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Partnering With China for
     Mutual Benefits


June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   1
It is an honor to be here today, and to spend
part of the day among people whose lives and
      work are defined by innovation, and
  collaboration. There has never been a time
when those qualities are in greater demand in
            America and the world.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   2
We are, indeed, operating in a new economy
today – one that has its roots in the industrial
and information ages, but that is dramatically
 and fundamentally different. This new era of
      global competition is marked by an
  unprecedented level of interconnectedness
 among individuals, businesses and nations…
     connectedness that extends beyond
    telecommunications and the internet.



June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   3
In many industries we find ourselves in a truly
global workplace, unconstrained by time zones,
   language, physical proximity or traditional
 corporate boundaries. Our competitors are no
 longer far removed from us—no matter what
           their geographic location.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   4
Your presence at this seminar and your
  involvement are encouraging evidence that
 there is a wealth of potential. We must ensure
that investment, infrastructure and intellectual
   resources are “optimized for innovation”.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   5
The era of China as a low-cost, manufacturing-
   for-export market has come to an end.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   6
Companies that integrate China into their global
   supply chains as a source of competitive
    advantage are far more successful than
 companies that pursue narrower objectives in
                    China




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   7
Specifically, companies that pursue China as
both a growth market and a market for lower-
  cost labor and sources, and integrate these
operationally, enjoy significantly higher profits
  than companies pursuing just one of those
                   objectives.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell    8
Furthermore, production is not migrating to
   China only to pursue low costs, but also to
 follow manufacturing customers, and to serve
the large and growing Chinese domestic market.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   9
Companies considering a move into China often
initially believe that means setting up their own
manufacturing facilities. However, this might be
 the very last thing to which a company should
               allocate its resources.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell    10
Setting up a manufacturing company and facility
is a major investment of time, assets and people.
  Though building bricks and mortar in China is
   not the fundamental objective, it can happen
 very quickly that every available resource and
   relationship is caught up in the construction
               project and start-up.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   11
The likely end-result is a bright, new and
  expensive manufacturing facility where the
costs are not nearly as low as expected – and no
   sales. This happens over and over again.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   12
A company should carefully consider why it
thinks it should build a manufacturing facility in
    China. Foreign-invested manufacturing
companies have a way of turning into replicas of
  the home-country’s facilities, complete with
exercise equipment, artwork lining the halls and
                  luxury offices.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   13
Local Chinese competitors see this behavior and
experience relief. They realize immediately that
 the foreign company is no competitor after all.
They know that given time, the foreign business
          will die from its own weight.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   14
This scenario has been replicated over and over
     again during the last 10 years. Chinese
 companies plan for five years, 10 years and 50
years. American companies must adopt this kind
 of thinking if they are going to be successful in
                      China.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   15
The Secret to Success in China




June 3rd 2009      Jerry R. Mitchell   16
Personal relationships are generally not
  considered the essential business driver by
American business people, especially those from
               North America.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   17
A group of total strangers can meet in the
  morning, discuss what needs to be done and
 then go out that afternoon and “do a project.”
They will part that evening and possibly never
see each other again. Americans can do this. In
  China, such a scenario could never play out




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   18
Absolutely no business results will be achieved
until after a solid personal relationship has been
 developed. Whether this takes weeks or years,
the most important thing is that the relationship
  must be firmly in place before any business
              results can be expected.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   19
The development of good relationships is
predicated on the notion of having top talent on
  the ground in China that is empathetic to its
            unique environment.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   20
Good relationships are not just a Chinese
custom. The building process is more a form of
                due diligence.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   21
During this period, the potential Chinese
business associate is evaluating every move of
the potential new partner to assess his or her
  trustworthiness and reactions in certain
                 situations.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   22
This may be an arduous process, but once
   established, the relationships will last for a
 lifetime. Most importantly, one must note that
relationships in Chinese are between people, not
    between companies, which can seem very
    foreign and possibly scary to Westerners.




 June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   23
There are at least a thousand ways Americans
 can get into trouble in China. The best way to
set oneself up for failure is to “just be yourself,”
 conducting business “as usual.” In practically
  every component of business behavior, the
customs in China are diametrically opposite of
       what foreigners instinctively do.




