Friday, November 15, 2024
25 C
Brunei Town

Latest

Japanese ‘salarymen’ reach TikTok stardom

TOKYO (AP) – They’re your run-of-the-mill Japanese “salarymen”, hard-working, pot-bellied, friendly and, well, rather regular.

But the chief executive and general manager at a tiny Japanese security company are among the nation’s biggest TikTok stars, drawing 2.7 million followers and 54 million likes, and honoured with awards as a trend-setter on the video-sharing app.

Daikyo Security Co’s account, which gathers goofy dances, gobbled instant noodles and other everyday fare, is the brainchild of the company president.

Despite his unpretentious demeanour, Daisuke Sakurai is dead serious about not only enhancing brand power but also recruiting young people to his company, a challenge he sees as a matter of survival.

Founded in 1967, Daikyo has 85 employees, 10 of them working at the headquarters office, tucked away on the second floor of an obscure building in a downtown Tokyo alley.

“Our job is among those labelled ‘Three-K’ in Japan,” Sakurai said, referring to kitsui, kitanai, kiken, meaning, “hard, dirty and dangerous”.

A common job for Daikyo guards is to work at construction sites, directing traffic with a flashing stick, making sure the trucks come and go safely without running over pedestrians.

Daikyo Security Chief Executive Daisuke Sakurai (R) and General Manager Tomohiko Kojima hold the awards they have won recently for their Tik Tok videos in the hallway of their Tokyo headquarters office of Daikyo Security Co in Tokyo. PHOTO: AP

It’s not a job that requires overly special skills, but no one wants to stand around outdoors for hours. As many as 99 security companies are fighting over every recruit, in contrast to two potential employers for office clerks, Sakurai said.

And this is in rapidly ageing Japan, where every sector is suffering a labour shortage. So why not turn to social media, the place where youngsters supposedly flock? Sakurai started posting on Twitter and Instagram.

But it was when he went on TikTok that things went viral.

In a hit segment, General Manager Tomohiko Kojima slaps, with a flip of his hand, gel sheets, each decorated with the eyes of various comic-book characters, on his boss’s face, right over his eyes.

“What is this character?” the subtitles asked in English.

No cuts are used, they said proudly. Kojima had to keep trying until the strip landed just right.

“I don’t practice during my work hours,” he said with a laugh. The clips have a clear message: They defy the stereotype of rigidly hierarchical, perhaps even oppressive, Japanese companies. At Daikyo, a worker gets to slap gel sheets on the CEO.

Before TikTok, the number of people applying for jobs at Daikyo was zero. After TikTok, the company is getting dozens of applicants, including those of people who want to work on the videos. Some of the videos, such as one in which the workers cook up a scrumptious omelette, unfold to the sounds of snappy songs, like World’s Smallest Violin by American pop trio AJR.

They all depict the happy yet humble life of uniformed men and women at work who don’t take themselves too seriously. They are Japan’s good guys. And it’s clear they like each other very much.

Their success contrasts with the image of Japan Inc as falling behind in digital technology, especially of older men who are fixed in their ways and unable to embrace new technology.

These days, TikTok is flooded with businesses seeking attention, from hair salons to taxi companies.

Sakurai has his eyes on global influence now, hoping to draw workers from places like Vietnam and Indonesia, and allowing them to work in English.

spot_img

Related News

spot_img