246 Episodes

  1. Why people are afraid to trust AI. And how to fix it

    Published: 1/02/2021
  2. What you can learn from Japan’s seven-minute miracle

    Published: 4/01/2021
  3. This startup built the first open-source driverless car

    Published: 7/12/2020
  4. Why startups should be better than charities at solving social problems

    Published: 9/11/2020
  5. The Dream of Flying Cars meets the Truth of Aviation Startups

    Published: 12/10/2020
  6. What’s really changed after six years of Disrupting Japan

    Published: 14/09/2020
  7. How this silkworm startup is taking on the pandemic

    Published: 31/08/2020
  8. Reinventing online maps to focus on community

    Published: 17/08/2020
  9. Selects: Why Japan’s Geisha are disappearing in the social media age

    Published: 3/08/2020
  10. Your Japanese textbooks are lying to you

    Published: 6/07/2020
  11. DJ Selects: Why startups lose control of their sales channels, and how to fix it – Allen Miner – Oracle

    Published: 22/06/2020
  12. What makes people pay for new online events

    Published: 8/06/2020
  13. Why public humiliation is the secret to success

    Published: 25/05/2020
  14. The Japanese Trap of the Glorious Failure

    Published: 27/04/2020
  15. DJ Selects: Why Your Startup Accelerator is Going to Disappear

    Published: 30/03/2020
  16. One important lesson startups will forget after the panic

    Published: 16/03/2020
  17. Why boring startups are actually the most interesting

    Published: 2/03/2020
  18. DJ Selects: How this Musical Shoe is Helping Hospitals

    Published: 17/02/2020
  19. Why Japan’s #KuToo is Not Really About Shoes

    Published: 3/02/2020
  20. Big News for Disrupting Japan! – Japan Startup News

    Published: 21/01/2020

4 / 13

Startups work differently in Japan, and there is a lot happening here right now. Disrupting Japan introduces you to the most innovative founders and VCs, and shows you what it’s like to be an innovator in a society that prizes conformity.

Visit the podcast's native language site