Jun 15, 2022
Internal meetings are held for worthy purposes such as
reporting, planning and innovating. Not everyone views these
meetings the same way though and this is where we can face problems
when we run meetings in Japan.
Let’s examine 8 sets of typical meeting issues we will be
familiar with:
- Expressions of desire. The range here runs from one group, who
express their desires as a wish, all the way to the other end of
the scale, where actual demands are being made. We may prefer
that those who are wishing for outcomes were more assertive and
just come out and ask for what they want. On the other hand,
we may feel confronted by aggressive team members who start making
demands on us during the meeting.
- Winning at all costs or cooperating. Hard driving people get
things done, they brook no interference and apply their energy,
guile to bulldoze their way through the barriers. They have
tunnel vision, only see their interests and are oblivious to their
impact on those around them. Those at the opposite end of the
scale are sensitive to the others in the meeting and are busily
kuki wo yomu – reading the air in the room, in order not
to offend anyone. The middle group stand up to the bulldozers
and put forward their own views, willing to engage in open
debate.
- Stress under fire. Business is highly stressful in this modern
age, as technology and speed of change keeps the challenges coming
thick and fast. Some of the team will be stressed, but will
be aggressive and add to the stress of others in the meeting.
Another group will also be stressed, but hide it, so as the leader,
we may not be picking up on it. Others will acknowledge they
are stressed, deal with it internally and keep moving forward.
- Varying communication styles. Confrontational, direct
communication can cross the red line and become inappropriate very
quickly. As the leader we would prefer an honest conversation
on the issues, so that we can gauge the array of views on the
subject. Quieter team members can have good points to make,
but they self-censor and prefer to either say nothing or are very
indirect in what they say. They often get run over by the more
aggressive individuals in the room.
- Deflaters and elevators. To get to the number one position,
strong individuals will jockey for position. They elevate
their power by depressing the power of others. I remember
being in meeting where one of the sales guys was telling one of the
administration staff, that she was a cost center and he was a
profit center, implying his value to the organisation was greater
than hers. There are others though, who are building others
up and even some who do so at their own sacrifice.
- Degrees of accountability. We want everyone be accountable and
to hold everyone else to be accountable too. Some dominant
people though want to control everything and hold others to
account, but grant themselves a free pass, because they are so
awesome or hardworking or a major producer.
- Confront or acquiesce. Being confrontational in business is a
given for some people, yet for others, it is the last thing they
would ever dream of doing. They may even bend over backwards
to avoid confrontation, because it is too much pressure for them to
endure. We would prefer people to be passionate, but
considerate and to make their point, without trying to intimidate
everyone else to get agreement.
- Thrusting or hiding. Being direct is fine, as long as it is
done in a polite and considerate, collegiate manner. The
problems arise when the communication of their position is done in
a direct, even abrasive way, because they don’t care what others
think. The other problem is when feelings are being hidden and
valid concerns and views not being expressed, robbing the meeting
of different perspectives.
For Western leaders all of these types of meeting issues would
be very familiar and we grow up in business trying to find ways of
dealing with them. We accumulate a tool box to deal with
them. We go to leadership courses which give us ideas on solutions.
What happens though, when we start running meetings in Japan in the
same way?
The Japanese approach to meetings is to use them as one stage in
moving the business forward. There is a lot of wisdom in this
idea, because what happens before and after the meeting play
important roles. In the West, we tend to get in the meeting
room and duke it out, until we make some decisions and then
everyone gets back to their job. In Japan, the meeting room
itself is not the gladiatorial venue it is in the West and almost
all of the issues considered so far, are subsumed by a different
take on how to use meetings to get results. So where is the
toolbox for these occasions?
Nemawashi or groundwork files down the rough edges of
disagreement before the meeting starts. Loud people, quiet
people - everyone is consulted prior to the meeting and the
lobbying is started, so that the meeting itself is a rubber stamp
on decisions already agreed to prior to the meeting proper.
Any disagreements are worked on privately, so that the meetings can
be run with efficiency and decorum.
If we come to meetings with a purely Western view, we will be
expecting these flagged eight issues in full flight, which all work
perfectly well in our home environments, but we may not find what
we are looking for. If we use the nemawashi methodology, we
can circumvent many of these problems.