Research
If you are considering doing this alone . . .
Let me tell you how expensive and dangerous
that is. I spent 27 months, over two thousand hours and over $325,000
in opportunity cost to compile information to save my clients months of
headaches, save tons of cash, and generate hundreds of millions more in
repeat sales.
The original content for what is now my Asia Mastery Program
was written at the request of Siemens VDO’s Motor Division in Germany in
2003. With
the emergence of China as an economic force, and with customers and suppliers
in Japan and Korea, it became apparent that their directors, managers and
engineers needed guidance as to how to communicate and navigate relationships across the cultural
divide.
Problem was, there was nothing on the shelves, and nothing on the
Internet that would meet my client’s needs. So they agreed to open doors
for me to interview their people in far-flung places. Clients are often
surprised to hear that, had I known the cost in time and income, I would
never have started the process. But, no regrets. Without this research, I
would never be in the position to help my clients make such huge returns
on their investment. These are the comments I hear on a regular basis:
"One idea alone triggered tens
of millions of dollars in revenues for my firm."
"That first contract, worth just
under $15 million mushroomed within 17 months to over $100
million. You're my hero."
"And if we had
worked with you three months earlier, we would have saved the
extra $5
million that it cost us to renegotiate the (Joint Venture)
deal."
My
in-depth research included over two thousand hours of interviews with
people from China (including Hong Kong and Taiwan), Japan, South Korea, Australia,
Europe, Britain, and various points in North America. The groups included
senior executives and mid-level management people, venture partners, engineers,
purchasers, quality control people, salespeople, financial people, customer
service staff, global consultants and entrepreneurs.
This was my process . . .
First I interviewed westerners
to find out what they felt they were doing right in their Asia operations.
Then I interviewed their Asian colleagues to discover how they truly felt
about their western colleagues' actions. What they could be doing better?
How could they be more effective, save time, increase productivity,
motivate staff or assure repeat business?
They trusted me enough to reveal the errors
that were being made. Now you can get inside the mind of the Asian to understand
how we are perceived, and what it takes to gain full cooperation.
Scientific
Method?
Asians insist I had a "scientific method."
Well, that’s nice. But what I really did was go into every
interview with a genuine interest in understanding the cultural
gap, without prior expectations, and with nothing to prove. (I
have a colleague who calls this the naïve new person interview
style.)
It worked. Asians revealed to me information
they never reveal to their western colleagues, clients and
suppliers. That is why most of the information in my program is
information you will not find anywhere else, at any price.
We don't know what we don't know
After 2000 hours of
international business research, do you know the saddest thing I see? It’s
missed opportunity. It's the fact
that we don't know what we don't know, and that costs us the big bucks in
Asia. Western companies that do business with Asian customers, suppliers
(and even their staff)
have no idea how much money they are leaving on the table by doing some small
things wrong.
All my research revealed
that westerners do many things that get in the way, result in poor communication,
trigger passive resistance, and cause loss of productivity. I am not just
talking about the people who spearhead projects. (Certainly, a lot of costly
mistakes are made in that area.)
I’m also talking about
what happens after the contract has been signed. When those who interact with
the customer have not been trained in cross-cultural competencies, seemingly
minor faux pas can have major repercussions.
Whole
New Game
I became intimately aware of my clients’
challenges through working closely with executive groups in retreat
settings.
Typically, at the start, they have no idea what is
required to apply the skills that are necessary to their success in Asia.
They are well-educated people – quick studies – who operate at a high level
of competence in their respective fields. But this is a whole new ball game.
A whole different level of learning. We need to start at the lower levels
of competence. After our work together, they begin to think of themselves as babes in the woods.
I spend
enormous amounts of time on continuous research and discovery. My clients
tell me what works. My Asian contacts tell me. We all believe in my Asia
Mastery Program
because it continues to bring results month over month.
“You don’t just listen, you grasp the concept of what
is being communicated. How quickly can anyone assess what is being
said in such a short time? You ask the right questions, then you
have the exceptional ability to assess the information, no matter
how complex, to digest it and incorporate the concept.”
~ Nate Iikubo, Advance Purchasing, Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries Climate Control, Inc.
(Detroit, Michigan, USA)
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