16 de noviembre de 2007 por historias del éxito del negocio de China
Una mente abierta, flexible y una comisión seria.
Por Ernie Tadla
Primero: una mente abierta y flexible. ¿Puedo introducir a mis amigos de dos señoras?
Alguna gente mira este cuadro y ve a crone. Alguna gente ve a mujer joven. Alguna gente puede ver ambos, pero no en
same time. Eligen el que verán.
Si usted puede ver ambos, usted cambia de vieja señora a la señora joven cambiando su opinión, su paradigma. Nada cambia en el exterior, solamente en el interior. Usted puede ver y entender ambos lados. Lea el resto de la “lección ocho de China: Las dos cosas que toma para hacer negocio acertado en China” o para fijar un comentario
15 de noviembre de 2007 por historias del éxito del negocio de China
A través de mis 30 años en el juego de la negociación y mientras que jugaba en todos los niveles, realicé que estas tres reglas de oro son realmente lo que materia para alcanzar grandes resultados en el juego.
Estas reglas se aplican a cualquier tipo de juego de la negociación, si es reparto de la libra del multimillion, comprando un coche o una casa - las mismas reglas se aplican.
Lea el resto “Del ABC del juego de la negociación” o fije un comentario >>
November 15th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
The Three Golden Rules for Winning in Any Negotiation
By Osama El-Kadi
Throughout my 30 years in the negotiation game and while playing at all levels, I realised that these three golden rules are really what matter for achieving great results in the game.
These rules apply to any type of negotiation game, whether it is multimillion pound deal, buying a car or a house — The same rules apply.
The wonderful thing about these golden rules is that even an unskilled negotiators can, not only be a players over night but also win big time using these three golden rules; They are the ABC of the negotiation game. Read the rest of “The ABC of the Negotiation Game” or post a comment
November 14th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
Confucius is still alive in Chinese Asia (as well as in Japan, Korea and Vietnam). Proving far stronger than the (European) ideas of Marx or Lenin, his moral and societal philosophy easily overcame the concerted efforts of the Chinese Communist Party in China to “rid the nation of [his] feudal teachings.” From Shanghai to Taipei to Hong Kong to Singapore, his influence can be seen in all aspects of Chinese society, especially Chinese business communication.
Read the rest of “Confucian Effects on Business Communication” or post a comment >>
November 14th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Greg Bissky
Confucius is still alive in Chinese Asia (as well as in Japan, Korea and Vietnam). Proving far stronger than the (European) ideas of Marx or Lenin, his moral and societal philosophy easily overcame the concerted efforts of the Chinese Communist Party in China to “rid the nation of [his] feudal teachings.” From Shanghai to Taipei to Hong Kong to Singapore, his influence can be seen in all aspects of Chinese society, especially Chinese business communication.
Chinese reports are often filled with polite but meaningless words; business letters and faxes take one, and often two or three, paragraphs to get to the point. Chinese meetings are characterized by general and/or superficial discussion: ensuring that no one loses face is more important than clearly examining the entire range of opinions. What’s missing from Chinese communication are well-reasoned arguments, strong conclusions, clear recommendations, tough questions, candid opinions and frank disagreements. All require a person to be definite, to clearly say This is what I think, and thus all risk hurting a relationship with those who disagree (especially in hierarchical relationships). Read the rest of “Effects on Business Communication” or post a comment