Follow
The Laws Of Nature
Obey the laws of nature: This is the very
core of Matsushita Konosuke's business
philosophy. Successful business is ordinary,
normal business, selling at a price that
allows a fair margin or profit, collecting
payment on time, and so on. In setting the
price of a product, for example, one has to
seek a natural balance between the profit
due to the manufacturer and the capacity of
the customer to pay. If a product cost $1 to
manufacturer; it ought to be sold for $1.10.
Selling under cost as an advertising
gimmick, for example, or at an excessively
high price in hopes of making a quick
profit, constitute bad business. Clever
strategies and careful calculations may be
important, but simple universal laws must
always be observed.
Put Up An Umbrella When It Rains
When asked the secret of successful
management, Matsushita Konosuke would often
reply with a question of his own: "What
would you do if you got caught in the rain?"
Invariably, the answer would be "Open an
Umbrella." The point was that you do what
commons sense dictates. You sell at a price
that will make profit; you make sure you
collect the proceeds of the sales; when your
products don't try to force sales by
manipulating prices or quality. If there is
a formula for business success, he felt, it
is operating in this straightforward,
down-to-earth way, as simply and sensibly as
opening an umbrella in the rain. When it
comes to business, however, a surprising
number of people let selfish motives
override their commons sense and they wind
up wandering around unprotected in the
rain.
A Leader Should Have Vision
Leaders in any field, Matsushita thought,
should always have a clear vision of what
they want to do, and only then approach
others for support or opinions. "Simply
acting on the advice of others without any
ideas of your own," he said, "is not
leadership." Seeking the input of others is
very important, of course, but only if the
leader maintains a firm sense of authority
and ultimate control. A leader who serve as
a firmly fixed axis can most effectively
mobilize others and maximise the results of
what they do.
The Public Is Right
Because effective decision making is one of
the most crucial aspects of business
management, all managers worry about what
yardstick to base their decisions on. For
Matsushita Konosuke, the most secure
foundation for decision making lay in
prevailing public opinion. Of course, he
knew that the majority was not always right,
as history has repeatedly shown. But in the
long run, he felt society has an almost
transcendent sense of good judgement. As has
been wisely observed, you can fool all of
the people some of the time, and some of the
people all of the time, but not all of the
people all of the time.
A Company Is A Public Institution
A few years after starting Matsushita
Electric, a tax official came to investigate
the accounts of the rapidly prospering
company. The official presented his case to
Matsushita Konosuke arguing that the
company's profit were greater than what had
been declared in its tax statement. After a
couple of sleepless nights mulling over the
matter, Matsushita concluded that,
ultimately, the money did belong to the
country. The next day, he promptly told the
tax collector to collect whatever amount was
outstanding, and the investigations came
simply and smoothly to close. Later
Matsushita realised that a company which
pools massive amounts of capital, takes up
great tracts of land, and employs many
people is, though ostensibly a private
enterprise, fundamentally a public
institution. It was this line of thinking
that led him to the further conviction that
an enterprise is beholden to society, making
it even a kind of crime to run a deficit.
You Have To Like Your Job
The crucial difference between a successful
businessman and a poor one is that the
former loves the work of business management
and the latter does not. It has long been
said that "What you enjoy, you do well" and
Matsushita Konosuke made this rule his
guide. If you like your work to the point
that you think it is your natural calling,
you'll be innovative and flexible, confident
in making decisions and acting on them, and
successful as you move toward your goals.
If, on the other hand, you think management
is a worthwhile occupation but are only in
the job for wanting something better to do,
or inspire you, and it will be difficult for
you even to become confident and successful
in your work.
Dreams Should Be Shared
As president of Matsushita Electric,
Matsushita Konosuke took every opportunity
to inform his employees of his plans and
dreams for the company's future. These
included the Five-Year Plan announced in
1956 aimed at quadrupling sales and the
project begun in 1960 to institute the
five-day workweek by 1965. Most companies at
the time were afraid to publicise such
plans-to show their cards, as it were-for
fear of the information leaking out and
being taken advantage of by competitors.
Fully aware of what the consequences might
be, Matsushita Konosuke chose to keep his
employees well-informed, because he wanted
them to share in his dreams for the company,
and because he believed it was simply the
proper thing for the proprietor of a
business to do. Matsushita Konosuke became
known as the "manager who talked about his
dreams," and it was those dreams that
directed and inspired the people who worked
for him.
