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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

An Early Homecoming?

***I now CAN vouch for the truth of #5, because it's happening to our friend. See below. It's such BS!***

Wild rumors abound about the financial state of my employer and I am beginning to seriously wonder if my husband and I will be coming home early.


Our employer, Nova, has had serious financial problems for some time, and may now be bordering on bankruptcy. Immediately before we came, a handful of teachers were arrested in a minor drug scandal, (two of whom came from my branch) triggering a flood of negative press. In addition, Nova has fought, and lost, a number of student lawsuits regarding allegedly dishonest cancellation and refund policies, causing the Japanese government to suspend part of their operations. The suspension currently prevents the company from offering long term contracts, which is supposedly where the majority of company profits derive from.


There are a number of online message boards claiming that Nova is going under and will be completely bankrupt in the coming weeks or months. At first I scoffed at this idea, because they are always making such claims, but now I'm not so sure. The past two weeks have brought a series of strange, foreboding events that are difficult to dismiss. For example:


1. Teachers outside the Tokyo and Osaka metro areas were paid late this month, and trainers (teachers who train other teachers) have not been paid at all. Their pay is currently ten days late. The powers that be keep pushing the pay date back, and so far they've changed it four or five times. Needless to say, the trainers are furious and many have supposedly resigned, although none in my area have. The CEO has sent a couple of faxes, but none of them say why the pay has been delayed. In one fax he claimed that prospects look brighter for next month, that it is always darkest before dawn, and to carry on business as usual, blah, blah, blah. I've never seen a vaguer statement.


2. New teachers normally receive pay advances to help them make ends meet until they receive their first paycheck. This isn't available anymore.


3. The company is closing anywhere between 50-200 schools. Sadly, I know this not because they announced it to their employees but because I read it in the news. The lack of communication from head office is appalling.


4. A company recruiter presented three choices to a new recruit scheduled to come to Japan. The choices were to come to Japan and hope for the best, to resign before coming over, or to wait until October 16th "to see what happens." October 16th happens to be the day after payday. I know this because a new teacher started at my branch this week and his friend is the new recruit. He still came though.


5. I've read on message boards that a few teachers have been evicted from their apartments because Nova didn't pay the rent. If true, that is the most infuriating thing I've ever heard because the company deducts rent from the teacher's monthly check and charges nearly double. I've also read that Nova has been evicted from office buildings for not paying the rent.

**Edit: Unbelievably, this is true. Our friend and his two roomates found on eviction notice on their door yesterday stating they had seven days to leave! The company has been withdrawing rent money from their paychecks, but hasn't payed the landlord in god knows how long! The tenants don't know what they're going to do yet. In perhaps the most hypocritical move of all time, the company has kept our friend on probaation because he was late twice. Ha ha ha ha! If this happens to my husband and I, I'm going to sit outside my branch and tell everyone coming in what happened. I'm scared!**

If something does happen to the company, my husband and I will happily come home early or possibly draw Japanese unemployment (how strange would that be). However, I would feel terrible for our students and for the new teachers and staff members.


What do you think? Are we coming home early? October 16th is D-Day I guess.

If you're interested, click here for a recent news story about the situation.

7 comments:

Crafty Japan said...

I'm fairly in the dark when it comes to watching the news lately, but even I've heard the rumours you're speaking of.

However, Nova are the #1 English Convo company in all of Japan and I honestly don't see them going under without a much bigger fight. I know it's stressful when its your pay packet on the line, but I would sit tight for the moment. Should D-Day come without cash, then it's decision-time. I'm sure you both could find jobs quite quickly though, if you do want to stay your full term :)

Good luck!! :)

Unknown said...

Almost 20 years ago, I used to work for the biggest Eikaiwa school in Japan while Nova was just a fledgling competitor. That school went bankrupt after as well and on the day they announced it, the teachers and staff ransacked the school stealing anything that wasn't nailed down. Seriously, it was like looting during a riot.

I don't think that will happen at Nova since it is a publicly listed company on Jasdaq, but they will definitely close down most of their schools and then when their market price is in the single digits some company will buy them at a discount, rebrand them and relaunch the school.

Erin said...

Hmmm, I wonder if that is a good thing. I've been reading since before you even went and although you were quite excited, you also seemed a bit homesick once you got there. Maybe this is a good thing! Not good that the schools are closing - that is horrible, but perhaps coming home isn't such a bad idea :)

Anonymous said...

Hi there, I'm an Australian who worked in Japan for a year (about 5 years ago). Even before I left I was given the tip not to work for Nova as they were dodgy! I took a leap of faith and went to the Working Holiday association in Tokyo on a hope they could find me a job. I basically had the choice of over 100 jobs all paying a lot more than Nova! So my humble advice (of course not knowing your Visa situation) would be to get out of Nova while you can and start looking for another job. Working in Japan for a nice small company I'm sure you will get so much more out of the experience, and really have a great time. Hang in there! (if you can). Good Luck :)

Shari said...

I've been saying essentially the same as Roy since the rumors started flying even more fast and furious than ever.

The only thing which will likely cause the company to go bankrupt rather than get bought out and re-named would be if the president (who I believe has controlling stock) decides his pride will force him to go down with the ship and take everyone else with him rather than allow him to sell out.

I think consolidation and closings are the first stage in trying to make the schools profitable enough to keep doing business. Nova expanded too rapidly in an attempt to push the competition out at other locations and they should never have done this. They also diversified too rapidly and invested in programs that never paid for themselves (like the internet teaching). Rather than run on profits from the highly successful branches, they invested in more and more branches in less lucrative locations and this required them to keep running on future revenue rather than current profits.

Anonymous said...

I think it depends on what you both want. If you are intend to stay in Japan for a longer period, find a new job right now and quit Nova asap while they are still paying you. Nobody wants to work by not having a salary.

Of course, if you two want to leave, do so before Nova applies for the bankruptcy. Good luck!

Melanie Gray Augustin said...

I've been reading the Nova stuff for a little while and really hope it sorts out soon. Good luck!