10 décembre 2007 par des histoires de succès d'affaires de la Chine
Comment être préparé pour l'expérience a appelé la Chine ? Pamela Lau a fait une recherche scientifique intéressante au sujet de la formation de pré-départ pour des expats projetant aller en Chine.Bien qu'il y ait de la littérature remettant en cause l'effet de la formation de pré-départ (Kealy et Protheroe, 1996 ; Selmer et autres, 1998), il est clair que selon expatrie, la formation de pré-départ est appropriée. Les données étant obtenu, des essais statistiques ont été effectués pour créer un arrangement plus profond des besoins de expatrie qui sont envoyés en Chine par leurs compagnies. Lisez le reste de « formation de Pré-départ pour expatrie qui sont envoyés en Chine » ou signalent un commentaire
6 décembre 2007 par des histoires de succès d'affaires de la Chine
Ainsi le gweilo a obtenu sur un vol de la Chine d'air.
Il semble que j'étais la seule personne non-Chinoise sur l'avion.
Le choc de culture a commencé là. L'air Chine de vol n'est pas comme le vol Air Canada. Nous prenons nos conforts occidentaux pour accordé et n'apprécions pas vraiment ce que nous avons jusqu'à ce qu'il ait emporté. C'était une bonne, progressive première introduction de phase pour moi. Prenez tous que nous sommes employés à ici et frappez-les en bas de trois entailles. L'espace, service, qualité si salles de toilette, allocation des places, ou nourriture. Je n'ai pas souffert, mais me suis rendu compte que j'étais comme un type de ville allant rendre visite à des cousins de pays à la ferme.
J'allais d'une société développée à une société se développante. They were trying to catch up with us, and doing a great job, but…
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December 6th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Ernie Tadla
So the gweilo got on an Air China flight. It seems I was the only non-Chinese person on the plane. The culture shock began there. Flying Air China is not like flying Air Canada. We take our western comforts for granted and don’t really appreciate what we have until it’s taken away. This was a good, gradual first phase introduction for me. Take all we are used to here and knock it down three notches. Space, service, quality whether washrooms, seating, or food. I did not suffer, but realized that I was like a city guy going to visit country cousins on the farm. I was going from a developed society to a developing society. They were trying to catch up with us, and doing a great job, but were not there yet.
Alone with my thoughts, I wondered and worried. What was I getting myself into? The pangs of being alone were deep. It would be four months before Lovy would join me. Without her at my side, I was at the mercy of others and my own mental meanderings. Would Dan and his partners, Wu Bing and Peter, accept me? Would the Chinese staff accept me? How would I order things since I didn’t know the language? Would I succeed? How would I begin? What would I do?
Then the “what ifs” started. What if they don’t accept me? What if I don’t succeed? What if? What if?
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November 27th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
Hi everybody (and in particular Celina, John, Mayke, Christina, Louis-Bertrand, Denise, Hani, Rob, Benoît, Jorge, Jef, Nir, who did I miss?),
Thanks, to many of you, for sending me mail asking what the China Business Group on LinkedIn is about and what you can to do help make the group an overwhelming success! I – Michiel a.k.a. Michael – hope you will appreciate me answering some questions through this message to all members. As it will:
a) Spare me some time to answer everybody in person (copy-pasting makes it rather impersonal to me)
b) Share what this group is about with everybody
So here goes! Read the rest of “Introduction China Business Group” or post a comment
June 27th, 2007 by China Business Success Stories
By Frank Mulligan
Expatriates are a big part of the business life in China. They have brought a good amount of technology, management and practical knowledge to bear on the challenges that face China’s industrial base. In many ways you could say that they brought a new manufacturing platform to China and the economy has been at least partly built around it.
Unfortunately, expatriates tend to bring both the good and the bad with them. It cannot really be any other way, and it’s not in any way a criticism. Read the rest of “Mature Workers” or post a comment