June 3rd 2009    Jerry R. Mitchell     24
Consequently, no Westerner should be
permitted to have contact with anyone in China
 before some formal cross-cultural training, a
  mandatory first step to business success in
                    China.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   25
Here are a few examples of the challenges
         Americans can face in China:




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   26
Americans tend to have limited knowledge of
 other cultures. This can be an obstacle in
        concluding deals in China.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   27
Americans tend to prefer negotiating alone
    rather than in teams. This can become
overwhelming, especially if the other side has a
                  large team.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   28
Americans often emphasize the short-term. The
  Chinese want to know what the long-term
                effects will be.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   29
Americans usually focus on content over
relationships. In China, relationships are very
                 highly valued.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   30
Americans’ emphasis on legal contracts and
constant deference to attorneys are seen as an
               insult in China.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   31
China's changing economy is a threat, but it also
   is an opportunity. The threat comes from:




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell    32
•    An 85-cents-per-hour fully loaded
          manufacturing cost.
     •    $10,000-per-year managers' and engineers'
          salaries.
     •    Little direct labor wage inflation.
     •    Growing technology expertise.
     •    World-class manufacturing quality in many
          industries.
     •     The migration of manufacturing industries to
          China; for example, electronics and textiles.




June 3rd 2009       Jerry R. Mitchell       33
The opportunity for U.S. businesses comes
             from China having:




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   34
• One-quarter of the world's population.
      • A very high economic growth rate.
      • A middle class of 100 million that is
      growing by 1 million per year.




June 3rd 2009    Jerry R. Mitchell   35
• A rapidly growing export market for
      U.S. products.
      • The largest market in the world for
      many products including cell phones,
      low-price TVs, and furniture.
      • The fastest-growing world market for
      automotive components and assemblies.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   36
Many companies have lost business when
      their customers moved their entire
      manufacturing operation to China.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   37
Anyone selling to the computer, consumer
 electronics, clothing, or furniture industries
experienced this years ago. Other industries,
such as first-tier automotive suppliers, are in
     the process of moving some of their
         production there right now.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   38
One stamping house that also designs and
  manufactures small assemblies of stamped
     parts had a primary customer base of
   automotive suppliers in the U.S., but these
    large customers were insisting that the
   stamping house open a facility in China to
 service their facilities that were already there
  and to ensure that this supplier was getting
                  the best price.



June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell    39
The stamping house's solution was to form a
 strategic partnership in China with a Chinese
     stamping house to service automotive
companies there and to export to the U.S. some
products that required a significant amount of
                assembly labor.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   40
Single-piece stampings continue to be made
    in the U.S., as are short-run specials and
    prototypes. The company is beginning to
           source its tooling to China.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   41
U.S. manufacturers' relationships with China
don't always have to be in terms of importing,
                 however.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   42
There are more opportunities to export to
        China than most people realize.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   43
Some of the U.S. products that are in
  demand in China are construction products,
   capital equipment, raw materials, branded
  consumer products, and high-tech products.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   44
China not a threat but an opportunity




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   45
• Initially export to U.S. transplant
      companies in China
      • Market full-scale across China with a
      strategic partner and subcontract add-on
      products to fill out the product line.




June 3rd 2009    Jerry R. Mitchell   46
For small businesses, strategic alliances are a
way to work together with others towards a
     common goal while not losing their
               individuality.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   47
Companies participating in alliances report that
 at much as 18 percent of their revenues come
             from their alliances




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   48
Rather than take on the risk and expense
   that international expansion can demand,
     one can enter international markets by
      finding an appropriate alliance with a
   business operating in the marketplace you
                  desire to enter.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   49
Alliances are formed for joint marketing,
  joint sales or distribution, joint production,
   design collaboration, technology licensing,
         and research and development.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell     50
Risk-sharing will feature among the
     motivations for alliances, but it may not
      be as important as gaining access to
     complementary resources, influencing
     industry standards or beating rivals in
               the rush to market




June 3rd 2009    Jerry R. Mitchell   51
The company first invests in an alliance and
 then has the option either to exit or get more
      deeply involved after it sees how the
   business develops. The cost of entering a
 relationship is relatively small in this case, as
 is the cost of exit; but the value of the option
     to grow the relationship may be high.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell     52
We are in the planning stages of arranging
       a trip to China to introduce American
          Companies to potential business
          opportunities in multiple cities.
    If you are interested please give me your
        business card or send me an email.




