top of page

Life through the Cube

Feb 8, 2026

Celebrating Seollal: Lunar New Year at CRScube

In South Korea, Lunar New Year is more than a public holiday. It is a pause that makes space for family, reflection, and renewal. Homes prepare, travel routes fill, and routines slow down for a few days. For a company founded and headquartered in Seoul, it is also a meaningful moment in the year that naturally influences culture inside CRScube.

What Lunar New Year means in Korea

Lunar New Year in Korea is known as Seollal (설날). It is traditionally observed over several days and centres on returning to family, honouring elders, and starting the year with intention.

While each household celebrates differently, a few themes are widely shared.

Respect and connection

Many families begin Seollal by greeting elders, often with a formal bow known as sebae (세배). It is a simple ritual, but it reflects something deeply cultural: relationships matter, and respect is shown through action.

Symbolism in shared meals

Seollal meals carry meaning as well as tradition. One of the most recognised dishes is tteokguk (떡국), a rice cake soup that symbolises “gaining a year” and stepping into the new year with health and good fortune. In many homes, the process of sharing a meal together is as important as the food itself.

A moment to reset

Seollal often comes with quiet reflection: closing out the year, acknowledging what was challenging, and returning with a clearer sense of priorities. It is not about dramatic resolutions. It is about a steady reset.

How Seollal influences day-to-day work

Cultural values matter most when they show up in practical behaviours. Seollal influences Koreans’ approach to work in ways that are simple but meaningful:

  • Reflection becomes routine: teams capture lessons and turn them into small, practical improvements.

  • Planning stays grounded: priorities are clarified early and expectations are set realistically.

  • Care shows up in detail: precision is treated as a sign of respect for the people relying on the work.

Why Seollal matters to CRScube

CRScube operates globally, but its roots are in Seoul. Seollal is one of the clearest reminders of that heritage, and it reinforces values that show up in how teams collaborate and deliver.

Reset supports better decisions

Seollal reinforces the value of a real pause, helping teams return with clearer thinking and stronger judgement in detailed, regulated work.

Respect shapes how teams communicate

The emphasis on respect during Seollal reflects a way of working that prioritises thoughtful communication, careful listening, and clear handovers.

Stable delivery comes from repeatable structure

Just as Seollal traditions create structure, repeatable ways of working and clear checkpoints help teams adapt to change without losing control of quality.

Relationships stay central

Seollal highlights the importance of connection, and that same mindset supports trust and shared responsibility across teams.


Lunar New Year in Korea is a reminder that progress is built through reflection,connection, and steady effort. At CRScube, it also reflects the heritage thatcontinues to shape how our teams collaborate and deliver.

From everyone at CRScube, happy Seollal!

placeholder_white_300x300.jpg

Share via

See CRScube in action

Explore how our platform will elevate your team and clinical trial management.

crscube_in_action_ca.avif

Get insights straight to your inbox

img_001.avif

Explore our knowledge base

Stay in-the-know with regular updates and industry opinions from our expert team.

Featured resources

icon_01.png

Electronic safety reporting in clinical trials: What sponsors need to know

For sponsors and CROs, it is crucial to understand the implications of the full enforcement of ICH E2B(R3) standards, especially as it impacts both pre- and post-authorization submissions.

icon_01.png

From our sales leaders Juan Munoz-Pujol and Scott Robertson

icon_01.png

Why ICH E2B(R3) still matters in 2026 – A conversation with Ducksang (David) Im

While E2B(R3) standard has existed for some time, global adoption has been gradual. What makes 2026 critical is that many regulatory authorities worldwide have now finalized mandatory transitions.

bottom of page