Business Cultures: Japan
Key Cultural Values
- Monozukuri (art of making): Japanese culture places extraordinary value on craftsmanship, precision, and continuous quality improvement — products must meet the highest standards
- Nemawashi (consensus-building): decisions are made through careful consultation of all stakeholders; consensus must be achieved before a decision is formally announced
- Kaizen (continuous improvement): Japanese business partners expect ongoing improvement in products and service — complacency is not acceptable
- Meishi koukan (business card ceremony): business card exchange is a ritual that signals respect and professional seriousness
- Hierarchy and seniority: organisational rank governs communication protocols; the most senior person in the room receives the most deference
- Long-term commitment: Japanese partners expect supplier relationships to last years or decades — short-term, transactional thinking is culturally incompatible
First Meetings & Business Etiquette
Greetings & Introductions
A bow is the traditional Japanese greeting; the depth of the bow reflects the level of respect. In international business settings, a light bow combined with a handshake is standard. Use formal titles (San for Mr./Ms., or professional title — Doctor, Director) and surnames. Never use first names until explicitly invited. Business attire is formal and conservative — dark suits are appropriate for all formal business meetings.
Business Cards & Gifts
The business card exchange (meishi koukan) is a significant ritual. Present and receive cards with both hands and a slight bow. Take a moment to read the card carefully before setting it respectfully on the table in front of you — never write on it, bend it, or put it immediately in your pocket. Bring more cards than you think you will need. A card with Japanese on one side is a powerful gesture of respect and seriousness.
Communication Style
Japanese communication is among the world's most indirect. Disagreement is almost never expressed directly — a Japanese counterpart may say 'that may be difficult' (muzukashii) where a Western business person would say 'no'. Silence often indicates discomfort with a proposal. Learn to read context, pauses, and polite deflections as substantive communication. Never put a Japanese counterpart in a position where they must publicly disagree.
Japanese is the business language; English competency varies widely. In internationally oriented companies and academic medical centres, English is functional. For regulatory submissions to the PMDA (Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency), all documentation must be in Japanese. Having Japanese-language marketing materials and a Japanese-speaking representative or interpreter is essentially mandatory for serious market engagement.
Negotiation & Decision-Making
Negotiation Style
Japanese negotiations are extremely methodical, detail-oriented, and slow by Western standards. Expect multiple meetings over months before a commercial commitment is made. Japanese buyers conduct exhaustive due diligence on potential suppliers — factory audits, detailed technical file review, and reference checks. Once a decision is made, however, it is firm and the relationship is typically very durable.
Decision-Making Process
Decision-making follows the ringi-sho system — a formal document is circulated through all relevant stakeholders who must sign off before a decision is formally made. This process is thorough but slow. The most senior person in the room may not be the decision-maker in a technical evaluation; teams of clinical engineers, quality specialists, and clinicians evaluate products before commercial negotiations begin.
Building Long-Term Relationships
Japanese business relationships are built through sustained, patient interaction over a long period. A Japanese distributor or hospital buyer must completely trust your company, your product quality, and your after-sales service capability before committing. Attending the same conferences year after year, consistent follow-up, and demonstrated improvement in response to feedback are the currency of relationship-building in Japan.
Meeting Norms
- Arrive precisely on time — in Japan, punctuality is a form of respect
- The most senior person typically speaks first and sets the tone
- Silence after your presentation is normal — allow time for consideration without rushing to fill it
- Bring comprehensive, professionally formatted printed materials in Japanese where possible
- Gifts are expected at first meetings and annual milestone meetings — quality, beautifully wrapped items reflecting Turkish craftsmanship are appropriate
Key Dos & Don'ts
| ✓ Do | ✗ Don't |
| Obtain PMDA shonin (approval) or todokede (notification) before approaching hospital buyers | Do not use first names without invitation |
| Treat the business card exchange ceremony with absolute seriousness and respect | Do not rush negotiations or express impatience |
| Invest in professional Japanese-language marketing and technical materials | Do not write on, bend, or casually pocket business cards |
| Demonstrate extraordinary after-sales service commitment — Japanese buyers value service above almost everything | Do not approach PMDA without a fully compliant technical file |
| Be patient: Japanese market entry takes 3–5 years of sustained investment before meaningful commercial returns | Do not underestimate the complexity and cost of Japanese regulatory approval |
Tips for Turkish Medical Exporters
- PMDA regulatory pathway: all medical devices sold in Japan require PMDA (Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency) approval — a process that requires a Japanese Marketing Authorisation Holder (MAH), Japanese-language technical documentation, and in some cases Japanese clinical trial data. Budget 18–36 months and significant investment
- Find a Japanese MAH/distributor first: a Japanese distributor who acts as Marketing Authorisation Holder is the prerequisite for market entry — companies like Medikit, Kawamoto, and Muranaka Medical are active in foreign manufacturer partnerships
- MEDTEC Japan and the Japan Medical Show: the primary Japanese medical device trade events are the best venues for meeting potential MAH/distributor candidates
- Quality certification: ISO 13485 certified to the MDSAP (Medical Device Single Audit Programme) standard is increasingly preferred by Japanese distributors
- Turkey-Japan economic partnership: the Turkey-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), under negotiation, may create tariff advantages for Turkish medical device manufacturers when finalised
Conclusion
Japan is the world's most demanding and most rewarding medical device market for suppliers who earn the right to participate. The combination of extraordinary quality standards, long buyer loyalty, and premium pricing makes Japan uniquely valuable. Turkish medical device manufacturers with genuinely high-quality products, the patience to invest in PMDA compliance and distributor relationships, and the cultural intelligence to engage respectfully with Japanese business culture will find Japan an exceptional long-term market.
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