#Asia #Japan 94: How Micro-Retail Shopping in Changing Japan – Nokisaki

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Japan has a long history of small shopping streets and tiny markets. In fact, despite the population density, American-style mall culture never took off here. The back streets of even the most crowded downtown office districts are filled with little specialty stores and vegetable stands.

Akiko Nishiura, the CEO and founder of Nokisaki, wants to see that culture spread even further in Japan, and her company is helping small merchants find physical spaces for pop-up shops, vegetable stands and food trucks. Nokisaki is connecting these small merchants, who need just a little bit of space, with commercial landlords who have a little bit of free space and are looking for some additional foot-traffic.

It’s an interesting business model, and Akiko and I discuss how it will work outside of Japan or even outside of Japan’s big cities.

She also explains how Nokisaki survived a crisis that would have bankrupted almost any other startup — at least any other startup outside Japan.

It’s a great discussion, and I think you’ll enjoy it.

Show Notes

Why parking is different (and difficult) in Japan
How a new alliance is developing between big-brand stores and tiny retailers
Why it’s so difficult for Japanese moms to return to work after having kids
How the Japanese market reacts to new challenges
How a security risk shut down her company
How Japanese retail culture differs from the West
How Nokisaki will out-maneuver her much better-funded competitors

Links from the Founder

The Nokisaki Homepage

Nokisaki Parking
Nokisaki Business
Nokisaki Parking on Facebook
Nokisaki Business on Facebook

Friend Akiko on Facebook

 

 Leave a comment
Transcript
Disrupting Japan, episode 94.
Welcome to Disrupting Japan, straight talk from Japan’s most successful entrepreneurs. I’m Tim Romero and thanks for joining me.

Napoleon supposedly once called England a nation of shop keepers. And while the comment was undoubtedly meant as an insult in the context it was offered, there’s something to be said in favor of being a nation of shop keepers particularly in this age of e-commerce, Rakuten, Amazon stores, and drop shipping.

In fact, Japan, more so than the U.S. has a culture of tiny little neighborhood shops that have never been pushed out completely by big box stores, shopping malls, and chain stores even in the big cities. Well, today we’re going to sit down and talk with someone who’s accelerating that trend by making it easier for small shop keepers to pop up all over Tokyo.

Akiko Nishiura, CEO of Nokisaki, connects commercial landlords with just a little extra space to small merchants who are looking for, well, just a little space. And in their spare time, the company is also trying to solve Japan’s horrible parking problems. The discussion of the company in the market alone would make this episode worth listening to.

Akiko also shares a story of something that would have forced almost any Western startup into bankruptcy but due to the unique and frankly somewhat extreme notion of Japanese customer loyalty, it resulted in only a minor interruption of Nokisaki’s rapid growth. But you know, Akiko tells that story much better than I can. So let’s hear from our sponsor and get right to the interview.

    

[Interview]
Tim: I’m sitting here with Akiko Nishiura, the founder and CEO of Nokisaki.

Akiko: Yes.

Tim: Thanks for sitting down with us.

Akiko: Thank you, Tim.

Tim: Now, Nokisaki is a parking space sharing and space sharing startup but I think you can explain it much better than I can. So tell me a bit about what Nokisaki is.

Akiko: Okay. Tim, have you ever heard the word “nokisaki” and do you know the exact meaning of nokisaki?

Tim: I have to admit I didn’t know it until I looked it up.

Akiko: Right. But Nokisaki means tiny space under the roof like when you hide from the rain, for example, just a small space.

from Disrupting Japan http://ift.tt/2sXwNxc

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