Leading High Performing Remote Teams
How can leaders ensure that performance remains high in remote or hybrid-work environments?
Content Marketing
In this course, you’ll learn how compelling blogs, videos, podcasts, and other media can reach customers and drive sales. You’ll also learn steps for creating an effective content marketing plan, and some important ways to measure its impact and success.
Content marketing is a essential digital marketing strategy for companies looking to provide relevant and useful information to support your community and attract new customers.
Get started on your content marketing journey today.
Sustainable Innovation in Times of Disruption: Choices for a Better Society
There are opportunities for progress all around us. The key is to innovate on these opportunities sustainably.
To help identify most effective path forward, you'll need to gain a global perspective to these challenges in an open discussion. How can Japan and the world take action to create a more sustainable, innovative world? Where do you fit in?
It's time to find out.
Social Media & Digital Communications: Impact on Global Public Opinion
Social and digital media have dominated the communications industry for decades. But it's no secret that social media has the power to sway public opinion, and the way in which many companies use these platforms could be seen as manipulative.
What do companies need to be aware of when utilizing social and digital media? How can these mediums be used to better communicate strategically with the world?
Discover what top media and communications experts have to say.
CAGE Distance Framework
Want to expand overseas? The CAGE distance framework can help ensure you're constructing a solid global strategy in four areas: cultural, administrative, economic, and geographic. Learn how to leverage useful differences between countries, identify potential obstacles, and achieve global business success.
Servant Leadership
There's more to leadership than driving a team to profit. In fact, there's a word for looking beyond self-interest to prioritize individual growth: servant leadership. Try this course for a quick breakdown of what that is, how it works, and how it can lead to organizational success.
Strategy: Creating Value Inside Your Company
Have you ever wondered why certain companies are more successful than others? The answer is strategy: internal processes that control costs, allocate resources, and create value. This course from GLOBIS Unlimited can give you the tools you need for that strategic edge.
Strategy: Understanding the External Environment
To plan strategy on any level, you need to understand your company's external environment. In fact, your level of understanding can impact hiring, budgeting, marketing, or nearly any other part of the business world. Want to learn how to do all that? This course from GLOBIS Unlimited is the perfect first step!
Using Japanese Values to Thrive in Global Business
Japanese companies have unique cultural, communication, and operational challenges. But they also have values that have led to remarkable longevity. Check out this seminar to hear how these values help earn trust from overseas head offices and develop employees.
Marketing: Reaching Your Target
Every company works hard to get its products into the hands of customers. Are you doing everything you can to compete? In this course, you’ll find a winning formula to turn a product idea into real sales. Follow along through the fundamentals of the marketing mix and see how companies successfully bring products to market.
Basic Accounting: Financial Analysis
Want to compare your performance vs. a competitor? Or evaluate a potential vendor? Then you'll need to conduct a financial analysis. This course will teach you how to use three financial statements and evaluate financial performance in terms of profitability, efficiency, soundness, growth, and overall strength.
Career Anchors
What drives you to be good at your job?
Career anchors are based on your values, desires, motivations, and abilities. They are the immovable parts of your professional self-image that guide you throughout your career journey.
Try this short GLOBIS Unlimited course to identify which of the eight career anchors is yours!
Leadership with Passion through Kokorozashi
The key ingredient to success? Passion.
Finding your kokorozashi will unify your passions and skills to create positive change in society. This GLOBIS Unlimited course will help you develop the values and lifelong goals you need to become a strong, passion-driven leader.
The recent worldwide plunge in stock prices has begun to fill me with dread. These are the sorts of unnatural fluctuations that make you wonder whether the self-regulating function of the entire international financial market has disappeared.
Japan cannot make a move, as it is in the midst of turmoil over the Long-Term Credit Bank of Japan issue and conflict between ruling and opposition parties. So it appears this situation may continue for a while.
What could cause a synchronous world depression look like?
During a business trip to Hong Kong in February, I actually played out a worldwide depression scenario in my head, and it made me shudder. Here is the scenario:
First: rioting in Indonesia
Second: China’s economy falls into recession
Third: US stock prices slump, leading to a global recession
The new Chinese Prime Minister Zhu was inaugurated in February, and the US economy continued to be bullish (at least on the surface), so I forgot about those scenarios. Just recently, however, I’ve started to feel that all of them could actually come true (a riot has already broken out in Indonesia.
Hong Kong is now in the midst of a depression with no end in sight. The decline in the Chinese economy isn’t showing any sign of slowing and continues to struggle following recent floods.
Not included in these scenarios are the conditions in Russia and South America. Reviewing recent events, the Russian economy has been obliterated. Central and South America appear to be slipping into the same rut as Asia. If this happens, Germany will be impacted by Russia. The economic malaise will spread westward from Eastern Europe and could well end up directly afflicting the US.
When you consider Japan’s situation and the bottomless economic recession in Asia, it is also possible this economic contagion will travel eastward to hit the US, or even up from Central and South America.
If Europe and the US go into a recession, the whole world would enter a total simultaneous depression (almost complete crisis). The US and Europe are the only hope, but when you take a look at recent stock market patterns in those regions, you get the feeling that things have finally come full circle.
What’s accelerating the global recession?
What most surprised me was the low savings rate in the US: just 1% according to The Nikkei newspaper (0.2% according to Nikkei Business). Individuals in the US are really committed to stock prices, so if the US stock market were to crash, it is highly likely that a vicious circle would emerge in which individual consumption freezes over and the very factor that sustains the US economy drains out, attacking corporate profits and causing stock prices to fall even further.
If US stock prices do fall and the US economy goes down as well, Europe will be drawn in, and the bottom will drop out of the global economy, paving the way for a simultaneous worldwide recession. Should this happens, economic and social chaos could result sometime between the end of this year and the end of the century.
It is a frightening situation to imagine.
What is even more frightening is that there appears to be no strong economic zone anywhere in the world that could break such a vicious circle once it took hold. Typically, it has been be useful to look toward Asia or Japan, where the recessionary trends first appeared, but contrary to recovering, the situation seems to reflect the bottom dropping out. If this simultaneous worldwide recession worsens, you could expect it to continue for some time.
Incidentally, in June, when I participated in the Harvard Business School regular alumni reunion, I often heard the word “cycle.” This may sound obvious, but I have strong memories of instructors sounding the alarm for everyone, saying, “Don’t forget that the economy goes through cycles.” What is happening in the US now is the same as what happened in Japan when the bubble was at its peak and people believed it would just continue. Americans seem to have forgotten the inevitable cycle of “what goes up must come down.”
I am fundamentally an optimist, but just this one time, when I calmly consider the situation, I really do believe that the chances of a simultaneous world recession are high. Business leaders must constantly imagine the worst possible scenario and be prepared for it. I think we are now in a period that will require strong, ongoing navigation.
I can’t help praying that a simultaneous worldwide recession will not happen, and that all these thoughts are just irrational fears.