Worklife

Ramblings about workplace culture, life in Japan, and then some.

Knowing but not trusting what you know

Apr 24, 2004 18:29 pm / Add a comment

It’s hard. Some­time, you think you knew some­thing but later find out your knowl­edge was based on false assump­tion. And then some­times some­one tells you dif­fer­ent story than what you thought to be true, and you become doubt­ful of what you know, and maybe go along with the dif­fer­ent story. But later, it turns out you find out you were right and the other per­son wasn’t.

My 9-year old was look­ing around in the kitchen for a big­ger glass for drink­ing grape juice. I started to hand him the big­ger glass of the same design. Then my mother-in-law said from the din­ing room, oh, it holds exact same amount. I stopped short. What? But it’s exactly same design, and obvi­ously big­ger. She said, I com­pared how much each holds one day, and they were exactly the same. Wow! She must be right, I thought.

It turns out she was talk­ing about dif­fer­ent glasses, not those ones with the same design. This reminded me of Richard Feynmen’s story in Feyman’s Rain­bow. When he was a grad­u­ate stu­dent at Prince­ton, he met a painter. A pro­fes­sional painter. When the painter said mix­ing red and white pro­duced yel­low, Feyn­man thought, it can’t be. But then again the guy was a pro­fes­sional painter, so Feyn­man gave what he know a ben­e­fit of a doubt, and vis­ited the painter’s job site to watch him mix red and white paints to pro­duce yel­low. The mix­ture resulted in pink.

Doing busi­ness in Japan is like that. It could be some con­sul­tants telling you things are dif­fer­ent in Japan. Things are indeed dif­fer­ent between Japan and other coun­tries, but if you have been good at obser­va­tion and devel­op­ing last­ing, trust­ing rela­tion­ship with peo­ple in your own coun­try, chances are very good that you can do so in Japan too. It’s hard. Giv­ing the other per­son chance to prove him­self is good atti­tude, but in busi­ness, espe­cially inter­na­tional busi­ness, you’ve got to know whether is the proof is valid in your par­tic­u­lar case.

 

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