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Son also rises

Face value: Softbank's Masayoshi Son

A rare, self-made business leader wants to revitalise Japan through telecoms

Softbank s hard-charging leader

THEY are the losers in battle. When you meet with them, they give all kinds of

excuses. They blame the government; they blame the weather! Masayoshi Son, the

founder and boss of Softbank, Japan s third-biggest telecoms operator, has

little patience for the risk-averse managers of the country s sluggish

industrial behemoths. Entrepreneurs like him don t give excuses for how tough

the battle is, and how tough the handicap is we always fight.

Japan is unfriendly to entrepreneurs. Like the rest of Japanese society, its

businesses have traditionally placed a premium on harmony, which in practice

has meant propping up weak firms and making it harder for new, more efficient

competitors to rise. Though some stragglers have been allowed to go to the

wall, this insiderish ethos still lingers. As a result Japan has the lowest

rate of start-ups among rich countries: one-third of America s rate and half of

Europe s.

Mr Son s outspokenness is as rare in Japan as his enterprising spirit. He is

the nearest thing the country has to American tech bosses such as Bill Gates

and Steve Jobs (who are his long-time friends and business partners). His

brashness means he is less welcome in some Japanese circles than a man whose

worth is estimated at $8 billion might expect to be.

He is used to being an outsider. Although his family has lived in Japan for two

generations, he is of Korean-Chinese descent, and has thus had to suffer having

doors slammed in his face. At 16 he moved to America to finish high school; he

then studied at Berkeley, which in the late 1970s was abuzz with the silicon

revolution. Mr Son says he vowed to devise one computer-related business idea

each day. This paid off when he patented a translation system and sold it for

around $1m.

He set up Softbank in the 1980s, initially as a software distributor. Soon it

became a vehicle to take stakes in American information-technology firms that

were entering Japan. Mr Son acquired nearly 40% of Yahoo! when it was still a

tiny operation, along with a gaggle of other dotcoms. By the late 1990s his

firm was worth $180 billion. But the dotcom crash wiped out 98% of its market

value (and Mr Son s wealth).

Since then he has resurrected the company by buying telecoms businesses,

emerging as the most feared competitor of NTT, the dominant, formerly

state-owned telecoms operator. To get there he took on heroic amounts of debt

and braved criticism over the accounting policies he adopted at the firms he

acquired.

Now he is risking the establishment s ire once more with a radical idea to

break NTT in two, arguing that this would be the best way to boost the take-up

of broadband and help Japan create new online businesses. Broadband speeds in

Japan are among the world s fastest, but access is costly. So although 90% of

Japanese households have access to high-speed connections, only 60% subscribe,

compared with 96% in South Korea.

The government is expected shortly to unveil a scheme to loop the country with

fibre-optic lines that will support internet access at up to 100 megabytes a

second, ten times the speed of the technology being replaced. Mr Son argues

that to guarantee fair access to this network and thus the most efficient use

of it it should be run by an infrastructure firm hived off from NTT, owned

jointly by all the telecoms operators. Instead, the government is likely to let

NTT continue to run the network, but erect Chinese walls between those

operations and the business of selling telephony and internet access. The

communications ministry is uneasy with Mr Son s plan because it eliminates

incentives to build alternative infrastructure although in practice, the

chances of any other operator building a fibre-optic network to compete with

NTT s seem slim.

Softbank s hard-charging leader

Mr Son argues that, whoever runs the new fibre-optic network, improved internet

access is a vital part of any plan to revive Japan s stagnant economy. Online

health services could help it cope with an ageing and declining population.

Unfortunately, he says, the country s media, government and society look down

on internet entrepreneurs, and the tax system makes it hard to build technology

businesses using employee stock options, a cornerstone of Silicon Valley s

success.

Somewhat optimistically, Mr Son has a 300-year plan for Softbank (by the end of

which time he expects people to communicate by telepathy and live to 200).

Earlier this year he invited contenders from inside and outside the company to

apply to be his successor (4,000 did so), although the 53-year-old does not

plan to step down for at least a decade. Thirty years from now Mr Son wants

Softbank to be one of the world s top ten firms, valued at around $2 trillion.

The open recruitment is an acknowledgment that Softbank has become big and that

he wants to keep it entrepreneurial, so it doesn t end up a timid plodder like

so many other firms in Japan.

Business