Provide Direction and Moral Support
Looking back over his career later in life,
Matsushita Konosuke recalled how he had been
ill quite a bit of the time and had been
forced to leave the actual running of the
company to his staff, providing advice,
encouragement, and support from his sick
bed. After the end of World War II, the
fundamental equality of a company president
and his employees as human beings became
established with the spread of democratic
values. Matsushita changed his approach to
personnel management to reflect that
equality: when handling down an order, he
did so in the spirit of a polite request
rather than a command. The product of this
approach was a feeling of respect and
gratitude for the labors of the employees,
that might be expressed by saying "That was
a good job well done!" and offering a cup of
tea or other refreshment after a successful
accomplishment. A president could not just
sit passively by while his staff toiled,
moreover; he had to carefully guide the
company according to sound business
principles and with a strong sense of
mission. Although Matsushita could hardly go
around offering such personal gestures and
words of thanks to each Login of his staff,
the idea of a company president as the
compass for the enterprise and the "server
of tea" was at the root of Matsushita's view
of the role of top management.
Stick To Fair Prices
In the days when Matsushita Electric was
just a small local workshop, Matsushita
Konosuke would go out to sell its products
himself. Some of his customers would press
him to lower his prices, but in the face of
their persistent requests, he would recall
the faces of his young workers sweating in
the factory in the summer heat, and he would
hold his ground, zealously defending his
prices by saying: "Our prices are based on
normal calculations taking into account the
products themselves and the efforts of the
people who have toiled to produce them.
Cutting these prices would be as painful as
cutting my own flesh." Lowering prices under
pressure from customers, he felt, was bad
business practice. Matsushita Electric has
always endeavored to set prices in
accordance with what society at large
considered fair and reasonable.
Business Is Do-Or-Die
Matsushita Konosuke would not tolerate the
notion that business was a matter of timing
or good fortune. "Business," he would say,
"is not a matter of the lick-of-the-draw; it
is a sword fight. In a real sword fight, one
slip-up and you've lost your head. It's the
same in business. Certainly these are times
when you win a little and times when you
lose a little, but to think that you can
succeed by persisting in a
one-step-forward-one-step-back approach is
fundamentally mistaken. Business does not go
badly because of timing, luck or any other
external factor. You must always see
problems as arising from some fault within
your own style of management." Like the
samurai, who carried swords to be used when
their life was on the line, Matsushita
believed a businessman's total
responsibility for his actions on the job.
Products Are The Progeny of Labor
In addition to his extraordinary passion for
manufacturing, Matsushita Konosuke kept
track of the products his company made after
they were sold. "The goods we make here
every day," he would tell his employees,
"are like children we raise with tender
care. Selling them is like seeing those
children grow up and go out into the world.
It is only natural, then, that we should be
concerned about how they are getting on in
their lives, and so go and see for
ourselves." He believed that maintaining
this concern for what you produce is the
first step toward building an ordinary
supplier-client relationship into a stronger
link based on mutual trust.
Complaints Strengthen Bonds
Most of us would rather receive a compliment
than a complaint or have merits rather than
faults pointed out, but in business
Matsushita Konosuke saw things differently.
"Naturally I'm delighted when a buyer
expresses compliments," he would say, "but
I'm just as pleased to get a letter of
complaint." His reasoning was that if
customers didn't bother to complain, that
meant they had already decided not to buy
any more products from your company. If, on
the other hand, they expressed their
dissatisfaction, even to the point of
seriously considering going elsewhere for
their needs, they were still interested. As
long as you are sincere, treat their
complaint with respect, and root out the
cause of the problem, in the end it is your
good faith they will reLogin. The
relationship will be that the stronger for
it. Far from being an attack, therefore, a
complaint should be treated as a valuable
opportunity to strengthen ties.
Transparent Management Fosters
Growth
Managers, especially sole proprietors, all
too often treat company assets like their
own personal possessions. Matsushita
Konosuke made a point of separating his
personal accounts from those of the company
even when he had no more than 10 employees
working for him. As the company grew larger,
he made it a regular monthly practice to
announce the details of the company's
accounts for all employees, from top
executives to the lowest apprentice to see
for themselves. "starting that practice", he
reflected years later, "made the atmosphere
in the workshop much brighter. Seeing their
efforts directly reflected in figures before
their eyes seemed to afford a sense of
satisfaction and purpose in their work."
Needless to say, this sense of satisfaction
was directly linked to the company's
subsequent growth. Matsushita, therefore,
came to believe that openness in management
practice is crucial to a business that seeks
to grow.
