My Leadership Journey
ACCJ-KANSAI CEO SERIES: GE’S ERIKO ASAI SHARES HOW TO STAY RESILIENT DURING UNCERTAIN TIMES
By C Bryan Jones
Since 2015, the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan (ACCJ) Kansai chapter has hosted the CEO Series, an annual collection of speaker events featuring top executives from leading companies. The sessions are very popular due to their intimate and insightful nature, and the glimpses they offer into the lives of successful leaders. Attendees leave inspired and with actionable advice to help them improve their work lives, while the candid discussion is especially valuable for young professionals starting to build their careers..
On May 19, Eriko Asai, president of GE Japan and ACCJ chair, spoke at an event co-hosted by the ACCJ-Kansai Business Programs Committee and Diversity & Inclusion Committee. She revealed what she had learned on her way to becoming GE Japan’s first female president.
“Today, I’m going to share with you my leadership journey and some of the challenges I’ve experienced over the years that helped me develop my leadership skills and keep myself resilient during uncertain times,” she said.
The landscape has changed significantly since Asai took the helm of GE Japan in January 2018, and the company currently is undergoing its biggest business transformation of the past 128 years. “One of the most important jobs, as a leader, is to drive the cultural transformation and make a difference,” she noted.
GE is working with governments around the world to implement rules and regulations that harness innovation while ensuring a sustainable future.
Milestones
Asai opened her presentation with a slide labeled “Leadership Journey” on which she charted the major events in her life and career, beginning with her birth in the UK.
More than just a visual representation of education and job changes, the chart tells a story that Asai believes has great value. “I highly recommend that you write your journey like this, because it helps you reflect on who you are, your strengths and weaknesses, why you think about something a certain way, what you care about, what has been consistent in your career journey, and where you want to be in the future,” she explained.
One thing that this writing exercise brings to the forefront is self-awareness which, Asai said, is such an important part of the leadership journey. Noting that her rise to company president was a zigzag, not linear, she outlined her career progression and the skills she learned along the way—a particularly valuable way of looking at professional development and staying the course.
“It’s very important to be intentional about your journey, according to your life stage,” she explained, breaking down the phases of career progression by age:
Twenties: challenge yourself
Thirties: work–life balance and expertise
Forties: leadership
Fifties: investing in the next generation
When she moved to Japan at age three, to Australia at age nine, and then returned to Japan two years later—all due to her father’s work with a trading company—Asai learned three key skills that would help her become a leader:
Survival
Listening
Adapting to change
Two more skills were added when she chose to study at a UK university, before going to work for Sony Europe in Germany— despite speaking no German:
Being the minority
Communication
When she began a series of transitions in her thirties—shifting first to government affairs with Microsoft Corporation, then to healthcare with GE Healthcare, during which time she also served as director of the American Medical Devices and Diagnostics Manufacturers’ Association, later expanding her role to energy and finally becoming president of GE Japan in her late forties— she added two more key traits:
Self-confidence
Resilience
Now that she is president, she has taken on roles that help her invest in the next generation. This includes serving as chair of the ACCJ. And, while she leverages her experience to help others grow, she finds herself also refining skills such as:
Developing people
Building teams
Crisis management
“I have lived in many places, in five countries, and have always been a minority in those societies—so I know how it feels when your voice is not heard, how painful it is to be left out with no means to respond,” she said. “Although I didn’t know the word ‘inclusive’ when I was very young, I came to understand what inclusive leadership looks like through my experiences in the early part of life. I’m sure many of you have had similar experiences. It’s very good to reflect on those and think about how you can apply what you learned earlier in life to your workplace today.”
As she noted, her path has zigzagged, so it is important to remember that you can learn at any time. “Leadership is all about acquiring skills at any point in your life. If you didn’t have a particular experience—for example, a chance to live abroad— earlier in your life, you can always do something different in your current life and practice adapting to the change.”
Pandemic Leadership
Next, Asai talked about the current situation and the need for leaders and teams to work together when dealing with a crisis such as the coronavirus pandemic.
“This is a moment when leadership really matters,” she said. “We need to prepare for the worst-case scenario and make sure that people understand the guidelines we have put in place. This takes self-awareness and imagination.”
She said that, in such situations, it is important to follow up with employees who may be feeling left out, or who find it difficult to talk with a manager. “We need to be creative about supporting them in making the work-from-home experience comfortable.”