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   53
Contact information:
   Jerry R. Mitchell
   Tel: 630 305-0005;
   Email: jerry@jerryRmitchellandassoc.com
   Website: www.jerryRmitchell.com
   Blog: jerrymitchellblog.com




June 3rd 2009   Jerry R. Mitchell   54

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Partnering with china6 3-2009#6

  • 1. Partnering With China for Mutual Benefits June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 1
  • 2. It is an honor to be here today, and to spend part of the day among people whose lives and work are defined by innovation, and collaboration. There has never been a time when those qualities are in greater demand in America and the world. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 2
  • 3. We are, indeed, operating in a new economy today – one that has its roots in the industrial and information ages, but that is dramatically and fundamentally different. This new era of global competition is marked by an unprecedented level of interconnectedness among individuals, businesses and nations… connectedness that extends beyond telecommunications and the internet. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 3
  • 4. In many industries we find ourselves in a truly global workplace, unconstrained by time zones, language, physical proximity or traditional corporate boundaries. Our competitors are no longer far removed from us—no matter what their geographic location. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 4
  • 5. Your presence at this seminar and your involvement are encouraging evidence that there is a wealth of potential. We must ensure that investment, infrastructure and intellectual resources are “optimized for innovation”. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 5
  • 6. The era of China as a low-cost, manufacturing- for-export market has come to an end. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 6
  • 7. Companies that integrate China into their global supply chains as a source of competitive advantage are far more successful than companies that pursue narrower objectives in China June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 7
  • 8. Specifically, companies that pursue China as both a growth market and a market for lower- cost labor and sources, and integrate these operationally, enjoy significantly higher profits than companies pursuing just one of those objectives. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 8
  • 9. Furthermore, production is not migrating to China only to pursue low costs, but also to follow manufacturing customers, and to serve the large and growing Chinese domestic market. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 9
  • 10. Companies considering a move into China often initially believe that means setting up their own manufacturing facilities. However, this might be the very last thing to which a company should allocate its resources. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 10
  • 11. Setting up a manufacturing company and facility is a major investment of time, assets and people. Though building bricks and mortar in China is not the fundamental objective, it can happen very quickly that every available resource and relationship is caught up in the construction project and start-up. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 11
  • 12. The likely end-result is a bright, new and expensive manufacturing facility where the costs are not nearly as low as expected – and no sales. This happens over and over again. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 12
  • 13. A company should carefully consider why it thinks it should build a manufacturing facility in China. Foreign-invested manufacturing companies have a way of turning into replicas of the home-country’s facilities, complete with exercise equipment, artwork lining the halls and luxury offices. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 13
  • 14. Local Chinese competitors see this behavior and experience relief. They realize immediately that the foreign company is no competitor after all. They know that given time, the foreign business will die from its own weight. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 14
  • 15. This scenario has been replicated over and over again during the last 10 years. Chinese companies plan for five years, 10 years and 50 years. American companies must adopt this kind of thinking if they are going to be successful in China. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 15
  • 16. The Secret to Success in China June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 16
  • 17. Personal relationships are generally not considered the essential business driver by American business people, especially those from North America. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 17
  • 18. A group of total strangers can meet in the morning, discuss what needs to be done and then go out that afternoon and “do a project.” They will part that evening and possibly never see each other again. Americans can do this. In China, such a scenario could never play out June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 18
  • 19. Absolutely no business results will be achieved until after a solid personal relationship has been developed. Whether this takes weeks or years, the most important thing is that the relationship must be firmly in place before any business results can be expected. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 19
  • 20. The development of good relationships is predicated on the notion of having top talent on the ground in China that is empathetic to its unique environment. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 20
  • 21. Good relationships are not just a Chinese custom. The building process is more a form of due diligence. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 21
  • 22. During this period, the potential Chinese business associate is evaluating every move of the potential new partner to assess his or her trustworthiness and reactions in certain situations. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 22
  • 23. This may be an arduous process, but once established, the relationships will last for a lifetime. Most importantly, one must note that relationships in Chinese are between people, not between companies, which can seem very foreign and possibly scary to Westerners. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 23
  • 24. There are at least a thousand ways Americans can get into trouble in China. The best way to set oneself up for failure is to “just be yourself,” conducting business “as usual.” In practically every component of business behavior, the customs in China are diametrically opposite of what foreigners instinctively do. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 24
