Sunday, November 25, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Excerpts from Made in Japan
Excerpts from Made in Japan
"Share of market is more important to Japanese companies
than immediate profitability"
"Outwitting an opponent in some clever deal is not the
Japanese are interested in"
"The most important mission for a Japanese manager is to
develop a healthy relationship with his employees, to create a family like
feeling within the corporation, a feeling that employees and managers share the
same fate"
"The concept of lifetime employment arose when Japanese
managers and employees both realized that they had much in common and that they
had to make some long-range plans
One of the most significant value concepts that we have
cherished from ancient times is a term that does not bear simple literal
translation, mottainai, which can be
pronounces “moat-tie-nigh”. It is a key concept, one that may help explain
great deal about Japan, the Japanese people, and our industry. It is an
expression that suggests, that everything in the world is a gift from the Creator,
and that we should be grateful for it and never waste anything. To waste anything is considered a kind of
sin."
"Struggling for survival under the constant threat of harsh
times and natural calamity, attempting to produce goods with a minimum of raw
materials, both became a way of life for the Japanese, and so the wasting of
anything was considered shameful, virtually a crime."
"When you are told from childhood on that the metal object
you hold in your hands comes from iron ore mined in countries far away, which is transported to
Japan at great expense and is produced in furnaces that use gas and coal from
other far way places, such objects seem very valuable."
from "Made in Japan"
"We proved it in Japan by changing the image of the words "Made in Japan" from something shoddy to something fine. My vision of the future is of an exciting world of superior goods and services, where every nation's stamp of origin is a symbol of quality, and where all are competing for the consumer's hard-earned money at fair prices that reflect appropriate rates of exchange. i believe such a world is within our grasp. the challenge is great; success depends only on the strength of our will."
These are the lines by Akio Morita way back in 1987, in his "Made in Japan".
Hope this world will come in grasp for us with all our efforts where we can proudly say "Made in India"
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