高级商务英语阅读
Supplementary Readings for
Chapter 1
The Long March
(1)
Chinese Companies Establish Brand Awareness in Overseas Markets
Top Band Weekly
August 27, 2003
By Lynn Furrow, General Manager of The Hoffman Agency Beijing Office
China exports a dizzying(令人眼花缭乱的)array of personal computers, DVD players, refrigerators, and consumer electronic goods… yet most people outside of China can’t name even one Chinese brand. As more and more Chinese enterprises push their goods into overseas markets, companies are now trying to change this.
Legend Group(联想集团), the largest computer manufacturer and a household name in China, is shooting to increase overseas sales from seven to 25 percent of its total revenue(总收入). In expanding overseas, however, it encountered a branding dilemma: because other companies in many countries around the world have already registered “Legend”, the Chinese company was forced to devise(设计,想出) a new English name that could be used unrestrictedly(自由的) in markets worldwide. Thus on April 28th, Legend Group’s new English name “Lenovo” was born. Although it may offer a fresh start, the new name erases(擦除,抹去) two decades of brand building in China and must stand up to the stigma(污名,特征) that Chinese companies face overseas: “‘The biggest challenge is to build up people’s confidence about the product,’ says Annie Chung, and analyst with Gartner Inc. in Hong Kong. ‘They need to get away from the China-made, low-quality image.’”
Netease.com, for example, had a bumpy(崎岖不平的) entrance into the U.S. market. After listing on NASDAQ just as the Internet bubble(泡沫) was bursting in 2000, the company then faced an accounting scandal(会计丑闻), a class action suit(集体诉讼案), and an order from NASDAQ to suspend(推迟) trading. When Ted Sun took over as acting CEO, he brought sweeping(彻底的) changes to upper management(高级管理层) and restated(重申) earnings in an effort to restore(恢复) investor and customer confidence. A couple of years later, investors seem to have regained
faith after the management shake-up(人事改组): the company is trading again at a handsome $31 per share -- triple what they were just three months ago.
In recent years Singapore Exhibition Services, the organizer of well-known telecom events CommunicAsia(亚洲电信展) and Broadcast Asia , has seen a steady rise of Chinese participants. In the months leading up to(在之前) this year’s event, SES reported a 20 per cent jump in the number of Chinese companies signed up to exhibit, including famous companies such as Huawei and Putian. Although the June event was cancelled due to the SARS outbreak, the rise in Chinese participation is evidence that more and more Chinese companies are realizing the importance of overseas industry events as an effective way to build brand recognition outside their home markets.
In one interesting twist for a Chinese company, China’s popular domestic beer maker Yanjing Brewing Company uses the US market as a means to reach audiences at home: when basketball player Yao Ming joined the Houston Rockets, the company signed a sponsorship/advertising deal that would place the company’s name on billboards(广告牌) in the Rockets’ stadium. The primary purpose was not to attract American beer-drinkers, but to grab the attention of avid(贪婪的,热心的) basketball fans in China that watch live TV broadcasts of the games played by the Chinese basketball superstar.
Creating, communicating and managing brand image is a relatively new concept for Chinese companies whose main experience with branding to date involves devising a logo and a catchy slogan. In order to build a positive brand image overseas, particularly because Chinese products are often perceived as(当做,视为) low-tech and poor quality, Chinese companies need to be more transparent about their business practices and financials, establish positive points of differentiation, and communicate these effectively with their audiences.
(2)
Are Chinese Companies a Threat to Your Small Business?
A closer look at how our free trade policies with China and the Chinese business environment may impact the future of your company
September 16, 2003
By Joshua Kurlantzick
In recent months, as the U.S. economic slowdown has continued, American companies, and many legislators(立法者) representing districts hit hard economically, have begun to lash out(猛烈抨击) at China. Touring the South, Democratic presidential candidates(民主党总统候选人) Richard Gephardt and John Edwards stopped at textile factories across the region that were on the verge of(濒临,接近于) bankruptcy. There, they condemned American free trade agreements with China for allowing Chinese companies, which pay much less for labor, to undercut(廉价出售) U.S. manufacturers and drive blue-collar jobs overseas.
