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Akio Morita
1921 -

Akio Morita (born 1921), along with a few other entrepreneurs,
embodied the postwar recovery and growth of Japanese industry.
Morita and Sony Corporation, which he co-founded with Masaru
Ibuka, challenge conventional notions about Japan's "economic
miracle." The energy and inventiveness of small, independent
companies like Sony, not "keiretsu" (industrial conglomerate
arrangements) or the Ministry of International Trade and
Industry (MITI), were the impetus for Japan's postwar economic
development; their dependable high technology products changed
the image of Japanese exports abroad.
Akio
Morita was born January 26, 1921, the first son and
fifteenth-generation heir to a sake-brewing family in Kosugaya
village near Nagoya. Influenced as a boy by his mother's love of
classical music (his family was one of the first to own an RCA
Victrola in Japan), Morita developed a keen interest in
electronics and sound reproduction. He became so engrossed in
his electronic experiments, even building his own ham radio,
that he almost flunked out of school; but after concentrating on
his studies for a year, he entered the prestigious Eighth Higher
School as a physics major. At Osaka Imperial University he
assisted his professor in research for the Imperial Japanese
Navy. Rather than be drafted, he signed up with the navy to
continue his studies. After his graduation in 1944, Lieutenant
Morita supervised a special project group of the Aviation
Technology Center on thermal guidance weapons and night-vision
gunsights. There he met Masaru Ibuka, an electronics engineer 13
years his senior. The two became close friends and eventually
cofounded Sony Corporation. After World War II, Morita became a
physics professor while working part time in Ibuka's new
telecommunications lab.
In March 1946 Morita and Ibuka established Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo,
or Totsuko, with only $500 capital and roughly 20 employees, in
a rented office in a burned-out department store in Tokyo.
To find a niche in a market that would be highly competitive
when large prewar electronics manufacturers returned, Ibuka
decided to produce completely new consumer products. Sony's most
significant development was a high frequency transistor radio
that not only established the company's reputation but also
revolutionized the consumer electronics industry. The project,
however, was launched following a drawn-out approval by the
Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI). After
Morita reached agreement with Western Electric on the transistor
technology in 1953, MITI officials dallied six months before
finally remitting the foreign exchange for the licensing fee.
Although the relationship between government and industry is one
of trust, Morita observed, government often impedes innovative
change and developments by excessive intervention and obsolete
regulations. By investing six to ten percent of its annual sales
in research and development, Sony took the lead in developing
new consumer products independently of government help or
keiretsu support. A pioneer of products ranging from
transistorized radios to solid-state television sets to the
Walkman and Discman to VCRs, by 1990 Sony employed more than
100,000 workers and was the world's leading maker of consumer,
non-consumer, industrial, and professional electronics and
entertainment software.
Morita was a pioneer in marketing as well. His initial failure
to sell tape recorders developed in 1950 convinced him that
market creation must accompany product development. On his first
trip to Europe in 1953, he was deeply impressed and encouraged
by the success of N.V. Philips, which had grown from a small
light bulb maker in a rural Dutch town into the world's leading
electronics maker. Morita then decided to target the world
market, particularly the affluent U.S. market, rather than the
poor and congested Japanese domestic market. Recognizing the
importance of establishing company identity in the world market,
Morita adopted "Sony" (finding a Western root from the Latin
sonus, meaning "sound," and combining it with the English
nickname "Sonny"), a name that foreign customers could easily
remember, as his company's trademark in 1955. Totsuko became
Sony Corporation in 1958.
In the mid 1950s most Japanese producers relied on giant
Japanese trading companies to export their goods, but Morita
decided to build his own distribution route in which the message
of the new technology and its benefits could be directly passed
on to the consumer. In 1960 Morita established Sony Corporation
of America and Sony Overseas S.A. (Switzerland) as its sales
arms. In 1961 Sony became the first Japanese company to offer
its stock in the United States in the form of ADRs (American
Depositary Receipts). In February 1960, Sony established the
Sony Corporation of America; and in less than two years, they
became the first Japanese company to offer its stock in the
United States. Sony felt that moving much of its manufacturing
and sales to the United States and Europe would only improve its
business, something other Japanese companies had yet to
discover. Sony subsequently expanded its sales force and
production facilities into an international network, with a few
hundred subsidiaries and affiliated companies worldwide. Sony
acquired CBS Records in 1988 and Columbia Pictures and Tri-Star
film studios in 1990 (now Sony Pictures Entertainment) to expand
its business in entertainment. Beginning in 1986, in response to
changing world market conditions, Sony expanded into the
nonconsumer sector, such as broadcasting equipment,
semiconductors, video communications, and computers. In 1987,
Morita wrote Made In Japan, a historical biography detailing his
rise to success that, according to Inc., Stanford graduate
school professor Jim Collins recommends to students for best
learning from those who have forged the trails.