Dam Management
In theory, an enterprise has to be growing
at a healthy, steady pace at all times; but
in reality, various economic factors can
inhibit such growth. Matsushita Konosuke
believed, however, that continued progress
is possible with the right approach, such as
by employing what he called the "dam method"
of management.
Bad Times Had Their Bright Side
Most businessmen are happy as long as the
economy is growing, but when recession sets
in they grumble. Matsushita Konosuke had an
idiosyncratic view of the meaning of good
times. During prosperous times," he would
say, "you move along at a gallop; in times
of recession, you saunter at a leisurely
pace. When you're galloping, you haven't got
time to look around you, so you don't notice
any problem. But when your pace slackens,
you can see everything in all directions,
and if you notice something wrong you have
time to fit it." In other words, even a
slump has its merits. When sales are down
because of a sluggish market, you can attend
to after-sales service more throughly than
you could before, or perhaps put more effort
into training personnel. If you are willing
to make this kind of effort during the bad
times, even a recession becomes a rare and
welcome opportunity.
People Are Diamonds in The Rough
Poor health prevented Matsushita Konosuke
from playing the role of active executive
leader of his business. He had little choice
but to entrust the day-to-day operations to
his subordinates. His company started out as
a small, unknown workshop, hardly the kind
of organisation to attract outstanding
talent. So Matsushita put immense effort
into personnel training and development.
"However much you rub it," he reflected
later, "you can't make a diamond from an
ordinary stone. But if you have a diamond in
the rough, you can draw out its gleam with
careful polishing. And depending on how you
polish it and cut it, you can make it
sparkle and shine in various different ways.
People are just like uncut diamonds; they
each have the potential for various kinds of
brilliance, qualities which, if polished
right, will shine radiantly. It is very
important for personnel managers to have a
proper grasp of this concept, and to attempt
to draw out the special strengths of each
employee." Understanding the great potential
of human nature us at the heart of
successful development of human resources.
People Before Products
Right from the very early days of the
company, Matsushita Konosuke would often
instruct his employees thus: "If someone
asks you what Matsushita Electric produces,
tell them we produce people, and only then
mention that we also produce electrical
goods." He always believed that the measure
of a company was the people who worked for
it, that no enterprise could succeed if its
employees did not grow as human beings, and
that business, first and foremost, was about
cultivating human potential. No matter how
much capital, technology or equipment an
enterprise boasts, it is bound to fail if
its human resources are not developed. And
Matsushita did not mean merely improving
employees' technical know-how or sales
skills, though these are certainly part of
the concept. For him, the true aim of
personnel development was to cultivate
individual self-reliance and responsibility,
to guide employees to an understanding of
the value and significance of their own work
and of the obligation of the company to
contribute to society. To make them, in
other words, productive, conscientious
Logins of their industry and their
society.
Trust Your Employee
One of Matsushita Konosuke's basic tenets
was trust. The first products of Matsushita
Electric were electric sockets molded from
insulation material. At the time, the
knowledge of ingredients of this insulation
was an industrial secret. Lest competition
grow intense by letting such crucial
technology leak out, the owners of most
factories kept the formula for insulation a
closely guarded secret confided only to
family Logins or trusted colleagues. Once
he and his co-workers discovered the way to
make insulation, however, Matsushita shared
it with all the people in his employ, down
to the newest shop-boy. He reasoned that
keeping things secret meant extra
unnecessary worry, was troublesome on the
practical level, and above all inefficient.
While some of his fellow manufacturers
warned him the dangers of betrayal, he
eventually discovered that, on the contrary,
the morale and loyalty of his employees
soared when they were entrusted with vital
information and important tasks to perform.
This experience convinced Matsushita that
people rise to a task only if you trust
them, and that even on the rare occasions
when your trust is betrayed, it is best to
just let it pass. Matsushita was widely
known as one who completely trusted his
employees, leaving them to carry out tasks
with complete confidence in their abilities
and judgement.
Subordinates Can Be Your Superiors
Matsushita konosuke was often called the
"God of Management" for his skill not only
in business but also in handling people.
Matsushita insisted there was no special
secret to his success, that he simply did
the obvious thing in the usual way. If
something was peculiar to his approach, it
could be revealed by his remark that "To me
my subordinates have always seemed so much
better than myself. In my eyes they are all
quite impressive, without exception better
educated and more talented than I am." As
company president there were times when he
had to reproach an employee, but he
confident that he would be thinking as he
did so how that person was superior to him
in various ways. For Matsushita Konsosuke,
who started out without adequate education
and suffered chronic illness, this humility
was one of the cornerstones of a successful
philosophy of personnel management.
