The NSK expo provides us with an opportunity to communicate directly with a wide range of customers about our products and services. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we have made changes to the way such expos will be held in the future. NSK holds its first online expo, NSK VIRTUAL EXPO, from January 25 to February 26, 2021. We hear from employees in charge of planning this event.
NSK Holds First Online Expo
NSK’s main focus for communicating with others in the machine tool industry in 2020 was our booth at JIMTOF 2020 Online - The 30th Japan International Machine Tool Fair (JIMTOF2020 Online). Looking ahead, NSK is preparing its own online expo and series of technology exchange meetings.
YamamotoJIMTOF, a biannual machine tool-related trade show, was held as a virtual expo in 2020. One advantage of exhibiting online is the ability to determine the precise number of visitors viewing our products and technical pages, which helped us understand visitor interest. However, this was NSK’s first experience participating in an online expo, and we were unable to get a real sense of what visitors were looking for and how they felt about what they saw. We realized how difficult it can be to engage with visitors at virtual events.
Proposing Solutions that Incorporate NSK’s Integrated Technology Capabilities
YamamotoOur next step is the NSK VIRTUAL EXPO, an exhibition hosted on our website for one month beginning on January 25. In this exhibition environment, inviting visitors to concentrate on NSK products and technologies exclusively, our aim is to showcase our lineup creatively and create future business opportunities.
As with JIMTOF2020 Online, our display concept for this expo is “More Than Precision - WAZA-ARI.” We will introduce a wide range of advanced products and services that embody NSK’s efforts to set the future in motion. As we prepare for both JIMTOF2020 Online and the NSK VIRTUAL EXPO, we focus our activities on the concept of Cross Technology. This means proposing solutions that take advantage of our integrated technological capabilities from the four essential components of machine tools: precision bearings, ball screws, linear guides, and spindles. At NSK, we are the only manufacturer that produces and develops all four of these products. In order to promote the total value that NSK offers, we formed cross-departmental project teams rather than having individual technology divisions pursue this issue individually. These project teams study and follow trends in the machine tool field to develop products matching these trends.
NakamuraAt past JIMTOF shows, individual technology divisions determined which of their own products would be exhibited. For the upcoming NSK VIRTUAL EXPO, we instead worked with multiple cross-departmental teams, so that from the start we were able to obtain product information beyond those from our own divisions. This resulted in a greatly improved exhibition.
MatsumuraOne of the interesting features of this process is that these teams were made up not only of members from the Technology Division, but also from Sales. Our Technology Division has a strong desire to educate customers about our new products. And our Sales Division also wants to appeal to customers, getting them interested in our products, even those that have already been introduced at expos. Therefore, I think it was good that we were able to incorporate the perspective of sales team members that interact closely with customers.
Often in the past we created separate displays for individual products but this time we divided the exhibition into categories based on the value our products provide customers. In this way, we can easily communicate NSK’s integrated strengths.
YanoIn order to continue our planning in the midst of the pandemic, members from each department met for discussions online. We held a number of meetings, and as we went along, we became accustomed to meeting virtually and, I believe, the planning went smoothly.
NakamuraBecause the NSK VIRTUAL EXPO will be held online, we have a wider range of options, but this also made it more difficult to choose how to best organize it. In the end, we made these decisions by returning again and again to defining the expo’s ultimate aim. As one component of the event, we will hold seminars (available in Japanese) to give people a broad, in-depth understanding of NSK products and technologies. Rather than communicating via impersonal technologies like computer graphics or text, we thought that personal presentations from the engineers themselves would more effectively convey the advantages of our products and how they are developed.
YanoAt in-person exhibitions, conversations with visitors can generate seeds of ideas for new innovations. This is more difficult online, so we’ve designated a fixed period of time for seminar Q&A in real time via online chat. I’m looking forward to seeing what kind of feedback we will get from visitors and how many people will watch the expo unfold.
Continuing to Integrate Different Perspectives
MatsumuraI was reminded that even customers within the same industry have different ways of thinking, depending on their division, and I learned the importance of respecting others’ views and moving forward in a way that is mutually satisfying. As we continue to get work done, I will focus on communicating with others, both inside and outside of the company, in a way that respects their cultures as we move forward. We were also able to work across departments in our discussions on how to present this exhibition, which helped us find hints for future offline exhibitions and how our post-COVID-19 exhibitions should be designed. I hope to carry these discussions into our work in the future.
YanoThis was an opportunity to watch people in different departments come up with ideas and find solutions to issues, and I learned a great deal. Thinking about how to build consensus was a great experience for me. I’ll continue to think about the need to listen carefully to others’ opinions in discussions such as these.
NakamuraEven with features like online chats, virtual exhibitions and presentations are still basically one-way modes of communication. In light of this, we worked hard to figure out ways to convey our message in a manner that doesn’t invite misunderstanding or leave out information. I hope in the future we continue to make the most of technology exchange meetings and similar opportunities that allow us present our products directly to customers.
YamamotoThe COVID-19 pandemic has changed the way we work and the way we do business, and I believe that remote work and digital tools will become increasingly important in the post-COVID era. We will take this transformation as an opportunity to embrace digital technology to further expand our sales support tools and customer service tools.
Keeping in mind our goal of proposing new solutions, we’ll work to create more opportunities to listen to and speak with customers and share their feedback with the entire company.