Why this CEO makes his executive team climb a mountain that's claimed more lives than Everest
About seven years ago, that tradition changed radically.
CEO Hiroshi "Mickey" Mikitani tells Business Insider that he now has his leadership team doing something much more adventurous than gathering at a cushy resort.
Instead, execs now meet on Mount Tanigawa every year, a Japanese mountain that's claimed the lives of more climbers than Mount Everest.
Despite that jarring death toll, Mikitani decided to change the company offsite after hiking the mountain with his young son. (Although the climb is difficult, some trails, including the one that Rakuten employees take, are signficantly less dangerous than others.)
Mikitani sees the tradition as the perfect way for execs to get to know each other better through a non-conventional bonding experience. Even more importantly, the struggle to make it to the top all together symbolizes the idea of working through company difficulties as a team.
"Rakuten always goes to the peak," Mikitani grins.
One other exec who has climbed Mount Tanigawa several times gleefully told Business Insider that he almost died last year when he started sliding on the rocks under his feet. He almost careened off the side of a cliff before managing to grab onto a rock at the last minute. His teammates and their guide then threw him a rope he used to climb back onto the path.
Although the offsite is all about team building and pushing boundaries, another exec jokes that it also acts as a good way for employees to stay in reasonable good physical condition through the year.
"The fear keeps you fit," he laughs, saying that he would remind himself to go to the gym more often in the months leading up to the retreat.
Mikitani recalls one particularly memorable climb, where he invited a journalist who planned to profile the company to join the expedition. After a grueling acent and witnessing how execs continually pushed themselves and eachother to the limit to make it to the top, the journalist, between his own tired gasps, apparently said, "Now I finally feel like I understand Rakuten."