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File: 3ee8043aede6e14⋯.jpg (51.56 KB, 346x500, 173:250, 510hcG0vyZL.jpg)

File: 07c8cc06f09a291⋯.jpg (80.88 KB, 600x801, 200:267, 1467707234233.jpg)

 No.105380

Post weird shit you've stumbled across, even if it's trash or you haven't tried it yet. I found this one while looking up a book I found in the shed:

>Moshi Kōkō Yakyū no Joshi Manager ga Drucker no "Management" o Yondara (もし高校野球の女子マネージャーがドラッカーの『マネジメント』を読んだら, What If the Female Manager of a High School Baseball Team Read Drucker's "Management"?), or Moshidora (もしドラ), is a 2009 Japanese novel by Natsumi Iwasaki. It follows high school girl Minami Kawashima who manages her school's baseball team using Peter Drucker's Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices to rally her dispirited teammates. A 10-episode anime television series by Production I.G aired between April and May 2011. A live-action movie was released in Japan on June 4, 2011.

This one even got its own article in (((The Economist))): https://archive.is/9vDTJ

____________________________
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 No.105382

Fuck it, I'll copypaste the article's text here too.

Drucker in the dug-out

>ZOFF, a maker of cheap, chic glasses in Tokyo's trendy Harajuku district, is hardly a place you would expect to find dedicated followers of management theory. But one day its boss, 38-year-old Takeshi Ueno, came into a staff meeting waving a book about baseball with the picture of a gamine schoolgirl on the cover. It had the clunky title: “What if the Female Manager of a High-School Baseball Team read Drucker's ‘Management'”. Mr Ueno told his staff to read it. Satoko Osanai, his sales manager, did.

>Like many young businesswomen across Japan this year, Ms Osanai became an instant fan—not of baseball, but of the late management guru, Peter Drucker. After reading the book, she says, she started treating colleagues and customers differently. As news of the novel travelled from office to café to home, its sales topped 1m. According to the publisher, the cutesy manga cover was aimed more at attracting salarymen than women. Yet almost half of the buyers have been female. What's more, sales for Drucker's original works, such as “Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices”, published in 1973, have soared. Some 300,000 copies of the book have sold in the past six months, compared with 100,000 copies in the previous 26 years.

>The unlikely catalyst for this cultish enthusiasm is a fictional teenager called Minami. Like many high-school girls in Japan, she becomes the gofer for the baseball team's male coach. Unlike many of her compatriots, she is the kind of girl, as the book says, who leaps before she looks. Horrified by the team's lack of ambition, she sets it the goal of reaching the high-school championships. She stumbles upon Drucker's 1973 book, and it helps her turn the rabble into a team.

>Drucker's advice to focus on clear and measurable goals has resonated deeply in a country where the most common management injunction is gambare, which loosely (and unhelpfully) means “push yourself”. Drucker, who loved Japan as much as he was confounded by it, would have been thrilled. A year before his death in 2005, he gave prophetic warning that Japanese firms might soon be overtaken by rivals from South Korea, China and India. He urged them to brace for competition by working out what they were good at, what they should not do and what their values were.

>Not much of his advice has been heeded. Though some young outfits such as Zoff are razor-sharp, others remain corporate octopuses squeezing the life out of Japanese business. Women remain an underused asset: only 61% of them work, their average income is less than half that of men and they occupy barely 1% of boardroom seats. If Drucker, with the help of a headstrong teenager, can posthumously change that, it would be his greatest gift to Japan.

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 No.105383

>>105380

>>105382

Not to slight you but that's pretty gay.

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 No.105396

When I was studying in Japan I remember seeing this fucking book everywhere, but I couldn't read Kanji very well back then so I had no fucking clue what the fuck it was about.

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 No.105405

File: 43231eb71ad4ee8⋯.jpg (Spoiler Image, 70.75 KB, 501x576, 167:192, 1381538017589.jpg)

>>105382

>turning jap women into career-driven cunts

>when they already have a problem with population decline

<gift

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 No.105411

>>105405

You know that Tokyo Metropolitan Area alone has population comparable to all of Poland or Canada?

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 No.105414

What's weird about X founding a team for a certain sport? That shit is so mundane.

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 No.105416

>>105411

Regardless of population, poisoning a nation with feminism is the most evil thing you can do to it. Not just that, but it's going to worsen their economy, too. The more competition there is for a job, the less they get away with paying and treating you. The only ones that benefits from women in the workforce are the megacorporations.

And then, of course, any decline in birthrates will be the perfect excuse to import a bunch of subhumans because "we won't be able to take care of ourselves!" It's happening to all the heavily feminist countries like Sweden. Turning women into men is the most sure fire way to kill a nation and its people.

Just fucking look at the wording used: "women remain an underused asset". They consider humans to be nothing but objects that can make them money. So what if they kill a nation's culture and people in the process? "their average income is less than half that of men and they occupy barely 1% of boardroom seats." Textbook feminist talking points. Are women suited to leading positions? Doesn't matter, they need to be in them because of equality.

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 No.105421

>>105416

Women shouldn't be in the workforce but screeching about muh birthrates when island with less living space than california hosts 150 million people (half of total USA population) isgetting tiresome.

From what I hear women in Japan use workplaces as a matchmaking service rather than work and going to work after marriage or worse yet childbirth is strongly frowned upon.

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 No.105424

>>105421

It's government propaganda. As far as the government is concerned, people are just cattle. They just want more taxpayers. Whether they are miserable or not is irrelevant. The Japanese government has always been in a ridiculous amount of debt, so they must overspend like crazy. The population probably does the same, since they have such a corporate culture and having more money is considered the only thing that matters in life, along with working yourself to death for no reason, even though their economy just keeps getting worse anyway.

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