2017年振り返り / Lookback on 2017

2017年はなんといっても、クライミング(外岩)ブーム再燃が特筆。

社会人5年目を迎え、丁度中東と日本で働いた期間が同じ位になり、所謂日本の大企業官僚機構のダイナミクスに辟易しつつ、時々ソコソコ頑張った結果、「大凡見通しがついたと思っていた今後のサラリーマン人生の予測は(能動的に変化を嗜好しない限り)、恐らくかなり的確な現実となる」事に益々確信が深まる。

  • 1月:

人生初の(ほぼ)坊主を余儀なくされる。頭洗うのが楽(シャンプー不要)。

沖縄観光。往復JALで2泊3日(内1日はマリオット泊@名護)で29,800 円は破格。マット要らずの具志頭にてチョックストーンアタック(一応ボルダーグレード更新)とアラウンドザコーナーⅡを登る。

  • 3月:

人生初ぎっくり腰。(当日&翌日: 寝たきり。2日後: 分速20m位で出社。この時から会社の昼休みに横になって床で寝る習慣を開始。これが至極良い。3日後: クライムダウンしながらボルダリング再開。)

ジムでリードを再開。11C位まではOS。

  • 4月:

クライミング関連のちょっとしたお手伝いを開始。(生活パターンの変化)

Gym RP Grade更新: 12C (2日3便)

小川山兄岩にてクライミング再開後初の外岩リード。

  • 6月:

Personal Much Ado(すったもんだ)

  • 7月:

出張兼海外ジム遠征(シンガポール&マニラ)

  • 8月:

Gym RP Grade更新: 13A (4日11便) 。ジムと外岩の登攀力乖離に焦り、やや義務感から外岩通いを意識し始める。

クライミングログの記録開始@Excel。(進捗&目標の定量的モニターに加えて、モチベーションUp/維持にも繋がるため)

御年65歳の母が2ヶ月間渡英。偏に孫パワー

  • 9月:

RP Grade更新: イエロークラッシュ 12A (3日6便)。仕事の(一層の)閑散もあり、漸く外岩が楽しくなってくる。

  • 10月:

派遣会社に2度目の給与交渉&処遇改善を試みるも失敗。

シンガポールの友人を迎えて湯河原幕岩でエンクラ(初めての英語コールも一応大丈夫であった模様)

  • 11月:

初甲府幕岩&有笠山(激強パートナーの「脚を引っ張らざるまい」と豊富な成果)

  • 12月:

今更ながら初めてSUICA(PASMO)を電子マネーとして使い、ハマる。余計な買い食いが増える。

初河又(初石灰岩)

 

加速度的に早くなっていく1年。あっというま。

Catch up over greasy ramen / in Japanese garden

Had 2 batches of friends from overseas over the course of last Christmas weekend.

Random memo:

  • Queued 70 mins (13:30- 14:40) for having a Ramen @ Mutekiya (無敵家) in Ikebukuro (池袋)
  • Since any food is good enough in Japan and I don’t distinguish the spectrum of deliciousness beyond my generously-low threshold of tastiness, I don’t see the point of queueing for foods (or everything else) in Japan (or anywhere else). I just hate to queue and people who blindly follow whatever popular/trendy etc.
  • Nevertheless, having friends to catch up with, alleviates the pain of queueing.
  • Mutekiya Ramen (the one recommended best) is tasty during the initial several scoops, but it gets too greasy to eat (unless you like a greasy and thick-tasted ramen, as I do). It would be wise to choose a ramen with a different soup other than the most orthodox one (as in the case of Mutekiya Ramen).
  • Visited Koishikawa Korakuen (小石川後楽園) with another friend.
Koishikawa Korakuen (小石川後楽園)
  • Not much of serenity (due to the adjacently located amusement park and baseball stadium), but the varied configuration of Edo-era artifacts/structures and vegetation/ponds in the center of Tokyo are worthy of paying 300 yen entrance fee (as of Dec. 2017).
Located next to Tokyo Dome
  • The space of 6 years+ makes it difficult to recognize a friend who does not have a Facebook account.

