Tokyo Corporate Retreat — 7 Nights, 40 Executives Tokyo does something no conference room can — it drops a leadership team into a culture so fundamentally different from their own that the usual office dynamics stop working, and something more honest takes their place. This seven-night programme for forty executives is built around that idea: three days of structured conference and strategy sessions at the Four Seasons Tokyo at Otemachi (Tokyo's only Forbes Five-Star property in the central business district, with private conference floors and a dedicated MICE coordinator), followed by four days of cultural programming that moves the group through experiences unavailable anywhere else. A taiko drumming session where forty people play in synchronised rhythm and every title in the room becomes irrelevant. A competitive Tsukiji market challenge leading into a group sushi masterclass judged by professional chefs. A samurai sword training session with professional instructors, and a kintsugi ceramics workshop built around the Japanese philosophy that breakage and repair are part of something's history, not flaws to hide. Seven evenings of private dining span the New York Bar at the Park Hyatt (the 52nd-floor bar from Lost in Translation), a three-Michelin-star kaiseki dinner at Kikunoi, a private izakaya buyout for informal group bonding, and a farewell dinner at The Peninsula's private rooms overlooking the Imperial Palace moat. Full budget breakdown included — estimated $607,000–$766,000 total for forty executives including business class flights, Four Seasons room block, all group dining, cultural programming, ground transport fleet, and Tokyo DMC fee. Every booking contact is included in the document.
Tokyo Corporate Retreat — 7 Nights, 40 Executives Tokyo does something no conference room can — it drops a leadership team into a culture so fundamentally different from their own that the usual office dynamics stop working, and something more honest takes their place. This seven-night programme for forty executives is built around that idea: three days of structured conference and strategy sessions at the Four Seasons Tokyo at Otemachi (Tokyo's only Forbes Five-Star property in the central business district, with private conference floors and a dedicated MICE coordinator), followed by four days of cultural programming that moves the group through experiences unavailable anywhere else. A taiko drumming session where forty people play in synchronised rhythm and every title in the room becomes irrelevant. A competitive Tsukiji market challenge leading into a group sushi masterclass judged by professional chefs. A samurai sword training session with professional instructors, and a kintsugi ceramics workshop built around the Japanese philosophy that breakage and repair are part of something's history, not flaws to hide. Seven evenings of private dining span the New York Bar at the Park Hyatt (the 52nd-floor bar from Lost in Translation), a three-Michelin-star kaiseki dinner at Kikunoi, a private izakaya buyout for informal group bonding, and a farewell dinner at The Peninsula's private rooms overlooking the Imperial Palace moat. Full budget breakdown included — estimated $607,000–$766,000 total for forty executives including business class flights, Four Seasons room block, all group dining, cultural programming, ground transport fleet, and Tokyo DMC fee. Every booking contact is included in the document.