Title: Entrepreneurship in Japan
1Entrepreneurship in Japan
- Gaston Arevalo
- Daniel Kovacs
- Cristian Schreiner
2Table of Contents
- Overview
- Entrepreneurship Frameworks
- Education
- Financing
- Cultural and Social Norms
- Some trends and examples
- Conclusions
3Entrepreneurs in Japan
- There have always been entrepreneurs in Japan,
but - Entrepreneurs are found inside of corporations
- Entrepreneurial activity is based on spin-offs
- Parent company absorbs the risk
4What is Entrepreneurship?
- Management Style ? focused on innovation and
change - Execution ? transforming an idea into a promising
venture - It is much more than starting a business!
- Traditional Start-up Entrepreneurs and Corporate
Entrepreneurs - Focus on Traditional Entrepreneurs
5Traditional Entrepreneurs
- Average Characteristics
- 8 years of big company experience
- Brings established network of customers, most
frequently being prior clients - Keep majority stake in venture
- Prefer debt financing to equity financing
- Not many companies had access to capital markets
- Mostly acted as small family businesses
6How Entrepreneurial is Japan
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2003
7Women Entrepreneurs
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2003
8Entrepreneurship Frameworks
9Importance of Entrepreneurship Education
- Essential to promote starting a business as an
professional alternative to younger generations - Promote a culture of innovation and risk taking
- Eliminate some concerns that might exist about
fear of failure when starting a business - Put pressure on government to create programs to
aid young Japanese entrepreneurs.
10Some Differences (U.S. Japan)
- US Many Ph.D Students who want industry jobs
- How funded research assistantships from
external funds - Experience in project management aspects
- Professor like corp. lab director gets ideas
from students - Primary motivations academic, opportunistic
-
- Japan Ph.D students committed to academic
careers - Scholarship-funded or position allocated to
professor - Less experience with management/admin
- Professor like parent or mentor
- Primary motivation academic
-
11University-industry roles in conducting
innovation
Richard B. Dasher Stanford University, 2002
12What does this mean?
- Universities are less industry oriented in Japan
(especially than in the U.S) - Entrepreneurship Education is not viewed as
desirable as other professions like engineering. - Japanese universities are less well positioned
to train students to start up their own
businesses - One historical explanation anti business
feelings that arose among students and faculty as
a result of the left wing movements in Japan of
the 1960s and 1970s
13New trend Venture Business Labs
- Ministry of Education (MEXT) major investment
(buildings on university campuses, large
conferences) - Directed by professor considerable freedom in
program, budget use - Now probably in more than 50 Japanese
universities - Metrics for evaluation, guidelines are still
under discussion
14Educational Reforms Highlights
- Japans curriculum is regimented and dictated
- According to Yamada (1991) Japanese are less
creative, more conservative and not nearly as
individualistic. The Japanese education system is
to blame for discouraging innovations - Need for a change in the educational system is a
first step in long term culture reform. Example - New national policy cutting the prescribed
curriculum by 30 to leave what is taught to the
discretion of the individual schools.
15New Entrepreneurship Education Programs
- Some major departments examples
- Kochi Univ. of Technology Entrepreneur
Engineering Program - Keio University (Shonan)
- Some new curriculum tracks examples
- Waseda University (Entrepreneur Business
Strategy track) - Student organizations APEN
- Business Plan competitions
- New links between universities and industries
- What about venture investor education programs?
16Entrepreneurship Frameworks
17Venture Capitalists, Angels, Banks and other
Lenders
- The venture capital environment in Japan is in
its early stages. - No solid core of angels providing seed funding
to start-ups. However some have emerged to
support the next generation of entrepreneurs
(examples Isao Okawa, Masaya Nakamura, Testuro
Funai) - The increase of independent capital firms are
expected to expand investments to promising young
companies. - Foreign venture capitalists are beginning to
enter Japan (ex. Goldman Sachs, J.P Morgan,
Kyocera) - The Japanese monetary system, bank structure and
services provided by security firms are slowly
more favorable for the entrepreneur
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20Corporate Accounting Standards
- Accounting is structured for national tax
collection (makes it hard for investors to find
relevant decision-making information) - Tax regime does not allow special treatment for
startups. - Need for a venture-friendly environment in Japan
21What to do?
- Continue government efforts to create a more
favorable environment for new businesses - Reinforce stock market (exit for vc firms)
- Banks forced to write off bad loans to end
banking crisis and provide cash for start ups - Tax cuts that favor entrepreneurship and new
business creation - Creation of new local entrepreneurial districts
incubators - Reduction in governmental red tape in starting a
business - Transition to a new economy to encourage growth
- Continue elementary, secondary and university
curriculum reforms.