At the start of the pandemic, Asai set up the national crisis management team for GE Japan, to help it cope with Covid-19 and the potential disruptions to business operations. By working together, helping everyone understand the risks and importance of establishing and following safety guidelines, and listening to employee concerns so that they might feel comfortable and adapt, GE Japan was able to continue being productive and secure.
Once everyone had become accustomed to the new procedures and workstyle, she handed over related responsibilities to the business leaders, who then managed their units and teams on their own.
Strategy and Policy
Expanding on GE’s business transformation, Asai highlighted the importance of focus.
“GE has a 128-year history, but we have really changed our portfolio over the past couple of years,” she explained. “We used to have businesses such as capital, plastics, and even media. But we have divested ourselves of most of the non-core businesses and now are focusing on infrastructure. The three areas of the strategy are:
Energy transition
Precision health
Future of flight
In terms of policy, GE is working with governments around the world to implement rules and regulations that harness innovation while ensuring a sustainable future. Three key policy areas are:
Decarbonization
Decoupling
Digital transformation
Highlighting the last of these, she reminded attendees that “the ACCJ just released the Japan Digital Agenda 2030 report, which provides comprehensive guidance as to how Japan should leap from here, given that the government is focusing on establishing a digital ministry and there are a lot of changes to come. It’s an important time for the ACCJ to be putting forth a position on this, and we are also doing so at GE.”
Building a Culture of Success
“To make this business transformation, one of the most important jobs as a leader is to drive the cultural change,” Asai said, explaining that, at GE, 50 percent of a team member’s review score is based on performance and 50 percent on leadership behaviors, of which the company has three:
Act with humility
Lead with transparency
Deliver with focus
“When we talk about acting with humility, it sounds obvious. But it’s also surprising that we are talking about it at this point in GE’s long history,” she said. “We are very proud of our technology, but because we are so proud, we have become a little bit arrogant. So, the questions are: How can we become more humble? How do we behave with humility? What does humility look like? We need to discuss and debate this as a team.”
She added that humility is a very important starting point for leadership behavior. “If you think something is wrong, you should say so. We have to be open to this. It has to be a culture of welcoming feedback and acknowledging mistakes.”
Transparency, she explained, goes hand in hand with humility, because without transparency, people will not raise issues and you cannot solve problems. The worst-case scenario for a company is not having the bad things reported up to management level.
“Trust is the base of this transparency,” she said. “And this also goes for leaders sharing bad news with the team in a timely fashion, because, without leaders exercising transparency, the team will not have the courage to share bad news themselves. It goes both ways.
Delivering with focus relates to our ability to manage the demands of modern life, where it is easy to become distracted or be drawn into doing a task that is not the highest priority.
“In a world where we have so much work to do, we really need focus and speed. And being able to focus on the most important thing is a continuous challenge,” she said. “It is about ruthless prioritization and practice, and I am continually struggling to do that myself. Priorities are so important.”
Takeaways
In closing, Asai recapped five points that she believes can lead to a successful and rewarding career—one in which you might also zigzag your way to the top:
Leadership is about continuous learning
Focus on building trust
Embrace awareness and imagination
Be mindful of how you use time
Take control of your life and have fun!
“We live in an uncertain world, so constant change is the norm,” she said. “We are never going to be perfect, so we need to be humble and learn from others. The good news is that you don’t have to be perfect, and you don’t have to know everything, because there’s no way to know everything.”
Building trust, Asai noted, takes time. But “speed of trust,” as she calls it, is very important because when there is trust you can get work done faster.
Being mindful of how you use time also is critical, she said. “In my case, I need to spend about 20 percent of my time reflecting and really thinking deeply, without meetings, and 10 percent or more on people development, talking to people—especially young talent who have points of view to share—and spending time with them outside my work.
“And, obviously, sleep and exercise—all the things that keep you healthy—must be tended to, so it’s very important to carve out time in your schedule for that,” she added in closing. “Making sure you are healthy is, in the end, bringing a healthy spirit to work every day.”
THE JOURNAL
A flagship publication of The American Chamber of Commerce in Japan (ACCJ), The ACCJ Journal is a business magazine with a 58-year history.
Christopher Bryan Jones, Publisher & Editor