Focus On Strengths
There are two types of people: those who
concentrate on other people's weaknesses and
those who pay most attention to their
strengths. Matsushita Konosuke used to say
that, as a manager, focusing on people's
shortcomings quickly gave him a headache.
When you only look at weaknesses, every
person you encounter appears inadequate in
one way or another, and you end up
vacillating about assigning anyone to the
job or task you have at hand. Subordinates,
too, are bound to be unhappy if all you ever
notice is their failings. "I always tried,"
Matsushita said, "to notice people's strong
points seven times out of 10 and their
weaknesses the remaining three." By paying
more attention to employees' strengths, he
believed, he would be more likely to think
of ways to put those strengths to good use.
The important thing is to keep your
assessment of others' strengths and
weaknesses in proper proportion.
Keep A Firm Grip On Loose Reins
When it came to assigning jobs, Matsushita
Konosuke focused on his employees' strong
points. Even if a person might not have much
experience or distinguished record of
performance, if he seemed to have the
aptitude for the job, Matsushita was ready
to entrust it fully to him. This approach
fostered an abundance of experienced and
reliable personnel at Matsushita Electric.
One of the reasons behind this approach was
Matsushita's own poor health, which, right
from the start of his business, forced him
to rely heavily on others in the day-to-day
operation of the company. But though he
easily delegated work and authority to
others, he did not thereby abdicate
responsibility for what was going on under
him. He expected to receive reports about
particular projects at appropriate
intervals, and he would interject further
orders or advice when he thought necessary.
That was the duty of a person in a position
of responsibility, he believed. Forced by
chronic bronchial illness to rest for
extended periods, Matsushita quite often
summoned his subordinates to his bedside to
report on the business, in response to which
he would give new instructions or offer help
in problems they were encountering. He
called this keeping "a firm grip on loose
reins"; it was Matsushita way of
distributing authority and nurturing the
talents of his staff.
Be Realistic About People
When the staff of Matsushita Electric had
grown to about 80, it came to Matsushita
Konosuke's attention that one of his
employees had committed a financial
indiscretion. Being a person with a deep
aversion to the corrupt or unclean,
Matsushita worried considerably about how he
should deal with the matter, to the point it
kept him awake at night. Then he thought to
himself: "I wonder how many people there are
in Japan whom society calls criminals. If we
include all those who have committed only
minor misdemeanors, there must be about a
million. If that's what it's like on the
national scale, it's hardly surprising that
a company of 80 people should have at least
one dishonest employee. It's asking too much
to expect that everyone we employ will be
totally upright and virtuous. If I can't
accept that some will succumb to temptation,
I won't be able to use people to their full
potential." With that realisation, his
anxieties vanished and his personnel
policies thereafter became more aggressive.
An Employee Is A "Client"
With the wave of democracy that swept Japan
after the war, labor unions were formed
throughout industry, and at Matsushita
Electric, too, there were union marches and
rallies to press various worker demands.
Watching these demonstrations, Matsushita
Konosuke was reminded of the old saying that
"to employ can be trying, but looked at from
a different angle, all these people are like
clients, I must treat them with the utmost
care. Clients generally expect too much, but
if you want to do business with them, you
don't think of it as too much; you thank
them for their patronage and do what you can
to keep it." Reasoning in this way, he not
only eased his anxiety over the difficulties
of working with the labor union, but even
decided to avoid thinking in terms of labor
versus management. He preferred to deal with
his staff and employees as co-workers, in
fact, as people whom he served. In the end,
it was the truth of another proverb that he
fell back on: Soliciting the service of
others is the same as serving them.
Consulting Is Better Than Ordering
When as company president, Matsushita
Konosuke had orders to give a subordinate,
he was known for broaching the topic as if
seeking advice or offering a suggestion. In
other words, instead of simply saying "Would
you do such-and-such," he would say
something like "I've been thinking we could
do such-and-such this way; what do you
think?" or "Would you undertake this job?"
thus making this subordinates feel free to
present their own opinions and suggestions
on the matter. The result of this approach
was that his staff would undertake
assignments as if on their own initiative.
People display their best abilities, he
found, when they are working on their own
volition and responsibility. Matsushita's
style of personnel management and training
was grounded in his firm grasp of these
subtleties of human nature.
