首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
When Hayashibara took over the company in the 1950’s, Hayashibara believes that imitation
When Hayashibara took over the company in the 1950’s, Hayashibara believes that imitation
admin
2010-01-31
36
问题
When Hayashibara took over the company in the 1950’s,
Hayashibara believes that imitation
Hayashibara grew into Japan’s largest starch syrup manufacturer soon after World WarⅡ. But in the 1950s the company became embroiled in cut-throat competition and felt adverse effects from the liberalization of sugar imports. It was at this juncture that your father died and you succeeded him as president of the company. You were just a nineteen- year-old student at Keio University. What was it like for you?
I was actually just the pro forma president until I graduated, at which point I came back to Okayama. Japan’s starch sugar industry was in chaos at the time. I was fresh out of college and didn’t know left from right, but because the sweet potatoes from which starch sugar is made were a government-controlled item, all of a sudden I had to confront the murky world of politics. There would be mah-jongg games with government officials every night, and decisions were based on backroom deals. We were a manufacturer, yet we weren’t giving our best in manufacturing. I felt that we should put our all into our products.
I understand that you went around seeking advice from many people.
I visited people like Professor Nikuni Jim of Osaka University, who was said to be one of the top three authorities in starch research, Professor Arima Kei, an expert on fermentation at the University of Tokyo, and Professor Suminoe Kinshi, an expert on brewing at the Tokyo University of Agriculture. I also received guidance from Ibuka Masaru, the founder of Sony Corporation.
In 1966 you decided to shift course from starch processing to chemical engineering in the belief that the company would have no value as a manufacturer unless it gave birth to new technologies through R&D. You surely have met many difficulties because it meant a big change.
It’s true that under ordinary circumstances the senior members of the company might have resisted my policy. But the future of the industry itself was clouded, and our own company’s business was in decline, so I don’t think there was much room for protest. In retrospect, I was able to obtain the cooperation of people who could be termed Japan’s top authorities in their fields precisely because we made a decision at that point in time that didn’t occur to other companies, to switch from processing to chemical engineering and go on to R&D. You could say that our management crisis provided the impetus for us to set our sights on becoming a R&D-based company and allowed us to lay the foundations for this undertaking.
So you are a R&D-based company, but do you have no interest in going into marketing?
Small business can’t succeed if it tries to do everything on its own, because creating things and selling them require totally different skills. You should make things easier for yourself by relying on other companies for what you can’t do. When I look at start-ups nowadays, I see them trying to take on both R&D and marketing. That is bound to put them in competition with major enterprises and lead to their being crushed in the end.
Besides, when you take on both manufacturing and marketing, the business becomes large in scale and tough to manage. R&D is fun, but I personally don’t think making and selling things are fun. And, I’m more interested in keeping the family starch chemistry business going than in building up a big company. Sony worked out because Ibuka Masaru made things and Morita Akio went around selling them. Honda, too, succeeded with the combination of Honda Soichiro and Fujisawa Takeo. It seems to me that everything goes better when people specialize in their own areas of strength.
I think the most important issue for a R&D-based company is to ensure the creativity of its engineers and researchers. How are you dealing with that?
Dr. Itokawa Hideo, who developed the pencil rocket, once told me, "The way to heighten creativity is to gain as much knowledge and experience as possible in other fields that interest you." The point is that new ideas are born through the meeting of different fields.
The combination of different fields should not be just two, say, A and B. If you have three fields, A, B and C, you can come up with a greater number of combinations. If you have five, the possibilities are virtually endless. The reason why we put a lot of effort into philanthropic activities is actually because we want to experience and acquire knowledge of other fields on a company-wide scale.
You are a believer in the idea that originality is the best form of risk hedging. Why is that so?
Back in the days of inflation, things were in short supply, so products sold as soon as you made them. Even if they didn’t sell at first, they did once you lowered the prices. But now that we’re in an age of deflation, only quality products sell well, and cutting prices won’t increase sales. A product is full of risk if it isn’t original. There’s nothing as dangerous as imitating others. Fortunately an environment is developing in which you don’t have to do what others are doing. It used to take five or six years for a good product to become successful, but now new products fly off the shelves as soon as they go on the market, because everyone is hunting for new things. In other words, you’re now free of the five-or six-year risk before a product starts to sell, and you can put that much more weight on originality.
Original research tends by its nature to yield lots of results, doesn’t it?
When you take up something that no one else is doing, every byproduct obtained along the way becomes yours. But if you do the same thing as others, your advantage is small even if you arrive at the goal first, because the byproducts will have already been harvested, If you reap all of the byproducts and come up with many marketable products based on them, the rewards will be many and the risks few even if you don’t reach your original goal. So what’s important is selecting basic research topics that others won’t undertake.
选项
A、will hinder the development of the company.
B、will give impetus to the company.
C、will offer people with more selection.
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/FDOd777K
本试题收录于:
BEC高级听力题库BEC商务英语分类
0
BEC高级听力
BEC商务英语
相关试题推荐
Whatisthemainreasonforthegrowthinforestry?
A、 B、 C、 A询问会议延期的理由的why疑问句→回答“because+理由”
A、 B、 C、 D、 B图中有一些人在人行道上走着。只听到(A)中的bus,容易误选。从图中无法判断人们是否在等公共汽车,因此(C)错误。图中的公共汽车已经停靠在路边,(D)中的approach与图片不符
Whatdoesthespeakerimplyaboutchangingacompany’sfilingsystem?
Whatislearnedaboutthecompany’snewsletter?
Whatislearnedaboutthecompany’snewsletter?
A、 B、 C、 AItcanseat500peopleanswershowlargeistheauditorium.Choice(B)usesthesimilarwordlarg
(Thecandidatechoosesonetopicandspeaksaboutitforoneminute.)A.Technology:theimportanceoftrainingstaffinhowto
Theinterlocutorasksyouquestionsonanumberofwork-relatedandnonwork-relatedsubjects.
•Youwillhearadiscussionbetweentwoseniormanagers,JohnandDeborah,aboutanassistantmanager,Colin,whohasappliedf
随机试题
非霍奇金淋巴瘤的特点是:
喉腔最狭窄的部位是
患者,男性,25岁。骤然抬起肿物时腰剧痛,继而右下肢麻痛,咳嗽及用力排便时疼痛加剧,不能下床活动。查体:活动明显受限,直腿抬高仅达40。,右足外侧皮肤感觉减退,右跟腱反射减弱,X线片:腰椎轻度侧弯,未见其他异常。治疗方法首选
癫痫首选、对癫痫的诊断及分型具有十分重要意义的检查是
D域由x轴、x2+y2-2x=0(y≥O)及x+y=2所围成,f(x,y)是连续函数,化为二次积分是:
内燃机在工作中会因()等原因产生损伤、故障或失效。
一般而言,现实市场中的套利交易面临的风险包括()。Ⅰ.政策风险Ⅱ.市场风险Ⅲ.操作风险Ⅳ.资金风险
法兰克福学派(复旦大学,2009年)
《刑法》第269条规定,犯盗窃、诈骗、抢夺罪,为窝藏赃物、抗拒抓捕或者毁灭罪证而当场使用暴力或者以暴力相威胁的,依照该法第263条的规定定罪处罚。试回答:若张三15岁,在公交车上扒窃后逃跑,被失主抓住,张三将失主打成重伤,跳车逃跑被抓获.张三
下列操作中不能向工程中添加窗体的是______。
最新回复
(
0
)