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Shall
We Dansu?
Fabiano
Cid
A
Westerner reports on learning about the Eastern mindset
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Willy
Brandt once said, "If I'm selling to you, I speak
your language. If I'm buying from you, dann müssen
Sie Deutsch sprechen." This quote has served as
the epigraph for a number of papers on localization,
yet it seems to me that the former German chancellor's
words only address half of the issue concerning our
vendors, prospects and clients in the Far East. In a
globalized world, and especially in the localization
industry, one can even speak the client's language.
However, by going one step further and actually seeking
to understand the Asian mindset, you will certainly
be able to deal with Easterners in a much more productive
way than those who are trapped in Western-centered thinking
and acting.
Upon
my return to Rio de Janeiro in 1999 after spending two
years in London, I had the opportunity to travel to
some Asian countries and was delighted by every place
I visited and every person I met. During my time in
the United Kingdom, I had the opportunity to travel
throughout Europe and I thought I had grown accustomed
to experiencing different cultures. However, the Asian
tour made me feel like I was on a totally different
planet. It was obvious that the people I encountered
could understand what I meant and we could communicate
perfectly well, but there was something else to it.
The way they looked at me, the way they structured their
thinking, even the organization of their sentences (whether
written or spoken) felt so different and peculiar that
there had to be something more that I was not grasping
at the time.
When
I read The Geography of Thought: How Asians and Westerners
Think Differently...and Why, by Richard Nisbett,
I found a well-documented and solid explanation for
my instinctive perception. The author, an eminent psychologist,
supports that human cognition differs in these two regions
of the globe for reasons that are related to various
aspects ranging from social structures to educational
systems. In the East Asian group, the author includes
Chinese, Koreans, Japanese and other peoples on which
Confucius's ideas had a critical influence. Westerners
for Nisbett are those brought up in Northern European
and Anglo-Saxon cultures, whose early descendants learned
from Aristotle and other Greek philosophers. The Confucian
and Aristotelian views, according to the author, still
influence the logic and perception of Easterners and
Westerners of the modern world. In this groundbreaking
study, Nisbett argues that Asians tend to have a more
holistic view of any situation, are greatly influenced
by environment and try to find a middle way between
opposing thoughts in a fundamentally dialectic reasoning.
Westerners, on the other hand, tend to categorize objects
and people, consider them individually while disregarding
the context in which they appear and use rules and conventions
to comprehend and analyze their behaviors.
The
Geography of Thought was a recommendation from Hideo
Yanagi, managing director of a Tokyo-based localization
company with which Ccaps established a fruitful partnership.
Over a few cappuccinos in Brussels, Hideo tried to explain
me how acupuncture was being used to make sushi more
tasteful. "Fish Acupuncture?" I asked myself.
He was absolutely serious. In fact, this sushi chef
transformed a most unconventional cooking technique
into a money saving procedure that is widely used by
Japanese restaurants today. (For further information,
visit the following website http://www.cnn.com/FOOD/news/9901/19/fish.acupuncture).
What about Kobe beef? Half a kilo of such meat can cost
up to US$100.00 simply because cows are fed with beer
and treated to daily massages! Before reading the book
that Hideo had suggested, I personally found it hard
to understand how someone could devise such ingenious
ideas. I left Brussels both confused and thrilled. Today,
however, things have become much clearer.
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College
students in the US and from mainland China and Taiwan
were asked "What goes with C: A or B?".
While the American participants showed a marked
preference for grouping by category (cow and chicken),
the Chinese and Taiwanese participants were more
inclined to group on the basis of thematic relationship
(cow and grass).
Source:
The Geography of Thought, by Richard E. Nisbett
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In a report called Quick Take on Japan, Renato
Beninatto rightfully says that "we think, act,
apologize and play differently than [the] Japanese."
He tells a story of a Japanese Project Manager who could
not understand why they were facing delivery issues
because of communication problems if his team could
speak perfect English. Again, it is not only the language
that can create barriers for a successful enterprise,
but the way that each involved party thinks. Communication
encompasses a much larger set of attributes than just
language. And if e-mail alone does not allow you to
convey an idea that could be better transmitted with
the help of facial expressions, body language and voice
tone, rest assured that the mindset of the recipient
of your message will play a major part in any confusion
you may experience. For instance, the way that Japanese
(and most East Asians) tackle problems and tell you
what is wrong is completely different from that which
is practiced in the West. Beninatto further explains
that "If someone [in Japan] says, 'This is a little
bit different,' he means you are way off." Yet,
the bold statement that you are entirely mistaken could
mean an insult, which must always be avoided, whether
you are the sender or the receiver of such a message.
Finally, "if you really are only off by a small
margin, he will say, 'You are almost correct',"
adds Beninatto.
East
Asian markets are increasingly becoming the targets
of global enterprises. This is either because they have
a high per capita purchasing power, as is the case of
Japan, or because they have an enormous population avid
for Western products, such as China. Even emerging economies
like Brazil have started to look to Asia in an attempt
to establish synergies and partnerships with these important
players. The recent political and economic agreements
between Brazil and China and the resulting developments
for the corporate world prove that for both the Brazilian
government and companies, the business possibilities
in the other extreme of the globe are countless.
While
these corporations need localization companies to help
them communicate with their target audiences in Eastern
markets, the responsibility of ensuring that deadlines
are met, quality standards are secured and the globalized
product is delivered seamlessly falls to those who hire
the local vendors or find local partners. Namely, the
global project managers and localization executives
in this part of the world. We work in a multicultural
environment and global economy, allowing us to adapt
to different methods, approaches and behaviors. However,
you will have a competitive edge and will be able to
communicate more efficiently with your East Asian partner,
vendor or even client if you bear in mind that not only
do they think differently from you, but that this way
of thinking, developed over centuries, is not something
that can be changed in a matter of weeks.
In
the US remake of the much acclaimed Japanese movie from
which the title of this article was borrowed, Richard
Gere is a bored estate lawyer who finds himself taking
ballroom classes in a rundown Chicago dance studio in
an attempt to get closer to the object of his desire,
dance instructor Jennifer Lopez. The original movie
is a much better accomplished piece, as it depicts the
battle of a middle-aged, married man who finds pleasure
in a relaxed environment yet lives in a society where
public displays of emotion are avoided at any cost.
But to detect the beauty and humor of such a battle,
one must fully understand that for the East Asian individual
standing out from the crowd is not considered a positive
quality as it is in Western culture. As we head due
East and establish business relationship with local
clients, vendors and representatives, one must also
make an effort to better understand and relate to these
individuals. Or at least try to empathize with the fact
that they think, feel and learn differently than we
do. Otherwise, you might end up stepping on your Eastern
partner's foot!
My
word of advice? Be respectful at all times and as humble
as possible to realize that the world does not revolve
around you or your Western concepts. The above reading
recommendations can be a great start, yet the pure awareness
that Easterners simply think differently from you will
avoid not only confrontation - which is never desired
- but also a lot of painkillers to cure your headaches.
Finally, I sincerely hope that the fact that I have
directed this article at my Western counterparts will
by no means be considered disrespectful or prejudicial
against my dearest colleagues in the East. If only I
could think the way you do, I would feel much more comfortable
changing the course of my text and addressing you instead.
And for no other reason I am looking desperately for
a Chinese teacher to learn Mandarin.
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| Fabiano
Cid is the Managing Director of Ccaps Translation
and Localization. His article was first published
in the June 2005 edition of MultiLingual Computing
and Technology. Cid started taking Chinese
classes in Rio de Janeiro a few weeks ago and already
can tell the difference between mother, horse and
swearing (all "ma" with three different
tones). |
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