Subscribe by Email

Your email:

Browse by Tag

Banter Without Borders

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Japan and India: Diving Deeper into Global Waters

Submit to Digg digg it | Submit to Reddit reddit | Add to delicious delicious | Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon | Share on Facebook Facebook | Share on Twitter Twitter | Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 
In my previous post, I reviewed two illuminating and complementary podcasts on outsourcing and its application in today’s global marketplace. In the discussion of multisourcing and its attendant complexity of managing multiple providers, the cultural considerations were what resonated for me. When an overlay of country culture is added to the already complicated challenge of managing corporate cultural differences in an outsourcing agreement, the challenge is manifold, even if only two nations are involved.

As with any intercultural transaction, broad questions of communication arise early on: Are the cultures at hand relationship-based or transactional?  Is overall communication style direct or indirect? How does ‘saving face’ figure into the Japan and Indiapicture, if at all?  What is the role of and protocol surrounding small talk?  Taboos?  Humor?  How is silence used and interpreted?  What is the time frame for establishing relationships?  In the business sphere, additional issues as risk tolerance, leadership preferences, entertainment protocol, perceptions of time, decision making processes and, perhaps most importantly, issues of trust are but a smattering of crucial pieces one would need to assess and address.

Such questions and issues will now be increasingly on the minds of Japanese and Indian companies, as the two nations have begun collaborating in more and more outsourcing arrangements, according to a recent Wall Street Journal article (“India’s Outsourcing Firms Lure More Japan Business”).   As a global coach and consultant, I am naturally delighted to see this, since while the two countries are markedly different culturally, on the business front this seems like a match made in heaven, with timing auspicious for both nations.  The Japanese population is ageing steadily, causing gaps in the workforce (particularly in engineering, as the article states). Indian companies, meanwhile, have been feeling the pinch from the U.S. financial sector and have been busily strategizing in hopes of entering new markets.

That said, Japan and India are entirely at odds in their respective cultural orientations. While Japan is extremely homogeneous and in many ways isolationist, India is one of the most diverse mosaics on the planet, and from this basic difference springs a whole host of cultural contrasts. In short, though, where the current outsourcing development is concerned, there are two critical issues at hand for each country. For Japan, the huge question of trust will undoubtedly be its biggest obstacle. Japanese companies have, through the ages, been notoriously tight lipped when dealing with “gaijin” (literally “outside persons”), and, as the article states, very reluctant to entrust segments of their business to others.  For India, used to the efficiency and speed so deeply embedded in the U.S. business culture, the challenge of balancing this with the perfection and assiduous attention to detail demanded of the Japanese market will surely be its albatross.

Fortunately, both countries seem to be undergoing the coaching and training so necessary in these situations.  The reciprocal nature of such programs, as indicated in the article, with both countries sending participants to their respective new partners’ locations and engaging in multifaceted intercultural talent development practices, is a formula for a successful collaboration. It is a sure bet that if the current alliances are successful, both countries will actively continue down this newly paved path.

Comments

Excellent points. It reminded me of a project I was on many years ago. We were building a processing unit (USA based) and we have a world class group in Germany who was doing the testing. Right off the bat things were 'tense' and difficult. The Germans were not doing what they were asked and were making what seemed like rediculous requests for additional information etc. I was a manager at the time, and my boss and I were at whits ends over this. The manager of the German team flew to the US to try to smooth things over and it didn't help. That evening, realizing how alone he must feel in the US, I offered to take him out to dinner. Over a couple beers we broke open the issues and suddenly realized that all the tension was caused by cultural differences. We laughed, and the next day started over with a new found sense of understanding, and things got better.  
 
The US and Germany are both western countries, not that different. Yet this almost derailed the project. Japan and India are as different as can be. All this points out how important it is for leaders to set a tone of understanding an patience in their projects to ensure people have time to bond and figure out the cultural issues.
Posted @ Thursday, August 27, 2009 9:08 AM by Geoff Meissner
Many thanks for your astute comments. Too bad so many executives view time out of the office (whether for a coffee, dinner, or baseball game) as 'unproductive' and a waste of precious time when, in fact, exactly the opposite is the case, as you saw so clearly. Time spent nurturing the business relationship grants the biggest dividends in the long haul, and most cultures outside of the U.S. recognize this. How fortunate for the project at hand that you were able to save the day with your cultural acumen! (Hint: If you do, in the future, find yourself involved with Japan, do by all means include those 'few beers', which will give your counterparts permission to let their hair down rather quickly).
Posted @ Thursday, August 27, 2009 4:11 PM by Sue Perlmutter
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics

Receive email when someone replies.