, I am not yet familiar with many of the numerous Japanese business rules and traditions. I feel it is quite hard but necessary to get to know them and to understand how and when to apply it. But listening to Mr. Yoshikoshi's speech... I was feeling that we just need to keep on doing what we already used to practice from Europe: work with deadlines, take at least two consequitive week vacation for relaxation of body and mind, work efficiently so that overtime is (hopefully) not needed, and so forth.

... and in Japan
Well, I also got a closer look into traditional Japanese business culture: paid vacation yes... but you cannot take it, overtime until late at night everyday, (endless) discussions in a team for finding a consensus, staff are tired and cannot concentrate, no time left for personal life (weekend is reserved for sleeping and reduce exhaustion), mental illness until karoshi... death because of overwork.

Karoshi - 過労死
"Every year", according to Mr. Yoshikoshi, "30'000 people are killed by karoshi. Since the government started with this statistics 11 years ago, 330'000 people died because of overwork." So, what's going wrong? Well, Mr. Yoshikoshi introduced at his former company a healthy work/life balance (8 hours sleep, 8 hours work and 8 hours personal life). The part to reduce the very common overtime (only a worker doing lots of overtime is a good worker...) was even not an easy task. First he made overtime on Friday evening forbidden at the company, then Wednesday, next the whole week. But first, when he turned off the lights at 6:30pm... people came back after that to the office, turned the light on again and were working again. Imagine that in Europe?!?!

White-Collar Efficiency
What Japanese companies have to work on is White-Collar Efficiency. Blue-collar efficiency is there in the factories, but in the offices... there is the problem. On one slide of his presentation, Mr. Yoshikoshi showed an impressive chart: within 20 years of his career at Triumph, he increased revenues 5x times but could reduced the white-collar workers in the office by about 1/3. I guess what's left was a nice profit! And all this without overtime... in Japan.

There were lots and lots of other interesting aspects at his speech. Actually he published 16 books already about his management philosophy and the 17th is just hitting the book stores now. His meaning about Japanese business culture like nemawashi 根回し (informal process of quietly laying the foundation for some proposed change or project) is frank and clear: "It is bullshit". Nevertheless, he also noted that even in 10 years from now, he expects that less than 10% of Japanese companies will change to such a (European?) management style concerning overtime and work/life balance.

Japan: world leader in public holidays
The decrease of karoshi in Japan seems not an easy task. The government at least tries to give workers more days for relaxation and personal life through the increase of public holidays. And there, Japan is now world leader with 15 official public holidays. Even better... if a public holiday falls on a weekend, it will be taken on the following Monday. So Japanese workers never miss a public holiday. That, I think is a good idea... and it makes already 3 weeks of holiday over the year.

Japanese just don't want not to work
Talking about this topic with a friend in Tokyo, a web worker, he just said: this is true, I am not in the office at a public holiday but having my mobile and laptop at home I just work in my home office. OK, I finally got it... what Mr. Yoshikoshi changed in his former company is really a great achievement: for the company, for the health of staff and the Japanese karoshi statistics.

Presentation: Working without Overtime

Presentation: Working without Overtime

Table setup at the SCCIJ luncheon meeting

Table setup at the SCCIJ luncheon meeting

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