#Asia #Japan Is There (Finally) a Practical Way for Foreigners to Live in Japan?

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For decades, Japan has been struggling with the economic need to attract more foreign residents to the country and the general social reluctance to do so.

Over the years there have been some well-publicized failures and a few quiet successes, and Japan retains her image as a generally closed nation.

But reality changes much faster than perception in Japan. Things are already changing and that change is about to accelerate.
Today I’d like you to meet Nao Sugihara founder of MTIC, who is going to explain these trends in detail. Nao runs a recruiting platform called GaijinBank that deals exclusively with blue-color, foreign labor, and he’ll show you not only that Japan’s has opened up far more than most people acknowledge, but that this trend will likely accelerate over the next 20 years.
It’s a great conversation, and I think you’ll enjoy it.

Show Notes

Which companies hire foreigners for blue-collar work n Japan
The biggest misunderstandings between Japanese companies and foreign staff
The overtime gap with foreign workers
The real reasons foreign workers object to overtime
Japan’s new guest visa program
How to integrate more foreigners into Japanese society
Lessons learned from the Latin American guest-worker program
Why the foreign nurses programs never seem to work out well

Links from the Founder

Everything you wanted to know about MTIC
Friend Nao on Facebook
About GaijinBank

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Transcript
I love working with startups. I love talking with startup founders and I know that you do too. That is why you listen to the podcast and I thank you for that.

When the traditional media focuses on startups, they tend to look at the crazy founders making outrageous claims or the newly minted billionaires, CEOs, and investors. That is all good fun, of course, but when we look a little deeper, startups tell us something else.

Looking at what startups get started and what startups get funded, and what startups get traction, that tells us a lot about the kinds of problems that we, as a country, thin  are worth solving. What problems are important enough to attract time and money, and customers changes a lot from country to country, and it reveals a lot about the social priorities of the cultures that these startups operated, and it’s not always a pleasant revelation.

Japan has always had a complex relationship with her foreign residents. Even today, there is a widespread intellectual acknowledgment that Japan needs to increase and encourage immigration but transforming that goal into actual policy enter real social acceptance, well, that is harder.

Today, we sit down with Nao Sugihara of MTIC and were going to dive deep into this. Nao runs a recruiting platform called GaijinBank and while there are lots of job sites catering to foreign engineers and creative’s, socket deals exclusively with the blue-collar labor.

Foreigners are working blue-collar jobs in Japan is actually an incredible aspect of the Japanese economy and one that is largely ignored, not only by the Japanese press, but even by the foreigners living in Japan, and you know, I have to admit, the things are different and, in some ways, much more encouraging than I expected.

But you know, Nao tells that story much better than I can. So, let’s get right to the interview.

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Interview

Tim: So, I’m sitting here with Nao Sugihara of MTIC which is Make Tokyo an International City.

Nao: Yes!

Tim: So, thanks for sitting down with me.

Nao: Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity like this. I’m happy to talk today.

Tim: Wow, I’m glad to have you on, and I usually don’t interview founders of companies for like, recruiting companies, but what you are doing is really different.

Nao: Thank you.

Tim: You know,

from Disrupting Japan: Startups and Innovation in Japan http://bit.ly/2HcxZEv

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