Wednesday, Aug 30, 2023
logo
Update At 12:00    USD/EUR 0,92  ↑+0.001        USD/JPY 146,24  ↑+0.368        USD/KRW 1.321,31  ↑+3.12        EUR/JPY 158,91  ↑+0.23        Crude Oil 85,80  ↑+0.31        Asia Dow 3.418,86  ↑+17.15        TSE 1.934,00  ↑+1        Japan: Nikkei 225 32.529,72  ↑+302.75        S. Korea: KOSPI 2.571,80  ↑+19.64        China: Shanghai Composite 3.138,78  ↑+2.8948        Hong Kong: Hang Seng 18.615,13  ↑+131.1        Singapore: Straits Times 3,29  ↑+0.008        DJIA 22,02  ↑+0.05        Nasdaq Composite 13.943,76  ↑+238.626        S&P 500 4.497,63  ↑+64.32        Russell 2000 1.895,54  ↑+26.5312        Stoxx Euro 50 4.326,47  ↑+32.78        Stoxx Europe 600 459,83  ↑+4.42        Germany: DAX 15.930,88  ↑+138.27        UK: FTSE 100 7.464,99  ↑+126.41        Spain: IBEX 35 9.581,20  ↑+91.1        France: CAC 40 7.373,43  ↑+48.72        

Vietnam at the heart of Yabashi’s international approach

Article - July 10, 2023

With companies in five countries, Yabashi Holdings is a construction, machinery and mining group that draws on the synergy between its Japanese and overseas locations to maximize value creation across its business areas.

At Yabashi Holdings, international influences are considered vital to the Japanese organization’s good health and continued growth.

A construction, machinery and mining group made up of 17 companies – 10 in Japan, seven abroad – Yabashi has overseas firms in each of its three chief business divisions: wood products, metal products, and limestone mining and processing.

While also present in Myanmar, Singapore and South Korea, Yabashi has a particularly close relationship with Vietnam, where it has established three companies since 2000 – and is in the process of adding another.

“Japanese companies’ products are the result of the high levels of education the workers on the factory floor possess,” says President Tatsuyoshi Yabashi. “This leads to high-quality products. However, when it comes to value creation, I don’t think Japanese education is doing enough, so I believe we need to work in tandem with people from other countries.

“At Yabashi, our core strength is having companies in different countries and different industries, all independently working hard to achieve monozukuri – perfection and innovation in manufacturing. The variations between the group’s global locations trigger a synergic effect.”

Cultural understanding is crucial to maximizing international synergy, Mr. Yabashi adds: “I always tell my employees when they’re going on business trips abroad: Even if it only takes seven days to finish the work, stay for 10 days or more. Really get to know the culture of the area.”

"In addition, in 2025, I’m planning to build a canteen for our company that serves the traditional and most popular dishes of the countries of each of our employees. I want our employees to be able to experience with their five senses, tasting different cuisines, seeing different multicultural art and crafts, and so on.  We believe the more we understand each other culturally and business wise, the larger the synergic effect."

  0 COMMENTS