Such attention to quality and detail, such cleanliness in what is supposed to be a filthy place, militant dedication to work, and huge level of respect to their superiors.
![Dwill :dwill: :dwill:](/styles/theme/xenforo/faces/dwill.png)
![Dwill :dwill: :dwill:](/styles/theme/xenforo/faces/dwill.png)
Very clean and efficient, as you'd expect from Japan.Such attention to quality and detail, such cleanliness in what is supposed to be a filthy place, militant dedication to work, and huge level of respect to their superiors.
Lol i just saw that vid yesterday. Honnestly i dont expect nothing less from east asians. the beautiful part is that beat cadaans in their own game like economy-development everythingSuch attention to quality and detail, such cleanliness in what is supposed to be a filthy place, militant dedication to work, and huge level of respect to their superiors.
Lol i just saw that vid yesterday. Honnestly i dont expect nothing less from east asians. the beautiful part is that beat cadaans in their own game like economy-development everything
Microsoft Japan experimented with a shorter workweek program, called “Work-Life Choice Challenge 2019 Summer.” The company gave its 2,300 employees the opportunity to “choose a variety of flexible work styles, according to the circumstances of work and life.” The goal of management was to see if there would be a corresponding increase in productivity and morale when hours are cut down.
The results of the experiment were extremely positive, indicative that workers were both happier and 40% more productive.
Yup, I watched one like the video @AbdiGaalDoon posted but it’s easy to fawn over “OMG very good work!!11!1!” like some weaboo but then you realize these guys wake up at 6 am to work and then come back at like 7 pm. From there they have at most a couple of hours of free time where they’ll most likely do some more work. They’ll have 1 day free off.A lot of Japanese people will tell you that there's a dark side and a cost to all this efficiency foreigners like to fawn over. They have a culture of basically living to work rather than working to live which contributes to a lot of loneliness, misery, suicide and plummeting birth and marriage rates. Not to mention many people who just fall out of all this eventually like Hikikomori:
Human beings are not machines.