IVS2026 Panel Calls for Global Mindset in Japanese Startups
The session signals a shift in Japan's startup discourse away from domestic-market assumptions toward a global-first strategy, driven by AI's scaling dynamics and a shrinking home market.
Reporting from 1 sources: 4Gamer.net.
At IVS2026, a panel featuring Masaya Kubota, Towa Takigawa, and Hidekazu Suzuki argued that Japanese entrepreneurs must think globally from day one, treat IPOs as means not ends, and pursue proactive M&A. The discussion highlighted how AI widens the gap between Japan and the US, and urged founders to build global teams and communicate in high-reputation communities.
The panel opened with Masaya Kubota rejecting the premise of a 'Japanese startup industry' altogether. He argued that the assumption that Japanese people start businesses in Japan and list on Japanese exchanges should be removed. With population decline shrinking the domestic market, aiming for major success requires a global team from day one. Kubota also noted that the scaling law that benefits the strong works in favor of American capitalism, while Japan's low tolerance for mistakes puts it at a disadvantage.
Hidekazu Suzuki, CFO of Atrae, added that an IPO is a means to increase corporate value, not an end. He said market reforms and stricter IR requirements have raised the cost of explaining why a company goes public, making it easier for unlisted firms to take big challenges. Kubota went further on M&A, urging entrepreneurs to see acquisitions as a proactive growth strategy rather than a passive exit, even if it means delaying an IPO by several years to swallow listed companies.
Towa Takigawa, who started a business in the US, contrasted Japanese and American entrepreneurial mindsets. Japanese founders ask how to use Japan as an asset, he said, while Americans put purpose first and let structure follow. He predicted that AI enables small teams to compete, and organizations will center on people who handle customer contact points. The panelists agreed that placing oneself in a highly reputed global community and continuing to communicate-as Musk and Altman do-is essential for attracting attention and capital.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.