Weekend Read: Hammer Ready
Don Southerton, Korean Business Thought Leader

Weekend Read: Hammer Ready

As a trusted friend constantly reminds me,?“Don, no one does what you do.”

I strive to ensure success and sustainability?in dealing?with Korea-facing business partnerships?through well-communicated expectations and cross-cultural understanding.

It also requires a unique skill set—groomed over decades of working with an ever-changing Korea.?

I like the story that shortly after an engineer retires, a machine at his former factory stops working. They try everything they can do to fix it, to no avail.?Finally, the boss calls up the engineer and asks him to come in and fix it.

The engineer agrees to do so as a paid consultant. He comes in, walks around the machine, looks at a few things, takes out a hammer, and whacks the machine. It whirrs into life.?

The engineer presents his former boss with a bill for $5,000. The boss says, "This is ridiculous! What did you even do? I need an itemized bill."?

The engineer provides a new invoice that states:

·???????Hitting machine with a hammer: $5.00

·???????Knowing where to hit the machine: $4,995

Nuff said…

My work is knowing when and where to use the 'hammer', catching issues early, and then as needed providing work-throughs as projects can so easily get sidetracked. Many assume when initial talks and progress seem smooth things will continue to move forward—which is rarely the case.?

It’s one thing, too, for those well-experienced in global business who are now engaged in Korean projects to expect experience in the West will be enough to work through what can be escalating challenges—but in fact, what many will find out is that they are poorly suited to adapting and being flexible (a very Korea business approach and norm).

At the very least, working through issues can become a lengthy learning process. Both ways are time-consuming and costly.

My long-time approach when providing work-throughs is to step back and look for underlying concerns and nuances that are easily missed. Then knowing the Korean processes and mindset work for a resolution. Again, this is more art than science. ?

To summarize, impasses are common in all business—but what may work in the West to overcome issues will take a different approach in Korea.?

The best model is to be constantly aware and sensitive to what may unfold. Use less direct and non-confrontational ways to gain deeper insights into any challenges and be open to alternative approaches at?work-throughs. ?

As always, I look forward to discussing any challenges, and any questions you may have.

I'll have my hammer ready, too.? And here, ready for your call or email.


Don


Anton Scholz / ????

Founder Korea-Consult, Intercultural Coach & Journalist / Honorary Ambassador for the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg in Korea

9 个月

"Knowing where to hit the machine" that is where the magic happens. Sadly very few people understand that. If a lawyer charges 500 USD an hour or a 1h surgery costs you 10K USD somehow no questions are asked. But when it comes to intercultural expertise, which also is not something you pick up along the way, many people try to save money. Though when they face the potential financial fallout when then big deals fall apart due to the lack of ability to read the "fine print" in a negotiation everybody acts surprised. ??

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