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Comment by g9yuayon

2 years ago

I grew up in China and the guess culture was predominant there. It was quite a culture shock after I came to the US. In a training session back when I was in IBM, the VP of marketing told us a story about the ask culture: he was an American-born Japanese. When Lou Gerstner asked him what he wanted, he instinctively tried to be humble. Lou cut him off and said: I can't help you if you don't tell me what you want. Come back in X months when you know the answer. The next time they met, the VP told Lou that he wanted to be an executive, and he got promoted soon. Another thing I learned in the training session was that leaders have different styles but all the executives demonstrated only one of the four key styles: direct and decisive.

As time went by, I found it was much easier to adapt to the ask culture. I also found consistency matters more than the styles. When I consistently ask with good intention, people would not take offense.

In business, being direct is efficient and efficient "transactions" drive the business. In your personal life, at least in certain cultures, being transactional is seen as being shrewd and self serving.