The Changing Face of Japanese Management

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 2004 - Business & Economics - 260 pages

For many western managers the approach taken by successful Japanese organisations and their managers has tended to inspire awe, envy and incomprehension in equal measure. But what is so special about 'Japanese' management? And how 'special' is the response of Japanese managers to global business pressures ?

This textbook addresses these questions. It presents case examples generated from interviews with Japanese managers in Japan, Europe and the USA, contextualising their comments by reference to recent research in the fields of international and intercultural management. The book explains how and why individual managers variously perceive threats or opportunities in the business and career environments currently evolving both inside and outside Japan. It combines vivid images of the expected and the exceptional, the traditional with the new and unfamiliar.
The Changing Face of Japanese Management offers management students with little prior knowledge of Japanese business and society, critical insights into what is happening inside Japanese management today. It also offers clear and immediately transferable insights to management practitioners who are preparing to work or negotiate with Japanese business partners.

 

Contents

List of boxes
1
CROSSING BOUNDARIES
7
OUR OWN APPROACH
29
The face of Japanese management
36
Learning how to work
64
How Japanese managers learn to learn
80
LES JEUX SONT FAITS
92
Traditional experiences of recruitment and selection
99
The experience of organizational induction
114
Losing patience
122
Losing trust?
148
Regaining confidence
174
Facing the future
205
Glossary
237
Index
255
Copyright

Career expectations of Japanese women
106

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