Morita was often a spokesman for Japanese management. In
articulating his own ideas, he emphasized the importance of
teamwork and of motivating people by providing challenging work
in a family-like environment; engineers in industrial companies
particularly need targets for their creativity. Above all,
management must treat workers not as tools but as fellow human
beings. Morita argued that manufacturing determines the strength
of the economy and blamed excessive financial dealings to create
paper profits for undermining this base. Morita praised
familialism and loyalty to the company as facilitating
long-range planning and investment. He often criticized American
management's preoccupation with quarterly profits and dividends
and its tendency to postpone investment in equipment.
Morita was also outspoken on U.S.-Japanese relations. He warned,
for example, against "hollowing out" the economy in the United
States by moving manufacturing plants overseas to exploit cheap
labor. In 1989 an unauthorized translation of A Japan That Can
Say "No", a book based on conversations between Morita and
Shintaro Ishihara, Liberal Democratic Party member of the House
of Representatives in Japan, caused a stir in the United States.
Although most of the controversial statements were credited to
Ishihara, some critics blamed Morita for his arrogance. Morita,
however, praised the openness of American markets and, in his
efforts to reciprocate it, established in 1972 the Sony Trading
Company, whose mission is to promote U.S. exports to Japan.
Morita became executive vice-president of Sony Corporation in
1959, president in 1971, chairman and chief executive officer in
1976. In 1972, Sony was awarded an Emmy by the National Academy
of Television Arts and Sciences for the development of Trinitron
- the first time an Emmy had been given for a product. In 1976,
with Morita as CEO, Sony received another Emmy for the U-Matic
video tape recording system. Sony's third Emmy was awarded for
their one-inch helical-scan videotape recording; and it's fourth
came in 1984, for a new video recorder with mass image storage
capability specially suited for computer graphics. In 1985,
Billboard gave Sony its Trendsetter Award for their
revolutionary small D-5 compact disc player. Morita, himself,
received the Albert Medal of the Royal Society of Arts "for
outstanding contributions to technological and industrial
innovation and management, industrial design, industrial
relations and video systems, and the growth of trade relations."
Morita became chairman of the board in 1989. As vice-chairman of
Keidanren (Japan Federation of Economic Organizations) and
chairman of the Council for Better Corporate Citizenship within
Keidanren, Morita was active in educating Japanese companies
abroad to become good citizens of local communities. He
addressed a letter to the G-7 leaders meeting in Tokyo - the
Presidents and Prime Ministers of the United States, Japan,
Germany, France, Britain, Italy, and Canada - encouraging them
to seek ways to lower all economic barriers between North
America, Europe, and Japan to forge a new world economic order.
On November 30, 1993 at the age of 72, Morita suffered a
cerebral hemorrhage. Sony, struggling at that time due to a
decrease in profits, now had to worry about whether Noria Ohga,
Morita's handpicked successor and president/chief executive
officer as well as the chair of Sony Software Corporation and
Sony Corporation of America, would be able to fill Morita's
shoes. Ohga has been blamed for a $3.2 billion loss in Sony
Pictures Entertainment's performance. Besides the Sony
Corporation's concerns, much of Japan worried about what the
loss of Morita from the helm would mean for the country. Jolie
Solomon and Peter McKillop wrote in Newsweek that Morita is seen
as "the epitome of the transnational executive," or, as General
Electric chairman Jack Welch calls him, "spiritually global."
After years as a maverick who was more beloved abroad than at
home, Morita has lately been acknowledged even in Japan as the
country's "most powerful and persuasive voice"
In recognition of "his distinguished corporate leadership and
for a lifetime of innovative contributions in bringing advanced
technologies to consumer electronics products," The Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) presented Akio
Morita with its Founders Medal less than a year after his
stroke. The award was accepted by his wife and one of his sons,
as Morita was still in recovery stages. On November 25, 1994,
three months after being honoured by IEEE and almost exactly a
year after his stroke, Morita decided it was time to step down
as chair of Sony, still debilitated from his brain hemorrhage.