22Entrepreneurship Frameworks
- Cultural and Social Norms
23Conflicting Views
- Entrepreneurship is not new in Japan
- Each individual should work for himself. People
will not sacrifice themselves for the company.
They come to work at the company to enjoy
themselves.
Soichiro Honda 1948
- Entrepreneurship in Japan is not seen as
prestigious
24Professional Development
- Group oriented culture
- Indentity Social Hierarchy
- Group
- Company
- School
- Elite Gov Agency
- The Nails that sticks up get hammered down
- Success History
- Enter a big corporation
- Stay until they retire
25Specialists Perspective
- Japan needs cohesive social, political, and
economic revolutions to unleash the
entrepreneurial energies necessary to build
durable wealth (Garten, 1999). -
- Risk-taking entrepreneur in Japan confronts many
social pressures that can hinder success. (Herbig
and Jacobs,1999) - Japan's existing society and structure as well as
other cultural factors are not conducive to the
creation of entrepreneurial ventures and the new
types of companies that the country needs to
generate new jobs (Komago, 1999).
26- Entrepreneurship culture still exists
- Employment Status Survey ( Syuugyoukouzou Kihon
Cyousa) the number of aspiring entrepreneurs
did not decline so much in comparison to the
decline in the actual number of new
businesses - Government administered survey
- Japan's lack of the skilled venture capitalists
27Family Businesses
- Capital to establish such firms is often provided
from the founder's - Own assets and investments by family, relatives
and business associates. - Later, the usual sources loans from
private-sector financial institutions
28Cultural Pressure
- Cultural fear of failure still has a strong
influence - Risk aversion permeates the Japanese society
- Small business failure is not viewed as a
learning experience. - Top graduates see high risks, and not high
returns from working at startups. - Social pressure from parents is high for work at
famous big companies. - Another recent trend Seniority System X
Performance Based System
29Some Factors
- The start-up rate for new businesses in Japan is
the lowest rate among industrialized countries. - The White Paper on Small and Medium Enterprises
in Japan 2002 argues that the cause - country's transition to a lower rate of economic
growth - the decline in the income ratio between
entrepreneurs and salaried workers (i.e.,
operating income of a proprietorship versus wage
income). - Stagnating business environment has stamped out
many of the opportunities for new business
start-ups - But the income disparity offers little incentive
for a person to leave his job to become an
entrepreneur - Culture as the only factor, therefore, does not
explain the relatively low entrepreneurial
activity in Japan in recent years.
30Success Stories
- Anita Lee - Go Mobile co-founder
- 2. What are some of the challenges you have faced
in starting your business and how did you
overcome them?Thankfully, my earlier days in
Finance and being involved in a family business
had taught me that there are always challenges
when developing a business - Initially, I found the Japanese language barrier
a challenge, - The greatest challenge I faced in the beginning
was the expensive upfront cost of high profile
advertising.
31Success Stories
- Koichiro Shimizu
- President, LearningEdge Co., Ltd.
- www.seminars.jp Â
- Profile - Shimizu Koichiro Shimizu is the
president of LearningEdge Co., Ltd. He had worked
for ABeam (Former "Deloitte Tohmatsu Consulting")
and a venture company after graduating from Keio
University. - In Deloitte, he worked for various companies (US
consumer product, US auto, French Gas, French
life insurance, UK mobile phone, Dutch life
insurance, Japanese pharmaceutical, etc) as a CRM
IT strategy consultant. - He established his company in 2003 and has
developed "seminars" (www.seminars.jp) which is a
portal website of seminars. Amazon.com is selling
books on internet, "seminars" is selling seminars
on internet. Now he is focusing on this
"seminars" to be the No.1 seminar portal web
site.
32Conclusions
33Entrepreneurs and the future of Japan
- Closer ties between university and industry and
promotion of Entrepreneurship - Declining student population (so universities
need more external support) - Tighter corporate RD budgets (so companies need
to rely more on university for pre-competitive
research) - New faculty policies appear to be promoting
professor led start-up companies - Maybe higher operational risk conflict of
interest violations - Lower individual risk
- More student and junior faculty now appearing on
patent applications
34Challenges for future entrepreneurs in Japan
- Educating / managing investors
- Decision making and governance
- Connected with attitudes toward failure
- Market access often poor for any new company
(exit strategies) - Conflicting attitudes towards youth and women
- Somewhat of a common factor in East Asia
- Exclusion of product development people from
initial product planning - Promising entrepreneurs might opt to pursue their
business idea outside of Japan
35Japan since 1998
- Development of new legal framework
- Venture Capital Investment Co. Law in 1998
- Government funding initiatives
- Establishment of Business Incubators
- Established grants and incentives for promising
entrepreneurs - Major push to encourage universities to enter the
field - Creation of education programs to encourage
engineers to enter the business world
independently