HCBE Faculty Articles
Examining the Japanese leadership orientations and their changes
ORCID
Bahaudin Mujtaba0000-0003-1615-3100
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Leadership & Organization Development Journal
ISSN
0143-7739
Publication Date
1-1-2012
Abstract/Excerpt
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to analyse the leadership tendencies of Japanese people and relevant changes over time while exploring their task and relationship orientations on the basis of culture. Design/methodology/approach – In order to explore the behavioural tendencies of working adults in the Japanese workplace, the paper focused on comparing the leadership orientations of 231 respondents on the basis of age, gender and public/private sector work experience. To deepen the understanding of Japanese leadership orientation, the authors precisely examine Japanese culture, organisation and management practices. Findings – Japanese respondents have a significantly higher score on the relationship orientation. Their task score is also in the moderately high range. Japanese males were found to be more task‐oriented. No differences were found based on public/private sector work experience. However, older Japanese have a significantly higher focus on task orientation compared to their younger colleagues. Research limitations/implications – One of the limitations is the small number of responses. One specific limitation is the fact that this study was conducted with a convenient sample population. Future studies can compare specific populations in different parts of the country with similar working backgrounds and demographic variables. Practical implications – The findings that Japanese employees are more focused on their relationship but that they also have a moderately high task orientation score are useful for managers and expatriates working in Japan to understand the behavioural tendencies of Japanese people and the relevant changes over time. Originality/value – Japan is a high‐context culture; therefore Japanese people are traditionally regarded to be relationship‐oriented, and this was confirmed academically in the findings of this research. However, the paper showed that the Japanese also have a moderately high task orientation.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1108/01437731211229322.
Volume
33
Issue
4
First Page
401
Last Page
420
NSUWorks Citation
Mujtaba, Bahaudin and Isomura, K., "Examining the Japanese leadership orientations and their changes" (2012). HCBE Faculty Articles. 395.
https://nsuworks.nova.edu/hcbe_facarticles/395