His resignation secured the Sony position for Noria Ohga, who
still intended to retain his other Sony responsibilities.
Morita took over from Masaru Ubuka as honorary chair of Sony,
Billboard reported, as well as being formally recognized as
founder of the corporation. Ibuka was named founder in 1990 and
will continue in that role and has also been named chief
advisor. Steve McClure noted in his Billboard article that in
Japan, such titles (which indicate the friends' joint role in
starting Sony) are often awarded to executives who have
essentially retired from their companies.
Morita's 1993 stroke left him partially paralyzed. He left for
his Hawaii condominium in the fall of 1994 to recuperate.
Fortune magazine reported that although his spirits were good
and his mind lucid, he often had trouble speaking and moving.
Part of his therapy involved his speaking in Japanese and
English on alternate days. Morita gave up his honorary chair
position, but is still considered "Sony's patriarch," Brent
Schlender and Cindy Kano said in Fortune, still maintaining
contact with his Japanese protegés by phone and fax. Sony
executives make stops in Hawaii to see Morita on trips between
Japan and the United States. His power and influence are still
prominent factors in Sony's efforts. When Ohga reached his 65th
birthday, an age at which he and Morita had previously decided
was when one should relinquish the presidency of Sony, he met
with Morita to get approval for appointing Nobuyuki Idei -
someone with no engineering experience, unlike the usually Sony
régime - as the next commander-in-chief. Idei, who began work
with Sony in 1960, caught Morita's attention early on. He spent
over ten years in Europe where he founded Sony's French
subsidiary. When he returned to Japan, he was made general
manager of Sony's audio division in 1979, where he was in charge
of marketing such products as the Walkman and helped Ohga
promote the audio CD. In the 80s, he ran Sony's home-stereo
component group, and the video group when he helped with the
promotion of the 8mm camcorder. By 1990, Idei had secured Ohga's
former position of director of Sony's Design Centre and was
responsible for Sony's merchandising and product promotion. In
1993, he took over corporate communications, making Idei Sony's
most visible senior executive. In many ways, Schlender and Kano
reported, Idei had more direct involvement in much of Sony's
business than anyone else with the company. Believing that
Idei's marketing experience, his resourcefulness, and his
enthusiasm for technological advancement, Morita agreed that
Ohga's selection was appropriate.
Akio Morita was awarded an honorary Doctor of Law degrees from
the University of Pennsylvania and Williams College and various
medals of honor in Japan, Great Britain, France, West Germany,
Austria, and Brazil, among others. In 1995, he was presented
with the Japan Society Award for outstanding contributions to
better United States-Japan understanding.
Throughout his career Morita remained an avid sportsman. He
played golf for over 40 years. At age 55 he took up tennis; at
60, downhill skiing; at 64 he resumed water skiing; and at 68,
scuba diving. Morita and his wife, Yoshiko, have two sons and a
daughter.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Akio Morita was born on January 26, 1921, in the city of Nagoya,
to a family of sake brewers. The Morita family has been brewing
sake for nearly 400 years in the city of Tokoname, near Nagoya.
Under the strict eyes of his father, Kyuzaemon, Akio was groomed
to become the heir to the family business. As a student, Akio
often sat in on company meetings with his father and he would
help with the family business even on school holidays.
The Morita family had in those days already embraced the latest
in Western culture, like the automobile and the electric
phonograph. Whenever he was relieved from his household duties,
the young Akio would become engrossed in taking apart the
phonograph and putting it back together.
From an early age, Akio was fond of tinkering with electronic
appliances, and mathematics and physics were his favorite
subjects during his elementary and junior high school days.
After graduating from High School Number Eight, he entered the
Physics Department at Osaka Imperial University.
During that time, Japan was in midst of the Pacific War. In
1944, Akio, who had become a Navy lieutenant upon graduation
from university that year, met the late Masaru Ibuka for the
first time in the Navy's Wartime Research Committee.
When he returned to the family home in Nagoya after the war,
Morita was invited to join the faculty of the Tokyo Institute of
Technology by one of its professors. Morita packed his
belongings and prepared to leave for Tokyo, when an article
about a research laboratory founded by Ibuka appeared in an
Asahi newspaper column called, "Blue Pencil." With the end of
the war, Ibuka had founded Tokyo Telecommunications Research
Institute to embark on a new beginning. Upon reading this
article, Morita visited Ibuka in Tokyo and they decided to
establish a new company together.
