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
考研
If you think Japan’s hard-drinking business culture is as dead as the Sony Betamax, think again. After more than a decade of eco
If you think Japan’s hard-drinking business culture is as dead as the Sony Betamax, think again. After more than a decade of eco
admin
2022-11-25
31
问题
If you think Japan’s hard-drinking business culture is as dead as the Sony Betamax, think again. After more than a decade of economy during Japan’s lengthy economic recession, many Japanese companies are thriving today—and they’re reviving some of the business customs that were hallmarks of Japan Inc. during the booming 1980s. Not only are company-sponsored drinking marathons back, so too are subsidized dorms for single employees as well as corporate outings such as hot-spring retreats and annual visits to the company founder’s ancestral grave. "We realized that workplace communication was becoming nonexistent," explains human-resources manager Shinji Matsuyama, whose company, Alps Electric, spent several million dollars last year to bring together about 3,000 workers for its first company-wide undokai, or mini-Olympics, in 14 years. According to Matsuyama, the shared experience of playing dodge ball and skipping rope "helped unite people under a common goal."
It’s that sense of team spirit and togetherness that many Japanese corporations are trying to revive. A generation ago, college graduates entered companies together, lived together, drank together, quite often married each other, and retired together. This close-knit corporate culture all ended when the country went into economic recession in the 1990s. Threatened by cheap labor and more efficient business models, Japanese companies began adopting American management concepts such as merit-based pay and competition among employees. "The Japanese equated globalism with not just the American way of business, but with rejecting their past," says Jun Ishida, CEO of Tokyo-based business consultancy Will PM. "No more drinking sessions, no more company events. Suddenly it was about the individual out for himself and only himself."
But as the economy became better in the past several years, many executives began to wonder if they had gone too far. Trying to rebuild company loyalty and decrease turnover, major companies including Canon, Kintetsu and Fujitsu have in recent years altered or scrapped their performance-based pay and restored seniority as a determinant of salaries. Meanwhile, trading house Mitsui last year reopened five dorms for single employees—a program that costs the company nearly $1 million a year. Employees have responded enthusiastically. Despite the crowded space and shared bathrooms, 24-year-old Miki Masegi moved from her parents’ house in central Tokyo to live with 105 female co-workers. Though her commuting time doubled, she says the move was worth it. "It really helps to have people around that you can talk to about your problems," Masegi says.
Companies are trying to foster friendship and loyalty in other ways as well. Every new employee of Tokyo PR firm Bilcom, for example, must spend a weekend making a three-minute digital slide show sharing their most moving personal experiences. Company president Shigeru Ota says the presentations are designed to "create a new type of family company by sharing life history… delight, anger, sorrow and pleasure."
Despite such experiments, Japanese companies may find it hard to restore the glory days of Japan Inc. That’s because today, one in three Japanese works part-time; younger employees in particular tend to value mobility over the security of lifetime employment. Indeed, during Noboru Koyama’s Saturday-night drinking session, employee Eri Shimoda acknowledges that his co-workers "feel like family." Yet most of those who attended the party also say that, warm sentiment aside, they plan to leave the cleaning company within a few years. "Work is just work," says one of them.
A. requested every new employee to share his/her most impressive personal experiences through a presentation.
B. tended to value employees’ mobility over the their lifetime loyalty.
C. held a corporate sport meeting in order to unite its staff.
D. gave up its merit-pay system so as to keep down the turnover rate.
E. spent $1 million a year providing single employees with five dorms.
F. introduced some American management concepts into Japanese corporate cultures.
G. may find it hard to keep its employees’ loyalty.
Alps Electric
选项
答案
C
解析
Alps Electric出现在第一段。Alps Electric出现在第一段后半部分。该部分提到该公司花费了几百万美元来举办undokai “运动会”或mini-Olympics“小型的奥运会”,并引用该公司人力资源经理的话,表示这样“有助于团结员工”。C中的corporate sports meeting与undokai和mini-Olympics对应,unite its staff与helped unite people对应,故C为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/k5i4777K
0
考研英语二
相关试题推荐
"Sustainability"hasbecomeapopularwordthesedays,buttoTedNing,theconceptwillalwayshavepersonalmeaning.Havingen
Overthepastdecade,manycompanieshadperfectedtheartofcreatingautomaticbehaviors-habits-amongconsumers.Thesehabits
Conveniencefoodhelpscompaniesbycreatinggrowth;butwhatisitseffectonpeople?Forpeoplewhothinkcookingwasthefoun
Conveniencefoodhelpscompaniesbycreatinggrowth;butwhatisitseffectonpeople?Forpeoplewhothinkcookingwasthefoun
WilltheEuropeanUnionmakeit?Thequestionwouldhavesoundedstrangenotlongago.Noweventheproject’sgreatestcheerlead
HenricIbsen,authoroftheplay"ADoll’sHouse",inwhichapretty,helplesshousewifeabandonsherhusbandandchildrentose
FormostthinkerssincetheGreekphilosophers,itwasself-evidentthatthereissomethingcalledhumannature,somethingthat
FormostthinkerssincetheGreekphilosophers,itwasself-evidentthatthereissomethingcalledhumannature,somethingthat
Parentsofchildrenwhohappilyeatwhat’sputinfrontofthemmightassumetheirkidsarewellnourished.Buttwonewstudies
Divorcedoesn’tnecessarilymakeadultshappy.Buttoughingitoutinanunhappymarriageuntilitturnsaroundjustmightdo,a
随机试题
NocountryintheworldhasmoredailynewspapersthantheUSA.Therearealmost2,000ofthem,ascomparedwith180inJapan,1
为达到最好的消毒效果,环氧乙烷消毒仓内相对湿度最好保持在
用下列哪种方法不能防止或减少光幕反射和反射眩光?()
项目决策分析与评价的核心内容是()
石油天然气油罐区的灭火系统宜设置()灭火系统。
不管是选择了安逸的工作,还是充满挑战的事业,都不能后悔,也不要抱怨,更不要动不动就____________:假如我选择了另一项工作,状况会不会更好?要知道,抱怨和悔恨都____________,唯一有效的行为是从意识到自己的选择并不适合自己的实情那一刻开始
马斯洛的需要层次理论中最基本的需要是()
A、 B、 C、 D、 B图形凌乱,考查数量类,线段数分别是:8,7,6,5,4,?,应该选择3条线段数的图形。
Howdidpeopleinsmallcommunitiesentertainthemselvesinthepast?
Ifitwereonlynecessarytodecidewhethertoteachelementarysciencetoeveryoneonamassbasisortofindthegiftedfewan
最新回复
(
0
)