By: Erin Meyer
It was Friday afternoon in Paris and I had spent the morning
teaching a group of Chinese CEOs how to work effectively with Europeans.
I asked the class: “What steps should the team leader in this case
study take to manage different attitudes towards confrontation on the
team?”
Lilly Li, a bird-like woman with a pleasant smile, who had been
running operations in Hungary for two years, raised her hand: “Trust has
been a big challenge for us, as Hungarians do not take the same time to
build personal relationships as we do in China.”
Now I was a little confused, because the question I’d asked was about
confrontation, not trust. Had she misunderstood me? I pushed the
earpiece closer to my ear to make sure I was hearing the translator
correctly. Lilly Li continued to talk for several minutes about trust,
hierarchy, and her experiences in Hungary. The Chinese participants
listened carefully.
After several long minutes of interesting comments that had
— from my perspective — absolutely zero to do with the
question I’d asked, Lilly came to the point: “If the team leader had
spent more time helping the team build relationships outside of the
meeting, they would have been much more comfortable dealing with debate
and direct confrontation.”
All afternoon long, the participants’ answers followed a similar
pattern: After taking several minutes to discuss peripheral information,
they would loop back to the point.
The behavior illustrates one of the key differences between the
cultural norms of East Asia and the West. Of course each East Asian and
each Western culture is different — often dramatically so. But this
differentiation appears to be basic.
Psychologists Richard E. Nisbett and Takahiko Masuda wrote about this cultural difference in a famous study.
As an experiment they presented 20-second animated videos of underwater
scenes to Japanese and American participants. Afterward, participants
were asked what they had seen.
While the Americans mentioned larger, faster-moving, brightly-colored
objects in the foreground (such as the big fish), the Japanese spoke
more about what was going on in the background (for example, the small
frog bottom left). The Japanese also talked twice as often as the
Americans about the interdependencies between the objects up front and
the objects in the background.
In a second study, Americans and Japanese were asked to “take a photo
of a person.” The Americans (left) most frequently took a close-up,
showing all facial features, while the Japanese (right) showed the
person in his or her environment with the human figure quite small.
Notice the common pattern in both studies. The Americans focus on
individual items separate from their environment, while the Asians give
more attention to backgrounds and to the links between these backgrounds
and the central figures.
These tendencies have been borne out in my own interviews with
multi-cultural managers. While Northern Europeans and Anglo-Saxons
generally follow the American thinking patterns, East Asians respond as
the Japanese and Taiwanese did in Nisbett and Masuda’s research.
Perhaps it’s not surprising. A traditional tenet of Western
philosophies and religions is that you can remove an item from its
environment and analyze it separately. Cultural theorists call this specific thinking.
Chinese religions and philosophies, by contrast, have traditionally
emphasized interdependencies and interconnectedness. The Ancient Chinese
thought in a holistic way, believing that action always occurs in a field of forces. The terms yin and yang (literally “dark” and “light”), for example, describe how seemingly contrary forces are interdependent.
Here’s what one of my Chinese participants said after we’d discussed
the fish and photo studies: “Chinese people think from macro to micro,
whereas Western people think from micro to macro. For example, when
writing an address, the Chinese write in sequence of province, city,
district, block, gate number. Westerners do just the opposite. In the
same way, Chinese put the surname first, whereas Westerners do it the
other way around. And Chinese put the year before month and date.”
This affects the way business people view each other across the
globe. As Bae Pak from the Korean motor company Kia told me: “When we
work with Western colleagues, we are often taken aback by their tendency
to make decisions without considering the impact on other business
units, clients, and suppliers.”
A Polish manager, Jacek Malecki, with whom I worked as part
of a different assignment, shared with me an experience that
illustrates this: “When I took my first trip to meet with my Japanese
staff I managed the objective-setting process like I always had. I
called each person on the team into my office for a meeting, where I
outlined his or her individual goals. Although I noticed they asked a
lot of peripheral questions during the meetings no one actually
explained to me that my approach was not ideal for them, so I went back
to Poland with a false sense of comfort.”
Later Malecki saw that the team had spent a lot of time consulting
with one another about what each person had been asked to do and how
their individual objectives fit together to create a big picture: “The
team was now making good progress but not in the way I had segmented the
project.”
In a specific culture, people usually respond well to
receiving very detailed and segmented information about what is expected
of each of them. If you need to give instructions to a team member from
this kind of culture, focus on what that person needs to accomplish and
when. Conversely, if you need to motivate, manage, or persuade someone
from a holistic culture, spend time explaining the big picture and how all the pieces slot together.
If you are leading a global team, this type of cognitive diversity
can cause confusion, inefficiency, and general frustration. But we’ve
known for a long time that the more diverse the team, the greater the
potential for innovation. If you understand that one person sees a fish
and another sees an aquarium, and you think carefully about the benefits
of both the specific and holistic approach, you can learn to turn these
cultural differences into your team’s greatest assets.
Source : Harvard Business Review Magazine