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-
- THE JAPANESE LANGUAGE:
- Written Japanese consists of multiple alphabets,two of
- them phonetic (hiragana and katakana) and kanji (Chinese
- characters). The Japanese may choose from these alphabets
- in order to project a certain image. For example, since
- katakana is used to write foreign words, a katakana brand
- name has an image that is not traditionally Japanese. Even
- the English alphabet (known as 'romanji') may be used to
- convey a modern product image. A name written in hiragana
- or kanji positions the product as a traditional or old-
- fashioned product.
-
- Even among Americans who study Japanese in Japan,more
- than half quit after one year. If you want to be taken
- seriously,you must dedicate the time necessary to attain
- fluency and not be merely a 'makasa bozu'("Three Day Monk").
-
- DEVELOPMENT OF SENSITIVITY:
- You will need to develop cross-cultural sensitivities
- and skills that will win confidence. The Japanese may expect
- the foreign side to present its position first. They may
- remain quiet and noncommittal, waiting for the other side
- to make concessions. Silence may be used as a tactic.
- Americans may begin repeating themselves because they
- cannot accept periods of silence. Negotiations may
- be dragged out until the last possible moment in order to
- put pressure on the foreigner. [It may be good strategy to
- never divulge your real deadline.].
- Even if they do not agree with what is being said,they may
- appear to go along with it for the moment.They may return to
- the subject later with the facts.Or, you may need to bring
- the issue up again in a different way at a different time.
-
-
-
- NEGOTIATION POINTERS:
- 1. Emphasize the building of a long-term relationship.
- The first meeting may not involve ANY discussion of
- business. You may be mistrusted if you press for quick
- decisions. Japanese want time to establish a rapport.
- Introductions take time for an exploration of status.
- Status is based upon age,sex,education, and a person's
- position in the company. Conversation is used as a
- medium of mutual unveiling. Speaking modestly allows
- people to understand where the other fits into the
- hierarchy.
-
- In America, the main idea is often presented first;
- whereas in Japan the most important idea may be
- shared last.
-
- 2. Be apologetic even if you have done nothing wrong...
- If a question is repeated, answer "I'm sorry I did not
- make myself clear".
-
- 3. Do not criticize competitors or any government.This is
- a place for business,not politics. A Rand Corporation
- study found that fairness disputes between Americans
- and Japanese involve different interpretations of
- "equality of treatment,respect of individual rights,
- and due process" based on different social and
- cultural contexts.
-
- 4. Do not be aggressive or boastful. Japanese avoid
- self-promotion. Modesty is one of their characteristics.
-
- 5 .Do not insult a team member in front of a colleague.
-
- 6 .Do not single out one of their people for credit when
- the project is a group effort. Praise is as
- embarassing to them as criticism. It means they are
- being singled out from the group.
-
- 7. Use a go-between. Do not tell them what you want in
- return for a concession; discreetly let the go-between
- handle this.
-
- 8. Avoid the use of 'Orientals' or 'Orient'. (Use'Asia'
- instead.) Call them ONLY 'Japanese'.
-
- 9. Do not initiate 'pats on the back'. Do not try to
- imitate the bowing ritual (you may look ridiculous).
- Avoid a lot of eye contact. Let the Japanese establish
- the level of formality. Avoid using first names at
- the start.
-
- 10. Speak slowly and stick to the facts. Be careful
- what you say as a verbal commitment may be as binding
- as a written one. Visual aids in a presentation are
- welcome. Avoid jargon and expressions such as "the
- bottom line" and "the whole enchilada". They like
- analogies and parallels.
-
- 11. Do not constantly change the proposal. Frequent
- changes may imply insincerity on your part.
-
- 12. Avoid the 'hard sell' of yourself or your firm.The
- profit motive may not be a good argument. Other
- considerations are harmony in company,the market, or the
- country; employment for people; growth and increase in
- market share;and the enhanced reputation of the firm.
-
- 13. Write out large numbers. Provide their team
- with printed material about your company in
- advance. You may be required to supply answers
- to precise questions so you may need to bring
- technical people as well as decision makers.
- They will like to collect information.
-
- 14. Do not bring lawyers unless 'they are disguised'.
- Bring men of rank and seniority.
- Do not bring wives and children to meetings.
- (The Japanese believe that Americans tend to prefer
- home life over business life).
-
- 15. In negotioations you must win the confidence of the
- entire group which means that you will need to exercise
- patience. Expect that higher ranking Japanese may enter
- the process after mid-management has completed the
- preliminaries.
-
- 16. Send written memos to confirm what has been agreed
- upon. The CONTRACT is not more binding than this
- agreement. It is merely for Western lawyers.Bringing
- out lawyers too early will make you appear adversarial
- and indicate a lack of trust.
- Japanese do not take a contract as seriously as they
- take a verbal agreement. The contract should be flexible
- enough to cope with unforseen circumstances.
-
- 17. As a follow up, send thank you letters and include
- informal photographs you may have taken of the meetings
- leading up to the agreement.
-
- 18. Be aware that an ability to use English may not mean
- that the Japanese speaker has digested American culture.
- English may have been acquired in a cultural vacuum and
- Western values may not have been assimilated.