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2016-05-03 09:30:09
Constantly trapped in pointless meetings? Try the Japanese or Finnish approach.
Our guide to understanding meeting culture around the world.
By Alina Dizik
3 May 2016
If you want to get your point across in a meeting in Finland, keep quiet; and
let your counterparts deliberate. Of course, that won t work at all in, say,
Canada.
As more of us do business across cultures and far-flung offices, every meeting
can feel like a riddle. What do the long silences, idle chitchat and serious
faces really mean in context?
It s easy to make a mistake.
You have two minutes to either gain credibility or lose it.
A familiar gesture at home can signal something altogether different elsewhere.
For example, while answering a ringing mobile phone in North America and across
Europe may be a sign of disrespect during a meeting, it s just part of the norm
for some Chinese businesspeople many of whom attend meetings with multiple
phones in hand, said Robert Gogel, Paris-based chief executive of Integreon, a
consulting firm with a focus on outsourcing and legal services.
You have two minutes at the beginning of the meeting to either gain
credibility or lose it, Gogel said.
It s best to prepare ahead of time so you can quickly zero in on cultural
quirks before you head to the meeting table. You at least have to understand
your local customers, said Gogel, who spends most workweeks travelling between
clients in Asia.
Here are five rules of thumb for different countries to make navigating your
next international meeting a little less nerve-wracking.
Stick to the schedule
Where: Germany, Austria, Japan
We ve all been to meetings that have a loose agenda, if any at all. They don t
start on time and they seem to repeat as stragglers wander in. Not so in these
countries. Japanese users of Do.com, an online meeting platform, are more
likely to create a detailed agenda and pass out supporting documents several
days prior to a meeting than meeting goers in any other country, according to
founder Jason Shah.
In Japan, meetings start promptly, stay on schedule and have an agenda.
(Credit: Alamy)
People [in Japan] are cognisant of how much time remains and don t go over,
said Shah who is based in San Francisco. It s expected that you ll understand
the written materials ahead of the meeting. If a meticulously planned meeting
runs over the allotted time, the gathering might be deemed unproductive, he
adds. Ultimately, it can lead to a negative outcome because participants may be
seen as inefficient.
Germans and Austrians have a similar sentiment, said Stuart Friedman, founder
of Global Context, a cross-cultural communication firm based in Redwood City,
California in the US. In the US, a well-planned gathering that exceeds its
scheduled time might signal great interest or excitement over the topic, but
meetings that run long in Germany are often taken to mean that the parties are
not communicating efficiently, he said.
Don t even think about a brainstorm
Where: China, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore
Backtracking or debating a topic can go against the traditional Chinese concept
of saving face , which is meant to avoid any mistakes or actions that could
bring embarrassment. Laughing at even an obviously amusing answer, pointing out
a potential mistake or even being too straightforward in an answer can derail
the entire meeting.
In China, brainstorming doesn t take place in meetings.
Meetings in a number of Asian countries typically have a desired outcome,
without much room for taking a new direction. Knowing the meeting s outcome
saves participants from any confrontation or debates, but can be an odd
experience for westerners.
Some people will fly to attend a meeting that they hope to be a brainstorming
session, but [in China] brainstorming doesn t take place in meetings, Friedman
explained.
In some countries, people duck in and out on their own schedules. (Credit:
Alamy)
Savour the interruptions
Where: Italy, France, Spain
When Munich-based Pascal Soboll meets with clients in Italy or Spain, he s no
longer offended if they duck out early or arrive late. Rather than attend the
entire three-hour meeting, the managing director at innovation and design firm
Daylight Design, has learned that his counterparts there and in some parts of
France attend based on their own timetable.
People tend to come and go.
People change their schedules very spontaneously, said Soboll. They tend to
come and go.
For Soboll that means tweaking his own German-based expectations of client
behaviour. Rather than expecting the same group to sit through his entire
presentation (often analysing the company s existing strategy) he makes it
easier for people to turn up as needed. Those who have missed a portion of the
presentation can then review and ask questions to avoid information lapses, he
adds.
Some meetings are just awkward by nature. (Credit: Alamy)
Please, no small talk
Where: Finland, Sweden
While chitchat about everything from the weather to the latest sport scores can
be good way to ease into more serious meeting discussions in North America,
this type of warm-up exercise isn t acceptable in places like Finland and
Sweden where non-meeting related discussions can be perceived as a way to veer
away from a formally-set agenda and as a waste of other people s time.
In some countries there are long pauses in the conversation.
In some countries, including Finland, there are long pauses in the
conversation, which can make visitors feel like there s an awkward silence. Don
t try to fill it, though, with small talk or anything else. In parts of
Northern Europe business people are more comfortable with pauses that can be as
long as a minute peppered throughout the conversation, explained Friedman.
These breaks are used as a way to process what the other person is saying
without interrupting. But a clashing of customs can make it easier to distrust
the other side during a meeting, so it s crucial to keep this difference in
mind.
Are you comfortable with long pauses? They're common in parts of Northern
Europe. (Credit: Alamy)
The Americans insistence on breaking the silence causes [the Finnish] to not
trust [them], for instance, said Friedman. If someone Finnish gets quiet we
wonder what excuses they are contemplating.
Decode the feedback culture
Where: South Korea, Germany
When Soboll visits Seoul for business meetings, he anticipates the sort of
feedback he will get by first making sure he understands the relationships of
those across the table from him. The most junior team member speaks first to
give some initial input and the decision maker typically speaks last to make
the final call. The feedback order creates a formality to the meeting that
helps the participants to understand the significance of each person s input,
he adds.
In Germany, it's hard to tell how a meeting is going and nobody is going to say
they love the work. (Credit: Getty Images)
German meetings, to that end, can feel equally cool, he said. There s often no
way to tell how things are going. German clients don t applaud or jump for
joy, he said. No one is going to spontaneously say how much they love this
work.