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18. Juli 2007 durch China Geschäft Erfolg-Geschichten
Durch Nicolas Binse
Während der Wert des Steuerns der Qualität der Produkte, die von den chinesischen Lieferanten kommen, jetzt zu den meisten internationalen Kunden auf der Hand liegt, bleiben Fragen auf, gerade wie zu sie tun Sie.
Prüfung Plan
Zuerst müssen Sie denken an, was genau Sie steuern möchten. Es kommt ideal von Ihrer eigenen Definition von, was für Ihre Produkte und Ihr Geschäft kritisch ist. Ihnen mit dem Definieren des Testplanes helfen, Versuch, um zu betrachten was die letzten Qualitätsausgaben sind, die Sie gegenüberstellten, eine, die Sie holten, Kontrollen zu verlangen; oder laufen Sie die Spezifikationen des Produktes durch und wählen Sie die aus, die die größte Auswirkung auf Ihre Kunden haben konnten. Halten Sie im Verstand, daß der Kontrolle Plan gebildet werden sollte in übereinstimmung mit, was auf dem Spiel steht:
der Wert und die Kritikalität des Produktes. Obviously, you might not want to test rolls of paper tissues as extensively as medical respiratory equipment. A typical testing plan includes several cosmetic and functional items to check, with pass and fail criteria. Most of them will be based on visual checks or basic instrument measurements (ruler, caliper, weighing scale, etc.). Read the rest of “How to order a quality inspection” or post a comment
July 18th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Arno Boersma
An award-winning knowledge management approach complements legal measures for intellectual property protection
How can companies sustain their competitive knowledge advantage while tapping into the potential of the Chinese market? How can they develop, share, apply and protect their knowledge all at the same time in the Chinese arena? And, despite the fact that most knowledge cannot be legally protected, how can they protect their knowledge anyway? Read the rest of “Aware and Alert” or post a comment
July 18th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Filomena Mitchell
Greetings
Address a person using his or her family name only, such as Mr. Chen or Ms. Hsu. The Chinese family name comes first and is usually one syllable. A one or a two-syllable given name follows a family name. For example, in the case of Teng Peinian, Teng is the family name and Peinian is the given name. In some instances, Westernized Chinese might reverse their names when visiting and sending correspondence abroad. Therefore, it is always a good idea to ask a native speaker which name is the family name. Read the rest of “Business and Travel Etiquette in China” or post a comment
July 18th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Marco Hoekstra
It’s been a while since I last wrote an article on the web about my experiences in China. First a quick glimpse on why.. A year in Shanghai passes by very fast. You come here with a purpose, you come here with a way of thinking and working and you have to change all that… First it is about first impressions and you take the time to fit into your new working and living environment. Sharing your experiences is than part of your own learning experience. After half a year you feel more confident in doing the things in your way, customized to local circumstances. After a year you realize that you are sometimes still surprised by things that you see around you… Read the rest of “Experienced..?? People..!!” or post a comment
July 12th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Julian
My journalism course on China’s Mass Media had a guest speaker today — Arthur Kroeber, the managing director and head of research for Dragonomics and editor-in-chief of the China Economic Quarterly. Mr. Kroeber talked to us about the evolution of the business press in China since the reform and opening began in 1978, how economic reportage has contributed to expanding press freedoms on other fronts, and the problems that have arisen in recent years. I’ve posted the notes I took during his lecture. I’m sorry if they’re sloppy, but I was typing pretty fast:
One of the things that began to happen immediately after the reform and opening up period was the government’s greater tolerance of reportage about economic affairs. In the early 1980s, the Chinese government made the decision that Read the rest of “The Nature of China’s Business Press” or post a comment