Disrupting Japan

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 135:50:01
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Sinopsis

Japanese startups are fundamentally changing Japans society and economy. Disrupting Japan gives you direct access to the thoughts and plans of Japans must successful and creative startup founders. Join us and bypass the media and corporate gatekeepers and hear whats really going on inside Japans startup world.

Episodios

  • 10: Japan’s Accidental Entrepreneur – Yusuke Takahashi – AppSocially

    05/01/2015 Duración: 35min

    Yusuke epitomizes the new generation of Japanese startup founders. That means he is exactly the opposite of what most Westerners picture as a startup founder in Japan. He left a fast-track, high-status job in academia to start one startup after another, in both Tokyo and in San Francisco, and while Yusuke has not achieved a massive Silicon Valley style exit just yet, there is no doubt he is on his way.

  • 9: The Hardest Working Slacker in Japan – Masanori Hashimoto

    22/12/2014 Duración: 29min

    Masanori Hashimoto is the hardest woking slacker in Fukuoka. He's bootstrapped a collaborative diagramming company that is growing internationally and founded Myojyowaraku, the largest technology, music and arts festival this side of South By Southwest. But that ...

  • 8: The Indirect Way a Startup is Disrupting Japan – Akiko Naka – Wantedly

    08/12/2014 Duración: 38min

    Akiko Naka is an amazing woman. When you first meet, her reserved and unassuming manner makes you wonder if she really knows how potentially transformative her ideas and her company are. As you get to know Akiko, however, it becomes clear she knows exactly what she's doing. She's just doing things her way.

  • 7: How a Startup is Making Ticketing Pay – Taku Harada – Peatix

    24/11/2014 Duración: 36min

    Taku walked away from the kind of a career that most people dream of. He had proven himself at Sony Music, Apple and in his late twenties he was quickly rising thought he ranks at Amazon Japan. He and his friends knew they had an amazing career ahead of them, and that terrified them. At that point they knew they had to go out on their own and build something amazing.

  • 6: Breaking Open Japan’s Closed Business Culture – Tadashi Tanimoto – Realcom

    10/11/2014 Duración: 36min

    Tadashi Tanimoto is a man with a big successes behind him and a big dream ahead of him. The IPO of Realcom was just a milestone in a longer journey to change the way people work together and share information. Now, I realize, that sounds like a typical committee-written and board-approved mission statement from any number of enterprise software companies. But as you get to know Tadashi, you begin to understand that he not only means it, but lives it.

  • 5: Founding a Startup as a Foreigner in Japan – Jason Winder – MakeLeaps

    27/10/2014 Duración: 37min

    Jason came to Japan from Australia to study martial arts, and his company MakeLeaps is now kicking ass in online invoicing. Jason bootstrapped MakeLeaps himself and he and his partner, Paul Oswald grew the company organically, acquired two of their domestic competitors, and recently became the first Japanese company to receive funding from an AngelList syndicate.

  • 4: What Japan’s Startup Ecosystem Needs to Grow – Ikuo Hiraishi – Sunbridge

    13/10/2014 Duración: 28min

    The startup ecosystems in America and Europe are built around people like Ikuo, but men like him are still quite rare in Japan. After founding a series of successful (and a few less than successful) startups, Ikuo moved to the other side of the table and begin investing and mentoring.

  • 3: Why Japan Needs to Change Its Communication Strategy – Naoki Yamada – Conyac

    29/09/2014 Duración: 28min

    It was a unique combination of Naoki's adventure driving through the US, his ongoing frustration in working for a large Japanese firm, and his love of an anime character from his childhood that inspired him to start his own venture and to try to change the way we communicate with each other via translation. Conyac is a collaborative translation platform with an innovative approach to ensuring product quality and customer satisfaction.

  • 2: Exporting Japan’s Business Card Culture – Chika Terada – Sansan

    16/09/2014 Duración: 29min

    Business cards are far more important in Asia than they are in the West. Business cards command the same level of respect and deference as the person they belong to. Here in Japan, there are many times when a business conversation cannot get underway until all cards have been exchanged and everyone knows exactly ...

  • 1: Japan’s Coming Startup Boom

    02/09/2014 Duración: 11min

    Far too many people, including many of the Japanese themselves, consider Japanese society as inflexible and unable to change. This is simply wrong. In this kickoff episode we look at what was behind the two disruptive, transformative really, changes that Japanese society has been through in the past, and examine the groundwork that is being laid for the coming startup boom. We nail down ...

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