4 avril 2008 par des histoires de succès d'affaires de la Chine
Par Toffler Niemuth
Pour le non-avocat parmi nous, la formation de la personne morale pour des affaires nouvelles peut agir en tant que petit barrage de route aux parties. En Chine, la formation peut être un barrage de route beaucoup plus grand, particulièrement car un étranger essayant de diriger des ministères innombrables, barrières linguistiques, développent le guanxi nécessaire, et juste généralement figure dehors comment le système fonctionne.
En raison de ceci, mon idée était de faire commencer mes affaires en Chine au nom d'un associé local qui' d soit responsable de tous les gouvernement, incorporation, et questions d'impôts tout en me laissant avec le côté d'exécution et d'opérations des affaires. En fait, son beaucoup plus facile pour le Chinois de commencer des affaires (en Chine) que des étrangers. En effet, les personnes chinoises ont besoin seulement de CNY1 pour pouvoir commencer des affaires. Quoi qu'il en soit, j'ai pensé que c'était le meilleur plan, mais puis les questions de la vente, du rapatriement des bénéfices, etc. ont commencé à ramper dans mon esprit ainsi j'ai cherché le conseil additionnel. Lisez le reste de « commencer des affaires nouvelles en Chine (pinte 1) : La personne morale » ou signalent un commentaire
4 mars 2008 par des histoires de succès d'affaires de la Chine
Bonjour,
Je sais d'un fabricant chinois de ciment au lequel recherche le placement
remplacez leurs vieux fours debout avec nouveau « sèchent » les fours rotatoires qui
augmentez l'efficacité et réduisez la pollution et êtes en fait,
exigé par le gouvernement.
Vous Lisez le reste « de fabricants chinois de ciment » ou signalez un commentaire
February 12th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories
By Alexander de Nerée
A drawback of my, in itself interesting profession, is that I encounter a lot of lying in my daily work. Contrary to popular believe it is not so much the lawyers that do the lying. Although I have to admit lawyers are generally not easily persuaded to part with information, let alone the truth, I prefer to think of what we do as skilful editing of the information to fit a certain version of the truth. No harm in that. That is what lawyers are paid to do.
But in order to edit the information, you will have to obtain the information first. And that is not as easy as it may sound. First there is the filter of the client’s hurt feelings that makes it difficult to obtain any relevant information. In its strong believe of the correctness and the fairness of its own position, the client filters out anything that appears to be in its disadvantage.
“They never complained about the quality of our products and now, out of the bleu, they want their money back and claim damages! That is unreasonable.” In itself this is a good point which could legally be relevant but not if Read the rest of “Lying” or post a comment
February 7th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories
By Ernie Tadla
This is the story of an entrepreneur building a profitable business by beating all the global big guys.
Dan Mintz was born and raised in Brooklyn, and was the youngest person to be accepted into the New York Academy of Performing Arts. He started in the movie business as a student extra in the movie Fame. He went to Los Angeles where he furthered his education and experience in film production and created good connections with some of the major movie studios.
In the early ’90s, he went to China to set up a joint venture for a major movie studio. This was shortly after the Tiananmen Square fiasco and the climate for partnerships with American firms was cold, if not frozen, particularly with the Ministry of Culture, which would have to be involved. Read the rest of “A China Success Story: Dan Mintz and DMG” or post a comment
February 5th, 2008 by China Business Success Stories
My friend Chris Carr, dean of the CalPoly MBA program and the brains behind the International Business Tour blog has a very thoughtful post, entitled, “Will Paying More Change Behavior And Make Someone More Ethical?” Thoughtful, but wrong.
The post centers on whether paying more gets you better performance and/or better ethics, and Chris pretty much says it does not:
“Some suggested that we could solve the problem of too many defective products coming from China by paying more to the Chinese suppliers that make this stuff. I questioned that assumption, and still do…
Read the rest of “Why Paying More Is Good China Business” or post a comment >>