Back to Contents of Issue: February 2003
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In the mid 1960s, consultant and scholar James C. Abegglen used the term in a speech in Washington D.C. to, as he says, "convey the nature of Japanese corporations as having a common financial and personnel policy yet competing among themselves, like units in Alfred Sloan's General Motors." The term quickly spread. In 1999, while trying to come up with a name for our new technology magazine, we hit upon J@pan Inc. "We were just trying to take an old term and make it new," says publisher Terrie Lloyd. "By switching the 'a' for '@' it allowed us to say Japan was turning over a new leaf." The Wall Street Journal called our name "cheeky" in an April 27, 2000, article that started off with, "It's time to say sayonara to Japan Inc. Not the country, but the cliche." |
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