  • 25. Consequently, no Westerner should be permitted to have contact with anyone in China before some formal cross-cultural training, a mandatory first step to business success in China. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 25
  • 26. Here are a few examples of the challenges Americans can face in China: June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 26
  • 27. Americans tend to have limited knowledge of other cultures. This can be an obstacle in concluding deals in China. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 27
  • 28. Americans tend to prefer negotiating alone rather than in teams. This can become overwhelming, especially if the other side has a large team. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 28
  • 29. Americans often emphasize the short-term. The Chinese want to know what the long-term effects will be. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 29
  • 30. Americans usually focus on content over relationships. In China, relationships are very highly valued. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 30
  • 31. Americans’ emphasis on legal contracts and constant deference to attorneys are seen as an insult in China. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 31
  • 32. China's changing economy is a threat, but it also is an opportunity. The threat comes from: June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 32
  • 33. An 85-cents-per-hour fully loaded manufacturing cost. • $10,000-per-year managers' and engineers' salaries. • Little direct labor wage inflation. • Growing technology expertise. • World-class manufacturing quality in many industries. • The migration of manufacturing industries to China; for example, electronics and textiles. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 33
  • 34. The opportunity for U.S. businesses comes from China having: June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 34
  • 35. • One-quarter of the world's population. • A very high economic growth rate. • A middle class of 100 million that is growing by 1 million per year. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 35
  • 36. • A rapidly growing export market for U.S. products. • The largest market in the world for many products including cell phones, low-price TVs, and furniture. • The fastest-growing world market for automotive components and assemblies. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 36
  • 37. Many companies have lost business when their customers moved their entire manufacturing operation to China. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 37
  • 38. Anyone selling to the computer, consumer electronics, clothing, or furniture industries experienced this years ago. Other industries, such as first-tier automotive suppliers, are in the process of moving some of their production there right now. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 38
  • 39. One stamping house that also designs and manufactures small assemblies of stamped parts had a primary customer base of automotive suppliers in the U.S., but these large customers were insisting that the stamping house open a facility in China to service their facilities that were already there and to ensure that this supplier was getting the best price. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 39
  • 40. The stamping house's solution was to form a strategic partnership in China with a Chinese stamping house to service automotive companies there and to export to the U.S. some products that required a significant amount of assembly labor. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 40
  • 41. Single-piece stampings continue to be made in the U.S., as are short-run specials and prototypes. The company is beginning to source its tooling to China. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 41
  • 42. U.S. manufacturers' relationships with China don't always have to be in terms of importing, however. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 42
  • 43. There are more opportunities to export to China than most people realize. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 43
  • 44. Some of the U.S. products that are in demand in China are construction products, capital equipment, raw materials, branded consumer products, and high-tech products. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 44
  • 45. China not a threat but an opportunity June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 45
  • 46. • Initially export to U.S. transplant companies in China • Market full-scale across China with a strategic partner and subcontract add-on products to fill out the product line. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 46
  • 47. For small businesses, strategic alliances are a way to work together with others towards a common goal while not losing their individuality. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 47
  • 48. Companies participating in alliances report that at much as 18 percent of their revenues come from their alliances June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 48
  • 49. Rather than take on the risk and expense that international expansion can demand, one can enter international markets by finding an appropriate alliance with a business operating in the marketplace you desire to enter. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 49
  • 50. Alliances are formed for joint marketing, joint sales or distribution, joint production, design collaboration, technology licensing, and research and development. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 50
  • 51. Risk-sharing will feature among the motivations for alliances, but it may not be as important as gaining access to complementary resources, influencing industry standards or beating rivals in the rush to market June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 51
  • 52. The company first invests in an alliance and then has the option either to exit or get more deeply involved after it sees how the business develops. The cost of entering a relationship is relatively small in this case, as is the cost of exit; but the value of the option to grow the relationship may be high. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 52
  • 53. We are in the planning stages of arranging a trip to China to introduce American Companies to potential business opportunities in multiple cities. If you are interested please give me your business card or send me an email. June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 53
  • 54. Contact information: Jerry R. Mitchell Tel: 630 305-0005; Email: jerry@jerryRmitchellandassoc.com Website: www.jerryRmitchell.com Blog: jerrymitchellblog.com June 3rd 2009 Jerry R. Mitchell 54