269 Nicolai Bergmann — Founder, Nicolai Bergmann

269 Nicolai Bergmann — Founder, Nicolai Bergmann

Author: Dr. Greg Story October 11, 2025 Duration: 1:28:14

 

Flowers are a stage — design is the performance.

Affordable mistakes beat catastrophic caution.

Build leaders from the bench you already have.

A shop window can be a growth engine.

Hands-on founders create hands-on cultures.

 

Danish-born floral designer Nicolai Bergmann built his brand in Tokyo by treating the shopfront as a "stage," inspiring customers with ready-made designs. After moving to Japan in the late '90s, a high-visibility boutique and department-store partnership launched the "Nicolai Bergmann" name, later expanded with a Minami-Aoyama flagship featuring a café, gallery, and atelier. He popularized the signature fresh flower box, grew the team to ~250 by developing leaders from the floor and adding specialists, and runs on a philosophy of bold but "affordable" experiments—learning fast without risking the whole platform.


What makes leadership in Japan unique?
Japan's leadership landscape values craftsmanship, visible commitment, and community. A founder who works the market at dawn and serves customers on the shop floor embodies credibility. Beyond hierarchy, leaders earn trust through nemawashi—quiet alignment-building before decisions—and by signalling stability through continuity of people and place. Shopfronts, department-store counters and hotel lobbies are not just sales channels; they are social proof engines where consistency, aesthetics and service fuse into leadership currency.

Why do global executives struggle?
Executives arriving with playbooks optimised for speed and centralisation can stall amid Japan's consensus rhythms. Ringi-sho processes and stakeholder mapping feel slow until leaders learn to use the process to clarify value and de-risk execution. Underinvesting in the "stage"—the customer-visible experience—and overinvesting in back-office abstraction also hurts; in Japan, persuasion is tactile. People want to see, touch and feel the idea before they sign off.

Is Japan truly risk-averse?
It's more accurate to say Japan practices uncertainty avoidance. Bergmann's career shows that bold moves are welcome when the downside is capped: trial pop-ups before full leases, host-funded fit-outs, and prototypes that can be iterated. The mantra is "affordable mistakes"—push hard, but don't blow up the platform. Decision intelligence here means structuring experiments so they teach fast without triggering existential losses.

What leadership style actually works?
Hands-on, craft-credible and steadily developmental. Leaders who model standards on the floor, grow managers from within, and supplement with targeted specialists (e.g., seasoned CFOs) see durable results. Clear stages—flagship, gallery, high-traffic counters—act as internal academies where juniors learn by doing. Consistency of presence from the top creates momentum that SOPs alone cannot.

How can technology help?
Digital twins of store layouts and merchandising flows help prototype seasonal displays before fit-out; simple decision dashboards clarify which experiments are "affordable." Lightweight collaboration tools support nemawashi across shops, while CRM nudges seasonal outreach. None of this replaces the stage; it amplifies it—turning tacit craft into shareable playbooks without diluting design.

Does language proficiency matter?
Yes, but craft fluency and cultural curiosity travel far. Bergmann advanced by showing value on the counter and at installs while improving Japanese over time. A leader who demonstrates respect, learns the tempo, and leverages bilingual lieutenants can navigate ringi, win consensus, and keep teams inspired—even before perfect fluency lands.

What's the ultimate leadership lesson?
Treat every customer-facing surface as a stage; build leaders from the people who already care; and structure your boldness so you never risk the platform. Hands-on credibility + consensus craftsmanship = compounding trust.


Hosted by Dr. Greg Story, Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan offers a direct line to the experiences and strategies of executives operating within one of the world's most distinct economies. Each conversation moves beyond theory, focusing on the practical realities of management and leadership as told by those doing the work. You'll hear from a diverse roster of guests, from seasoned leaders at large corporations to innovative founders of growing ventures, all sharing their firsthand accounts of navigating Japan's unique business culture. This podcast provides valuable context on everything from building effective teams and driving organizational change to understanding the nuances of negotiation and customer relations in this market. Whether you're currently leading a team in Japan, planning to expand your business there, or simply curious about how professional success is achieved in a different cultural framework, these interviews deliver grounded insights. Tune in for authentic discussions that cut through the clichés, offering a clearer picture of what it truly takes to succeed. The depth and variety of perspectives make this series a consistently useful resource for anyone engaged with the business landscape in Japan.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Japan's Top Business Interviews Podcast By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Podcast Episodes
263 Glen Argyle, President Baxter Japan [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 59:15
"Leadership is the ability to bring people to somewhere they didn't think they could go." "If you want to do co-creation, you have to do co-creation—consistently. You can't just turn it on and off." "Don't focus only on…
262 Hideo Goto, President Schick Japan [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:09:15
"Walk the talk is the most powerful way to build trust." "Beauty grooming didn't exist—it was a new word to reflect a new purpose." "People didn't see themselves in the beauty industry until they started to look in the m…
261 Elio Orsara, Founder Elios Locanda Italiano [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:28:46
1. "If my motivation is to make the best product, the money will follow as a consequence." 2. "A leader must give up ego and put the right people in the right place—even if it risks their seat." 3. "You have to read the…
260 Chris Mohler, CEO Gap Asia [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:11:41
"You can ask four thousand people to adjust to you, or you can adjust to them." "If we want the stores to be successful, they need to feel heard—because their success is our success." "When I tried to dictate ideas top-d…
259 Kasper Mejlvang, President Novo Nordisk Pharma Japan [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:03:06
"Most of any leader's job is change management—setting a vision people buy into and aligning them behind it." "I view the organisation as an inverted triangle—the frontline is at the top, and we serve them." "You should…
258 Duncan Harrison, Managing Director, JAC International [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 46:01
"In Japan, if you want performance, you need ultra-clear expectations—people need to know the goal." "Building trust means creating a safe environment where it's okay to make mistakes." "Consensus-building is not optiona…
257 Yvette Pang, CEO International Logistics Company [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:02:46
"We walk the talk—not talk the talk." "Expect the unexpected—Japan will challenge every assumption you bring." "The language we use programs our mindset—'we' means we're in it together." "Creating little leaders is more…
256 Eiichiro Onozawa CEO Savills Japan [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:02:46
"You have to crystallize the objective—what the goal is, and how we can get there." "I treat differences as differences—not as superior or inferior." "If people are good at what they do, all I need to do is be a facilita…
255 Duncan Macintyre Managing Director CBRE Asia Pacific [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 56:05
· You've got to create the right environment so people can be successful and want to stay." · "In Japan, trust takes longer to earn—but once you have it, it doesn't disappear." · "You can't just come in and declare the s…
254 Guillaume Hansali- Country Head Keywords Studios [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:36:16
"Trust, for me, is the ability to predict someone's behaviour—consistency builds that predictability." "Excellence isn't the outcome—it's the rigour of the process, even when the result is uncertain." "You can't sell you…