Maiko Kuroda


Maiko Kuroda is a Japanese entrepreneur who served as a president of Toyoko Inn, and the daughter of its founder,. Following her father's resignation in 2006, Kuroda was the vice-president of Toyoko from 2008 to 2012, and has served as its president since 2012. During her term as president, Toyoko has recovered from a management crisis and become one of the largest hotels in Japan.

Biography

Early life

Burn in 1976 in Tokyo, Kuroda is the daughter of Norimasa Nishida, founder of Toyoko Inn, with sisters. During her childhood, Nishida often came home late. And even at home, he constantly talked about his career and yelled at his employee over the phone. As a result, Kuroda had no interest in her father's career, and wished to become a teacher or a housewife instead.
Kuroda studied at a girls' high school and became a member of its student council, which was appointed by teachers. She was therefore faced with backlash from students. In an interview, she mentioned the experience had affected her management style in later days. After gruading from high school, she studied at the University of the Sacred Heart, and Rikkyo University in her master's degree. Her major was the contemporary history of Germany. Kuroda began teaching history at her high school as part of her working experience during her university, but later abandoned her teaching career when she realised that she was not suited for the role. She later graduated from Rikkyo, but cannot attend job hunting activities because she was writing her thesis at the time.
Engaged in April 2002, Koroda worked in Toyoko at the time, and served at the marketing department at a newly opened branch. Koroda had her daughters in 2003 and 2005, and therefore quitted from Toyoko in 2004, and later went to Germany with her husband and beame housewife in 2005. At the time, the proportion of working women in Japan has just caught up with that of housewives. Seeing more of her friends become working women, Kuroda, who did not want to be an idle homemaker, started consider returning to the workforce, and planned to start a business while raising her daughter.

President of Toyoko Inn

Toyoko Inn had faced numbers of incidents after a in 2006, and had become a serious crisis when 2008 financial crisis was taken place. The company tried to address it by reducing accommodation fees and cutting staff, but did not improve its performance. Norimasa Nishida, the president of Toyoko at the time, resigned in 2006. Seeing his father's resignation, Koroda decided to manage Toyoko to save the company.
In 2008, Kuroda became the vice president of Toyoko. At vice president, Kuroda's main role was to communicate between her father and other managers, due to her father's arbitrary management style. And after communicating with grassroots-level managers, she found that the morale's falling was because of depressing performance instead of apathetic staff. Therefore, Kuroda decided to retain the policies of "Managers managing hotels" and "emphasis on female staff" and reforming the company based on these policies.
In Jube 2012, Kuroda became the president of Toyoko, with the slogan of "The most rewarding workplace for women in Japan". She changed the hotel's personnel structure during her term as president, such as encouraging individuals without working experience in the accommodation industry to join managers directly, focuses on interpersonal skills, and emphasises personal preference when hiring managers. She also established a committee for hotel managers. In addition to creating a communication network among managers, the committee also aims to prevent the problem where no one dares to question company policy in the time of Nishida and bring questions to light.
Following the revive from the aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in 2012, Toyoko has become better under the reviving trend. In May 2015, all Toyoko hotels were full during the golden week, which won the "Largest hotel chain with a 100% occupancy" of Guinness World Records. In 2016, Kuroda expressed her wish of expanding the rooms to 500 thousands from 50 thousands in 30 years, and eventually 10.45 million rooms. Almost 60,000 rooms in 301 Toyoko hotels were offered in August 2019, making it become one of the largest hotels in Japan.

Publications

*