Предохранение против Принуждение: Где начать вашу стратегию Китая IPR? Часть II

3-ье апреля 2008 рассказами успеха дела Китая

Предохранение против принуждения: Где начать вашу стратегию Китая IPR?Поддерживать эксклюзивные права к IP, организация должна иметь механизмы in place для того чтобы гарантировать продолжаемое предохранение.

Первым делом из, кто-то должно обеспечить что зарегистрированные права IP поддерживают их ценностьь. Товарные знаки зарегистрированы на 10 лет одновременно, таким образом зарегистрирования должны быть продленны перед законцовкой такого периода ценностьи. Отказ сделать так приведет к в потере всех эксклюзивные права к товарному знаку…

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Предохранение против Принуждение: Где начать вашу стратегию Китая IPR? Часть iий

27-ое марта 2008 рассказами успеха дела Китая

Предохранение против принуждения: Где начать вашу стратегию Китая IPR?Продолжаемый pervasiveness подделывать в Китае not only проблемой закона, но также одним принуждения. Пока законы и постановления Китая соответствует к согласованию на торговать-родственных аспектах интеллектуальных прав на собственность (ОТКЛЮЧЕНИЙ) и других широко принятых международных принципов, некоторые части механизма предохранения от Китая доказывали недействительное. Common examples are the high standards for criminal liability of counterfeiters, the high burden of evidence to prove bad faith registrations, and the difficulty to prove damages in civil proceedings…

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Luxury Brands in China: Part IV

March 19th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories

The challenges ahead

By Nick Debnam & George Svinos, KPMG

Chinese Challenges in Luxury Goods RetailLuxury retailing in China clearly presents tremendous opportunities, but also risks and challenges. In addition to heightening competition as is common among emerging markets, the most significant and relevant of challenges for luxury brands concern Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) regulations, the time frame for a return on investment, low luxury brand awareness, booming Chinese tourism and limited retail infrastructure.

• IPR regulations

According to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing the piracy rate in China remains one of the highest in the world and, on average, 20 percent of consumer products are counterfeit. Even domestic companies are troubled by piracy, with a recent study by the Ministry of Information Industry finding that 37 percent of Chinese companies suffered from such problems. Read the rest of “Luxury Brands in China: Part IV” or post a comment

Warning to China Managers: Out of the box thinking can get messy

February 19th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories

By Andrew Hupert 

Innovative manager in ChinaInnovative manager in ChinaInnovative manager in ChinaJust before Chinese New Year, I was in a Shanghai sales meeting where the owner of a European company was discussing post-holiday sales projections. The talk was all “new, innovative, out of the box”, but the walk was all about doing the same old thing only bigger and/or cheaper. I’ve been to this rodeo before. Some of the expensive new marketing initiatives put into place 6 months ago were about to whither and die.

If you are a straight-arrow manager trying some “out of the box” thinking in China you are going to need a strategy for gauging and recognizing success in the early stages. Most of all you need to avoid squandering your investment by pulling the plug too early.

Here are some ideas that might help: Read the rest of “Warning to China Managers: Out of the box thinking can get messy” or post a comment

4 Reasons Sourcing from China will be More Expensive in 2008

January 21st, 2008 by China Business Success Stories

Sourcing from China more expensive in 2008China has been trying to stem an ever growing trade surplus, manage domestic inflation, move development from the coastal areas to the inland areas and decrease its dependence on heavily polluting industries.

Because of these objectives, manufacturing in China is becoming more expensive as China adds in hidden (and sometimes not so hidden) costs into the sourcing equation. 

Here are the top 4 reasons you can expect costs to continue to rise in 2008:

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