Governance Fallout of Japan Inc. and “Compliance Vigilantism”

Gist of this post:

  • Recent quality-related scandals by Japanese companies could be an indication of the shift of how Japanese companies started to assign the glut of employees (who are immune to lay-off due to the life-time employment practice) to the auditing/compliance functions (or whatever institutes designed to eliminate the non-conformance of the set standards) . The increased deployment of manpower (and the morale of such re-purposed employees) has led to the application of rigorous standards (which might be too stringent) and that might have contributed to the increase in deviations from the heightened standards.
  • In short, the increased disclosure of scandals does not necessarily reflect the decline of corporate governance in Japanese companies. However, the already-attracted social attention would probably call for some mechanisms to enhance the “corporate governance”, and it is likely to accelerate the zeitgeist of endorsing “compliance vigilantism” (facilitated by the diligence and fastidiousness endowed in the Japanese) .
  • In my skewed opinion, the recent focus on compliance has become too excessive to the point of hindering the wholesome culture of product/service creation.

 

Lately there has been an abundance of news related to the major Japanese corporations who have been revealed to have conducted some form of falsification or omission of quality-control/assurance processes.

The general reaction to this recent chain of scandals is somewhere along the line of: “The rock-solid quality standards/products of Japanese manufacturers has become a thing of the past, and can no longer be trusted”, or similar forebodings lamenting the general decline of trust toward the good-old Japanese corporations.

While these views have a point and the deterioration of quality standards of Japanese companies is indeed a concern that unnerves the long-lasting trust in Japanese manufacturers; however, my concern lies at a different aspect: Disproportionate focus/resources deployed to ensure compliance, (as opposed to product/service delivery).

As the delivery of products/services always precedes the quality control of delivery processes, the emphasis on auditing (or process control) is a likely indication of how mature and sophisticated the industry has become.

Meanwhile, the notable downside of “auditing” process (or whatever institute designed to enhance companies’ capacity to conform to designated standards) is that it more or less requires the allocation of resources that could have been otherwise dedicated for creation of products/services. Inherently, it is costly to place quality control measures (unless such measures effectively remove the flaws/inefficiencies of delivery process). This is why we don’t expect much of quality when it comes to low-cost products/services, and it would be fair to conclude that there is a general decline in how Japanese companies place priorities in quality assurance (to reduce the costs associated).

However, it is worth revisiting the fact that pointing out flaws (or points of improvement) in the delivery process is relatively easy, compared to making products/services, and moreover such auditing could be never-ending, especially considering the complexities of modern delivery networks and the litany of points that could be potentially improved.

My intention is neither; deny the importance of quality control nor enumerate empirical evidence to advance my view, but I sense that the zeitgeist of “compliance” has become too domineering to the point of creating some Japan-specific phenomenon: Emergence of senior Japanese salarymen (who had been once dispirited and astray along their life-time career), with the newly-found mission of “rectifying” the non-conformance of production/delivery processes.

Based on my skewed, yet first-hand insight/experience of working in one of such Japanese companies, the expansion of auditing/compliance departments (or whatever authority which triumphantly identifies and preempts potential deviations from the specified rules and standards) has become more conspicuous in recent years. The increase of senior salarymen assigned in such departments is correspondingly evident, and more is the case for the morale of these “compliance crusaders” whose rejuvenated enthusiasm seems to be occasionally in conflict with the primary business objective of delivering product/service. With all due respect to the auditing/compliance functions, but too much of it becomes “nitpicking”, which is easy for anybody to do, but unworthy of consuming time and manpower.

Given the difficulty of retrenching workforce in Japan (low labor mobility) and the plenitude of employees who passively benefit from such lack of risk of job loss (with less exposure to meritocracy), it has always been a task for Japanese corporations to come up with ways to motivate and deploy these “fixed” workforce (on top of rightsizing workforce by adjusting handily-disposable contract staff).

