Aisan Industry has long been active as an automotive parts manufacturer, providing power train products mainly to the Toyota Motor Corporation for many years. With the global shift to EVs and the transition to clean energy, Aisan Industry began to work to transform its business portfolio. What became clear through this process was that low employee engagement and passive attitudes were rife in the company.
While the company’s first ever engagement survey, conducted in 2022, showed a high intention to continue serving at the company among employees, it also revealed low expectations of the company and poor desire to take on challenges among employees. In response to this, Aisan Industry began to work in earnest on a project of organizational cultural reform, under the name of “engagement reform.”
The first step in this reform project was to formulate a concept, together with employees, for what an “engaging workplace” would be. The company promoted the three messages it decided on - “change in the company starts with you,” “it’s your career, make it about you,” and “end each day with satisfaction” - using visual and videos that would get buy in from employees.
Next, the company organized Aisan Katariba, a forum for dialogue between employees and leadership that incorporates branding methods. This was a company-wide program of dialogue intended to get the leadership to listen to the true feelings of employees. Over 160 sessions were held over half a year, with over 1,600 participants. The company worked to improve the quality of dialogue, with leaders receiving training in listening to employees, rather than unilaterally putting forward their own message. As a result, there was a dramatic change in the atmosphere within the company, with, for example, some 70% of employees responding positively to the survey question, “is the company trying to change?”
The company also developed “Aisan Career Canvas” as a program to support employee career autonomy. The aim of the program was to encourage employees to develop greater clarity over their career goals based on their own individual values, and to incorporate this into their day-to-day behavior. The company even brought in schemes to promote self-understanding in a fun way among employees in the form a Career Trump card game.
Through such efforts, the company achieved a broad improvement in employee engagement, with scores for “trust in leadership,” in particular, increasing more than 10 points over a single year. This changed the way leadership and employees relate to one another, helping a culture that welcomes challenges to begin to take root.
The case of Aisan Industry is positive case study of how a company was successful in bringing about organizational cultural reform along the three axes of shared understanding in the form of a shared sense of urgency, presentation of a vision that gets buy in, and an approach that gets acceptance. It shows that genuine reform that puts the focus not just on systems and frameworks, but also on employee emotions, can help sustain transformation at a company. For further details, see the Case Studies page.
Please also see Case Study in Supporting the Design of Employee Engagement KPIs and Construction of an Analysis Platform for Central Japan Railway Company, Case Study in Supporting the Development of Section and Department Head-Level Leaders at NEC Solution Innovators, Ltd. to Generate Business Outcomes, and Initiative to Transform the Business Portfolio at NEC Corporation (Japanese only).