B6 Sunday, December 26, 2010
WORLD
Roswell Daily Record
Japan falls for novel on management guru Drucker TOKYO (AP) — Five years after his death, management guru Peter Drucker has shot to newfound fame — as one of Japan’s biggest pop culture icons of 2010. Yes, pop culture. Revered as the father of moder n management, Drucker’s ideas influenced some of the most powerful corporate leaders of the 20th century: Intel’s Andy Grove, GE’s Jack Welch and Toyota’s Shoichiro Toyoda. Now he is the star of Japan’s best-selling book of the year, a novel with an unwieldy title: “What if the Female Manager of a High School Baseball Team Read Drucker’s ‘Management’?” The book has sold more than 2 million copies since it debuted last December. The manga version launched this week, and an anime television series starts in March. There’s also a live-action movie on the way. Its success is in large part due to author Natsumi Iwasaki’s creative decision to write about high school baseball, a national obsession. Iwasaki says the setting serves as the perfect vehicle to introduce Drucker’s ideas to ordinary Japanese at a time when the country is grasping for direction. Japan’s once-heralded economy was eclipsed this year by China as No. 2 in the world. Growth is sluggish, and unemployment remains high by Japanese standards. There’s a sense
AP Photo
In this Dec. 14 photo, Natsumi Iwasaki, author of best-seller book “What if the Female Manager of a High School Baseball Team Read Drucker's 'Management'?,” speaks to the Associated Press at his office in Tokyo.
that the country has lost its confidence. “People are starting to realize that they can’t depend on politicians for change. We have to create change ourselves,” said Iwasaki in an interview with The Associated Press. “But Japanese people had never practiced management. They didn’t know what do to. They needed an intermediary to explain things,” he added. That inter mediary is Minami Kawashima, a teenager unexpectedly tapped to assist her high
school baseball team. The role isn’t lofty but her goal is: to qualify for the national championship tournament. Needing guidance to deal with her unmotivated team, she gains inspiration in “Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices.” Absorbing one of Drucker’s most famous lessons, she and her team start by focusing on their “customers,” the parents, classmates and community that support them. With that, the team embarks on a journey out of medioc-
rity. Hideki Yamawaki, a professor at the Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management in Claremont, Calif., says the book has resonated because it reminds people of the strengths that Japan can use to revive the country. “Almost everybody feels like Japan has really declined,” said Yamawaki, who knew Drucker personally. Japan today tends to focus on the negative, on what went wrong over the
past 20 years, he said. But the book, or rather Drucker, compels individuals to maximize strengths and talents. “I hope this book triggers a new way of looking at Japan, and I hope that leads to a real revitalization of the economy and society,” Yamawaki said. Drucker might have hoped so as well. The Vienna-born author, consultant and teacher had a decades-long love affair with Japan. He initially visited the country to indulge his passion for Japanese art but ultimately counseled many Japanese business leaders. His books always sold particularly well in Japan, and Iwasaki’s novel has further fueled interest in Drucker’s original works. Publisher Diamond Inc. says it has sold more than 450,000 copies of “Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices” this year, compared with about 116,000 total in the previous eight years. The Drucker Workshop — a Japan-based group of Drucker enthusiasts who study and spread his ideas — added 200 members this year alone, bringing their total to 700, said director Chuck Ueno. Magazines and newspapers throughout the year have chronicled how schools and offices around the country are incorporating Drucker’s techniques. For Iwasaki, 42, his book is a labor of love that began with his own
unlikely encounter with Drucker. He was playing a video game — Final Fantasy XII — and couldn’t figure out a way to build a team effective enough to defeat certain monsters. In a blog, another player mentioned Drucker.
So like Minami, he began reading. Drucker’s ideas were transformative, he says. They moved him to tears.
“This isn’t something that’s taught in Japanese schools,” said Iwasaki, a producer and a teacher of a comedy class by day. “It makes a big difference just to have that knowledge that there is something out there called management. Once you have that, you can figure out how to handle a situation.”
He blogged about it, which led to a publishing deal, which led to his literary home run. The publisher is negotiating to translate the book, including into English.
Iwasaki’s next book is also about baseball, but darker. The former high school pitcher wrote it more than a decade ago along with some other novels, all of which were rejected at the time. A big fan of Colombian novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Iwasaki says it’s a tragedy-filled story of 10 years of a high school baseball team, “kind of like ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude.”’
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