In business, numbers usually show up in boardrooms as balance sheets, profit margins and quarterly earnings. They tell us whether the organization is winning or losing, thriving or barely keeping the lights on. But numbers aren’t just dry statistics. They carry culture, symbolism and – if you’re superstitious – a fair bit of drama.
Numbers are never just numbers. If you step into an elevator anywhere in Japan, don’t be surprised if you can’t find the fourth or ninth floors. Developers replace ‘4’ with ‘3A’ and ‘9’ with ‘8A,’ because in Japanese, number four (shi) sounds like ‘death’ and nine (ku) means ‘suffering.’
In Metro Manila, I discovered a newly-refurbished hospital with the same superstitious practice. They have no fourth and ninth floor. Not even ‘3A’ or ‘8A’ floors.
Now, a Westerner might smirk: ‘Really? Skipping floors because of delusion?’ Look. Imagine being in a hospital bed and being wheeled into Room Suffering on the ninth Floor. That’s not superstition – that’s a horror movie. Smart businesses, including modern hospitals know perception is everything, and if avoiding certain digits keeps customers calm, then by all means, skip the fourth and ninth floors.
In truth, the Western world is also superstitious. They panic over number 13. Skyscrapers often jump from floor 12 to 14, airlines avoid row 13 and some hotels don’t have room 13 at all. Try convincing a nervous guest that sleeping in ‘Lucky 13’ is safe – you’ll need more than a soft pillow.
Bright side
Numbers don’t just mark superstition. They also define achievement. Malcolm Gladwell popularized the 10,000-hour rule as one key to becoming world-class at something – whether it’s violin, coding or running a business. It requires at least 10,000 hours of deliberate practice. That’s 20 hours a week for 10 years.
If you’ve been binge-watching Netflix that long, congratulations – you’re now a master of couch endurance. The rule reminds us of something powerful: numbers measure commitment. Ten thousand hours isn’t just math; it’s a story of grit, patience and effort stacking up over time.
Last week, I wrote about how to measure one’s mastery in Kaizen problem-solving. It’s similar to Japan’s tradition of folding 1,000 origami cranes. Legend has it that if you fold them, your wish will come true. Families often send bundles of colored origami pieces to hospitals, hoping for the recovery of a loved one.
Those cranes aren’t just paper – they’re hope, folded a thousand times. I’m telling my clients the same thing: complete 1,000 problem-solving projects, big or small, and you’re not just doing Kaizen. You’ll become an origami champion in continuous improvement.
That’s 10 hours per project. When multiplied to a successful 1,000 Kaizen projects, it becomes the equivalent of Gladwell’s ‘tipping point’ of 10,000 hours. See the contrast? Ten thousand hours represents discipline to master a craft. One thousand origami pieces represent faith in healing. Both are numbers, but each carries a different emotional meaning.
In business, numbers build credibility. Investors don’t buy stocks using ‘gut feelings.’ They want revenue, ratios and forecasts. In today’s digital world, companies often fall into ‘vanity metrics.’ Boasting about a million social media followers is an impressive tack – until you realize none of them ever buy anything.
It’s like bragging you have 5,000 Tinder connections but never went on a single date.
The human side of numbers
Despite their precision, numbers carry emotional weight. A worker doesn’t think of her salary as ‘P40,000/month.’ She thinks: ‘Rent, tuition, groceries and maybe pizza on a Friday night.’ Dynamic managers don’t see ’15 percent attrition.’ It sees skilled people walking out, knowledge leaking and morale dropping.
Some managers forget this. They talk about ‘cutting five percent of staff’ as if they’re trimming fat from a budget. But behind every percentage point are human lives and livelihoods. Business leaders who understand this don’t just see numbers – they see stories.
So, what can managers take from all this numerical wisdom?
Respect cultural numbers. If skipping a floor builds trust, do it. Math purists may cringe, but most people are fine as long as the elevator is operational.
Pick the right metrics. Focus on numbers that matter. Customer retention and employee motivation rates beat any social media ‘likes.’
Tell stories with data. Don’t just say sales rose by 15 percent. Say, ‘sales rose by 15 percent – enough to fund merit pay increases.’ Numbers persuade when they mean something.
Balance head and heart. Some numbers measure profit, others measure patience, others measure prayer. Intelligent managers know how to balance all three.
Numbers run the world – on spreadsheets, in superstitions and in stories of struggle and hope. Number four means death in Japan, eight means prosperity in China, ten thousand hours mean mastery and one thousand folded papers mean hope for healing.
It’s not just math – it’s tradition with a calculator. Ignore the power of numbers, and you risk losing people’s trust. Respect them – and you’ll see that behind every digit lies not just data, but people, culture and countless possibilities. In the end, numbers don’t just count; they narrate.
In business, the story told by numbers is the one customers and employees believe in – because behind every figure is the figure of trust.
Rey Elbo is a quality and productivity improvement enthusiast. DM your story on Facebook, LinkedIn, or X or email elbonomics@gmail.com or via https://reyelbo.com. Anonymity is guaranteed even if you skipped your math and statistics classes in college.