Navigating the data-driven landscape: the role of ambidextrous leadership
Leveraging real-world data can be transformative, and leaders need to both transform their core activities and pursue new opportunities....
by Kazuo Ichijo Published 22 July 2021 in Competitiveness ⢠5 min read
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As of late June, only around 16% of Japanâs population had been vaccinated for COVID-19. This is a far lower proportion than in the UK (just under half fully vaccinated), the US (47%) and Germany (37%).Â
Domestically, this may be understandable. Japanâs COVID-19 case numbers â fewer than 800,000 â and deaths â under 15,000 â are a fraction of those of most countries in Europe and North America.Â
But this low vaccination figure should be a big embarrassment, not least because of Japanâs hosting of the Olympic Games this summer, and the related fact that more than six out of 10 Japanese think the Games should either be postponed or canceled, largely due to fears that visitors may bring the virus with them.Â
The underlying reason for both the low vaccination rate and the unpopularity of the Olympics is Japanese exceptionalism â the belief that Japan is unique and so should do things differently from other countries. Â
For the coronavirus pandemic, this has been seen in the countryâs refusal to accept approvals of COVID-19 vaccines made in other countries. Instead, it has insisted on conducting its own tests. The outcome: vaccination only started in April, months after most other developed countries.Â
But this exceptionalism has long manifested itself in other areas, especially business, and has become a major hindrance holding back companies and the economy.Â
During Japanâs golden era, from the 1950s to the 1980s, self-belief was a potent tool. As the country rebuilt in the aftermath of the Second World War, it drove bankers, corporate leaders and government officials to work together to establish Japanese companies as among the worldâs best. Â
But in recent decades, the persistence of that outlook has done more and more damage. It has hindered its development of global goods in key areas. In wanting to develop its own mobile phone standards, for example, it ensured that Japanese phones â though technologically advanced and with a huge take up in Japan â werenât used anywhere else. Isolated from the rest of the world, its mobile phone makers were unable to reach global markets.Â
A similar outlook can be seen in attitudes to corporate governance, as witnessed recently with Toshiba, where government officials colluded with the company to prevent Effissimo Capital Management, the holder of 9.9% of Toshiba shares, from exercising its shareholders rights. Although shareholders eventually succeeded in voting out the companyâs chairman in June, the affair only served to underline how both big corporations and the government still believe their unique nature allows them to behave in ways that would not be tolerated in Europe or North America.Â
This exceptionalism has become a major hindrance holding back companies and the economy
Wholesale change of a mindset is hard. But there are ways in which Japanese companies can change their behavior could lead to useful change â even if they were only be adopted piecemeal. Here are five ways Japanese companies can break out of the exceptionalism rut:Â
Japanese companies are too inflexible in trying to do too much themselves rather than working with partners â especially global partners â in order to be able to progress much faster. They have to learn how to take advantage of innovations by others.Â
When working with other organizations â whatever their size â try developing weaker ties rather than strong ones. In the past, Japanese companies have typically looked to build tight, long-term relationships with their partners â the famous keiretsu system bringing together manufacturers with their suppliers, banks, distributors and other partners. Appropriate for its time, it now holds back businesses from developing the ever-changing mosaic of links that they need to navigate todayâs faster changing world.Â
Japan suffers from a lack of new companies â in good part because of the countryâs bias towards large companies. But startups offer the agility that many companies in Japan need â working with them can help established companies move faster, open themselves up to fresh viewpoints and in the process transform themselves.Â
The world is a diverse place, but most Japanese companies remain far too homogenous. The Olympics offer Japan an opportunity to see diversity in action â companies should use the games as a chance to encourage themselves to embrace diversity.Â
As the world emerges from the pandemic, Japanese companies should look for opportunities to become more outward looking. That could mean working with more international partners, bringing in more managers from other countries or â above all â looking for news ways of doing things from outside Japan.Â
 There are, of course, examples of Japanese companies doing well in all these areas.Â
Toyota has long had a global mindset, localizing its operations everywhere from the US to China on its way to becoming the worldâs top carmaker. Â
Chugai Pharmaceutical has flourished on the back of a partnership agreement recached in 2002 with Roche. Although Roche took a majority stake in Chugai, the Japanese company has continued to operate independently, allowing it to become the leading player in Japanâs oncology sector.Â
Ajinomoto has maintained its dominant position in seasonings, sweeteners and other food ingredients, as well as expanding into pharmaceuticals and chemicals, with a strategy of tying up with startups. Â
But over the past 30 years, too much of corporate Japan has lost its way. For that to change, companies should become more flexible in both their thinking and their operations: collaborating more with multiple partners, especially startups, embracing diversity at all levels of their business, from shopfloor to management, and finding new ways of doing things by looking beyond Japan.Â
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