The harmony trap in relationship management in Asia (and maybe us too)
In Asia, social harmony often prevails over individual opinions, creating challenges in corporate decision-making. Here is how to try to unlock the potential of human capital
3' min read
3' min read
Among the biggest professional challenges I faced in my five years in Asia, perhaps the main one was not to fall into the harmony trap.
In Asian cultures, the priority is to maintain harmonious interaction between colleagues, with the result that you will rarely hear real debates of opinion during a meeting.
This is because in Asia, social harmony and the collective good prevail over the individual good, inevitably also reflected in the decision-making process. The most extreme example is Japanese culture, where the suffix 'WA' (Peace/Harmony) is one of the pivots of language, present in dozens of words such as reconciliation, unison, peaceful negotiation. Even two of the last three Japanese emperors used words with the suffix WA in their choice of motto for their reign.
In this context of seeking harmony at all costs, it is difficult to move according to Western paradigms, such as brainstorming, let alone debating different solutions to a business problem with opinions.
And it does not help that there is absolute respect for elders inculcated by Confucianism and Buddhism in Asia: in a meeting it is almost impossible for the junior to speak in front of his superior, let alone even remotely express dissent.