Don't Imagine "Impossible"
Henry Ford once remarked that the smarter
the engineer the more likely he was to say
that something couldn't be done. Matsushita
had a similar idea about the connection
between knowledge and innovation: "We speak
of the shortcomings of the purely
intellectual approach, but this refers to
our wariness of half-baked theories that can
prevent us from proceeding to a practical
solution. If necessity is the mother of
invention, then simple, unaffected
determination is its father. Even when
everyone around you say it's impossible, if
you step back and rethink your task in the
simplest possible terms, free of the noise
of over-erudite and preconceived notions,
often the solutions will come to you, out of
the blue, so to speak." For this reason,
Matsushita's own lack of formal education
was a blessing in disguise, allowing him to
see to the heart of problems free of the
constraints of academic or unsubstantiated
ideas.
Small Companies Have The Advantages
"The bigger the organisation," Matsushita
Konosuke believed, "the harder to improve
its efficiency. The organisation where
efficiency is the most difficult to improve
is the government. It's not that public
servants don't work hard; it's that the
environment they are part of prevents them
from working hard. Surrounded by conditions
that obstruct their efforts, the fall into
an attitude of pessimism." Large companies,
he felt, have the same problem. Small
enterprises would soon be out of business if
pessimism set in, and there is much more
freedom of initiative and activity.
Companies with 20 to 50 employees enjoy a
responsive, personalised environment in
which it is easy for each person to
understand the personalities as well as the
work being done by the others. Matsushita
felt that such companies could attain 120
percent performance from their employees.
Start On A Clean Slate
Sometime in the early 1960s, when Japan was
being pressured to open up its markets, a
certain Japanese auto manufacturer asked
Matsushita Electric to lower its prices for
car radios by 20 percent, saying it was
necessary to cope with increased foreign
competition. At first glance this seemed a
thoroughly unreasonable request, but for the
sake of the Japanese automotive industry,
Matsushita Konosuke decided he must do his
best to lower the price. The problem was
that a 20-percent price cut on a product
that until then had been making only a
three-percent profit would put the company
way in the red. At that point, Matsushita
directed his engineers to go back to the
drawing board and completely rethink the
design until they came up with a product
that satisfied the customer's needs and
still cleared a reasonable profit for the
company. In a few months, they filled his
order. When circumstances call for changes,
it is usually better to go back to the
drawing board rather than trying to retouch
something you have already produced.
Management Is Perpetual Creation
For Matsushita Konosuke, business was a
creative activity on a par with the fine
arts; it was a process of producing
something valuable out of nothing. You start
with an idea for an enterprise. Then you
hammer out a basic plan, raise the necessary
capital, and put together the necessary
facilities and equipment. Finally, you hire
employees, develop a line of products (or
services), manufacture (or provide) them,
thereby making a contribution to society.
Moreover, each area of management has its
own mode of operation, and anyone hoping to
succeed in business must be able to adapt
those modes quickly to the constantly
changing social and economic milieu. In this
respect, management diverges from other
creative endeavors, since while a painter
can call a painting finished and put down
his brush, the work of a person in business
is never complete. In this sense, business
management is an organic, living art form.
Reward And Punishment
In his address at the management policy
meeting in January 1946, only months after
the war ended, Matsushita Konosuke called on
his employees to let the long road of
Japanese industrial reconstruction begin, as
it were, right there at Matsushita Electric.
As a first step, he wanted the management to
set an example of diligence and industry for
the rest of the employees. For his own part,
he made a New Year resolution never to be
late for work and not to take off one
working day. But then, on the very first
working day after the New Year holiday, the
car that was to meet him at Osaka Station
wasn't there when he arrived, and he was 10
minutes late for work. When Matsushita asked
the driver why he was delayed, he said it
was his own carelessness, rather than
circumstances beyond his control. Matsushita
ordered a reduction on one month's salary
for the driver and the driver's supervisor,
and a one month wage cut for himself, since
he was responsible for both of these
employees. He then promptly reported the
matter to the entire staff at the morning
staff meeting. Matsushita Konosuke firmly
believed in rewarding those who performed
meritorious service and punishing those who
were negligent, beginning with himself.
Attention To The Job
One piece of advice Matsushita Konosuke gave
to his employees in the early days of the
company was: You may be a well-educated,
clever and virtuous person, but those
qualities will not necessarily make you a
successful businessman. In addition, you
must acquire the knack for business. Asked
how this is done, he would reply thus: "By
giving your best to each and every task you
take on, and by reflecting on your
performance with an honest and unprejudiced
eye. If you do this constantly, day after
day, eventually you will be able to do your
job unerringly." The point was that you
cannot study how to be successful; you
acquire the secret to business success
gradually by applying yourself with
conscious effort from day to day. |