For reasons of outstanding security in the insecure Internet and Digital Age, where we have digital assaults, specific software engineers and various sources that may take our customers’ and our own data, I was unable to pass up a major opportunity on these subtleties of preparing in Digital Marketing.
As a prelude to diving into the 5-S Housekeeping Model used by the Japanese in their own and business worlds, I felt that I didn’t need to go into much detail about the Japanese educational system.
When compared to the world’s educational standards, the level of Japanese education is remarkable.
Galileo Galilei’s claim that mathematics and science are “the language of the universe” is echoed in Japan, where math and science are taught in schools as if they were a foreign language.
• Morals, manners, and etiquette take precedence in the Japanese educational system, and students aren’t expected to write tests until the age of 10.
Furthermore, the Japanese students are prepared to regard individuals, absorb liberality, and be sensitive towards all living beings and living creatures.
Most Japanese schools do not employ janitors or other maintenance personnel. All of the students are prepared to clean the homerooms, the school premises, and the entire schoolyard on a rotating basis. Before they learn anything else, they learn how to collaborate and participate in a group.
The lunch menu in most Japanese schools is standard, and it is provided by the school as a means of creating a familial atmosphere.
• After school, children participate in various workshops, such as calligraphy, verse, writing, science, etc.
The Middle East and India have a tradition of mandatory school uniforms, and this is no exception.
As in India, the students show a deep respect for their teachers and bow their heads as a sign of welcome.
Every day, the instructor greets each student with a generous smile, calls their names, connects with them through nonverbal hello there fives or handshakes, and offers a few encouraging words.
My impression is that we could all follow this glow of conduct and show empathy and successful authority to our customers as well as our employees.
Our Digital Marketing Leadership should follow the Five (5)-S Housekeeping Model in order to have a repeat customer base and build trust, loyalty, and security with them in order to further our reliable brand image.
As an example, let’s use the 5-S Housekeeping Model:
- SEIRI: It refers to the process of identifying and removing things that aren’t absolutely necessary from one’s work environment. Only the essentials should be kept in the workplace, sitting area, or at home.
Second, it refers to cleaning our working environment thoroughly so that there is no residue left on the floor machines or other equipment. To keep our workplace, sitting area, or living area free of dust, we should use a vacuum cleaner.
In the workplaces, workplaces, and in our homes, we are preparing our family members to be good housekeepers. Through the ability to be self-aware and order among people, this is possible.
In other words, it means putting everything necessary in a logical request so that it can be obtained quickly and put to good use. Benjamin Franklin said it best: “Everything in its proper place, in its proper place.”
Shippo refers to the idea of instilling a high level of housekeeping discipline and self-autonomy in those who work in, sit in, or live in your residences.
Even after we achieve our goal of freedom from the rat race, we can still maintain a high level of trust with our clients and customers through empathic communication and apply the same standards and methodologies to our Digital Marketing efforts and planning, and we can even continue to do so even after we are no longer in the rat race.