As exemplified by “Madogiwa-zoku” (“Window ledge tribe”): a term referring to a cluster of employees (usually senior) with little chance of career advancement, thus assigned to some obscure department in a company, the excess of career-stagnant employees has been somewhat a hallmark of big Japanese companies. With the increasing societal/industrial demand in compliance/auditing however, assigning such previously adrift workforce to these types of functions (be it internal department or external agency) appears to serve as a quick fix for mitigating the surplus of employees because of rigidly defined tasks (what needs to be done is clearly set), diligence & meticulousness of Japanese employees (under the clearly defined rules and guidelines), relatively attainable sense of achievement/improvement, authority over other departments/parties, etc.

Nevertheless, ensuring the compliance is essentially not intended to “create” products/services. Amid 2-decades-long economic stagnation, what Japan needs more is “creation” of new products/services/industries, rather than “improvement” of (already highly mature) existing delivery/manufacture processes. Even though, the revelation of recent scandals seems to suggest the need to further strengthen the auditing mechanism, but I would argue the strengthening of auditing mechanism has already taken place in Japan, and it inevitably leads to the increase of more cases of deviation from the heightened standards (which is the reason for the recent increase in the “supposed” scandals in Japan). Again, it is not my intention to downplay the severity of the issue, but misconducts are not only prevalent in Japan but also in other developed countries too. Besides, some scandals were utterly self-imposed (identified as “unfit” as per the internal standard). Perfecting the quality control is laudable, but it can never be achievable. Moreover the incremental improvement in quality (which could be negligible after a certain point) shall be evaluated in the context of resources that need to be deployed (people, time, cost etc.).

Instead of rambling on further, my conclusion is summarized in the first 3 bullet points in this post.

End of Post

Trigger and intent of this blog / ブログのきっかけと目的

Trigger (of starting this blog):

Combination of following chain of events/circumstances that pushed me to start something new:

  • Obscure, yet growing sense of urgency for letting the life pass me by. (aka. quarter life crisis)
  • My diminishing memory capacity, which nowadays prevents me from recollecting what I ate in the last evening.
  • Changing life circumstances (e.g. marriage, having a baby, growing old/sick, passing etc.) of people close to me, which reminds me of the transience of life.
  • Growing preoccupation with rock climbing and chronicling its progress (or non-progress, more often than not), which had intensified my pre-existing penchant for recording trivial details of everything.
  • Deteriorated motivation for work (after the failed attempt to negotiate the salary increase + conversion to non-contract employment status), which had inclined me to dedicate more of my mental resource and time to workplace distractions/daydreaming.

 

Intent (as of Dec. 2017):

  • Compilation of encyclopedia of my first-hand experiences and thoughts (which are more or less influenced by secondhand input from others) to capture whatever ephemeral/frivolous muses that would otherwise go un-externalized (therefore forgotten).
  • Archive of thoughts and records related to rock climbing.
  • Nonchalantly attempt to establish an alternative revenue source to supplement my meager wage as a disenfranchised contract worker (who failed to step onto the path for becoming a conventional Salaryman with a dedicated loyalty and guaranteed life time employment)
  • Reactive/Proactive treatment for my supposedly premature, but increasingly manifest amnesia & recurring insomnia (which often prompts mind-wandering before falling asleep at night)
  • Avenue for ventilating highly skewed views for no other reason than satisfying my ego
  • Improve (or mitigate the decline of) my English writing skills.

 

きっかけ:

マンネリ化しつつある日常と着実に進行する「老い/時間の経過」を感じざるを得ない自分自身や周囲の状況に対する焦燥感への処方箋として、新しい事に挑戦しようかと。

 

目的(2017年12月時点での構想):

  • しょうもない思考の足跡を、そう遠くない将来愛でるための土台造り(という名の暇つぶし)
  • 記憶の外注(ワード検索できるのは中々に将来重宝すると思う)
  • 岩登り(ロッククライミング)関連の備忘録&登攀録の充実
  • あわよくば副収入創出 (しがない雇われ人: 派遣社員から脱却を図るための消極的試行錯誤)
  • 健忘症と不眠症への対処/予備療法(気になる事があると中々寝付けない)
  • 拗らせてしまった承認欲求の解消
  • 英文Writing Skillの研鑽(というと聞こえが良いので最後に持ってくる)

1st Blog Post