On May 7, 1946, Ibuka and Morita founded Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo
K.K. (Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering Corporation) with
approximately 20 employees and initial capital of 190,000 yen.
At that time, Ibuka was 38 years old and Morita was 25.
Throughout their long partnership, Ibuka devoted his energies to
technological research and product development, while Morita was
instrumental in leading Sony in the areas of marketing,
globalization, finance and human resources. Morita also
spearheaded Sony's entry into the software business, and he
contributed to the overall management of the company.
The company's drive to expand its business globally is apparent
in the decision to change its corporate name to Sony in 1958, a
decision that was not well received either within or outside the
company because Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo had already become widely
known. To counter such views, Morita stressed it was necessary
to change the name of the company to something that was easier
to pronounce and remember, in order for the company to grow and
increase its presence globally. In addition, Morita reasoned
that the company could one day branch out into products other
than electronics and the name Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo would no
longer be appropriate. Therefore, he changed the name to Sony
Corporation and decided to write 'Sony' in the katakana alphabet
(a Japanese alphabet that is normally used to write foreign
names), something that was unheard of at that time.
In 1960, Sony Corporation of America was established in the
United States. Morita decided to move to the U.S. with his
family and took the lead in creating new sales channels for the
company. He believed that Sony should develop its own direct
sales channels, rather than rely on local dealers.
Many products that have been launched throughout Sony's history
can be credited to Morita's creativity and innovative ideas. His
ideas gave birth to totally new lifestyles and cultures, and
this is evident from such products as the Walkman and the video
cassette recorder.
Morita also demonstrated his ability to break away from
conventional thinking in the financial area, when Sony issued
American Depositary Receipts in the U.S. in 1961. It was the
first time that a Japanese company had offered shares on the New
York Stock Exchange, and this enabled the company to raise
capital not just in Japan. Sony paved the way for Japanese
companies to raise foreign capital, at a time when the common
practice of Japanese management was to borrow funds from banks.
In the area of human resources, Morita wrote a book called Never
Mind School Records in 1966 and stressed that school records are
not important in carrying out a job. Morita's point of view,
which he had first made known more than 30 years ago, is today
followed by many companies in Japan.
As changing the name Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo to Sony indicates,
Morita was eager to diversify Sony's operations outside of the
electronics business. In 1968, the company entered the music
software business in Japan by establishing CBS/Sony Group Inc.
jointly with CBS, Inc. of the U.S. Then in 1979, Sony entered
the financial business in Japan with the founding of Sony
Prudential Life Insurance Co. Ltd., a 50-50 joint venture with
The Prudential Life Insurance Co. of America. Furthermore, Sony
acquired CBS Records Inc., the records group of CBS in 1988. The
following year, Sony acquired Columbia Pictures Entertainment,
Inc., enabling the company to become a comprehensive
entertainment company that owns both quality software content
and a wealth of hardware.
Besides managing Sony, Morita was active in building a cultural
bridge between Japan and abroad as Vice Chairman of the
Keidanren (Japan Federation of Economic Organizations) and as a
member of the Japan-U.S. Economic Relations Group, better known
as the "Wise Men's Group." He was instrumental in trying to ease
trade frictions between Japan and the U.S., and through the
publication of such literary works as Made in Japan, he became,
"one of the most well-known Japanese in the U.S."
Morita was the first Japanese to be awarded the Albert Medal
from the United Kingdom's Royal Society of Arts in 1982. In
1984, he received the National Order of the Legion of Honor (Ordre
National de la Légion d'Honneur), the highest and most
prestigious French order, and in 1991, he was awarded the First
Class Order of the Sacred Treasure from H. M. the Emperor of
Japan. In addition, Morita received numerous awards from
countries such as Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Germany, Spain, the
Netherlands, and the United States, which shows the extent of
his global recognition.
Morita emitted a natural radiance, and his personality, which he
himself described as "cheerful," was loved by many. He had a
wide circle of friends both in Japan and abroad, including
individuals like Kiichi Miyazawa, former Prime Minister of
Japan, Henry Kissinger, former U.S. Secretary of State, and
orchestra conductors such as Zubin Mehta and the late Herbert
von Karajan.
Morita's boundless curiosity and challenging spirit extended to
his private life; he started skiing, tennis, and scuba diving
when he was past 50 years old.
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This web page was last updated on:
13 December, 2008
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