Meanwhile, Cabinet(内阁的) members of the Bush administration, touring the country to promote the president's economic packages, received many angry complaints from businesspeople concerned about the China threat. And U.S. textile makers last month filed a petition(申请) with Congress asking legislators to cap textile imports from China, using World Trade Organization (WTO) provisions(规定) in force(有效的) since China joined the WTO in 2001 and charging that China unfairly undervalues(低估) its currency and underpays(少付工资) its labor force. (In response, the General Accounting Office has agreed to investigate the valuation of China's currency.)
Some of these fears are real. Last year, China received the most foreign capital inflows of any nation, surpassing the United States as the world's favorite locale(场所) for investment. Meanwhile, Chinese wages, which average around 60 cents in manufacturing jobs, aren't rising in most fields. Ming-jer Chen, a China business expert at the University of Virginia, says the country's burgeoning(迅速发展的) labor pool(劳动力储备), the result of increased migration from poor interior(国内的,内部的) areas to richer coastal regions, seems likely to guarantee low-wage labor in most industries, at least for the near future.
Increased Chinese production by low-wage workers, combined with the undervalued Chinese currency, does allow China to undercut competitors, triggering(引起) a kind of deflation(通货紧缩) that may push some U.S. firms out of business. As The Economist has noted, the cost of a mountain bike(山地自行车) has plummeted(大幅下跌) around the world, largely because China has come to dominate bicycle production. For some U.S. textile manufacturers, it's very difficult to compete now, says Chip Coker, CFO of Coker International, a South Carolina textile company.
And, critics of free trade with China say, now it's not only blue-collar jobs that are leaving for the Middle Kingdom. Though a decade ago China was known mostly for manufacturing low-value, labor-intensive goods, in the past ten years, it's become a leading producer of low-end(低档的,廉价的) electronics, and has begun to develop domestic automobile, telecommunications and white goods firms. One Chinese white goods company, Haier, has even opened factories in the United States.
In China itself, the situation is more complex. China may be an increasingly powerful competitor for U.S. firms, and in many respects, Shanghai looks like a modern equivalent of any U.S. capital. At ubertrendy coffee houses around Shanghai, smartly dressed young men and women chew over(详细讨论) business on their trilling mobile phones. The city's high-rise(高楼的高层的)skyline(天际) is dotted with(点缀着) cranes(起重机) and construction equipment, and in brokerage houses(经纪行) near the Bund(码头堤岸), Shanghai's waterfront(海滨), investors study market tickers intensely.
But appearances can be deceiving(欺骗). Despite the First World veneer of Shanghai, most Chinese companies remain far behind the United States in terms of application of technology and in overall productivity. What's more, many Chinese entrepreneurs(企业家) remain stifled(堵) by a bewildering(令人混乱的) and often corrupt(腐败的) legal system, a bureaucracy(官僚主义、机构政治) still staffed(提供职员) by Communist(共产主义者) officials with little knowledge of market economics, poor physical infrastructure and other major problems. Because of these obstacles, in many sectors, China is still years from competing with U.S. firms making expensive, higher-value goods. Most of what China does well is produce low-value items that aren't economically feasible(可行的) to make in America anyway, since these lower-wage jobs left America decades ago anyway.
U.S. businesses often complain about the health care, safety and pension(退休金) regulations they have to deal with, but red tape in the United States pales in comparison to Chinese entrepreneurs' hassles(麻烦事). Howard Li, co-founder of Newtone, a Shanghai-based telecommunications company, says his company has to focus much of its energy on courting(讨好) government officials, since the government in China essentially retains a monopoly over telecoms.
Meanwhile, Chinese businesspeople in other sectors say that because Communist Party(共产党) officials still have so much leverage(影响力) over where companies can incorporate and who they can do business
with, they often spend large sums of money feting(招待) Party leaders at lavish(浪费的,丰富的) dinners and even take on excess workers who have ties to the Party. Worse, many small businesspeople are unable to obtain loans from banks when they're in direct competition with larger companies that are still linked to the state and, by extension(引申开来), to the Communist Party. Jun Zhao, the Beijing representative for China Vest, a venture capital firm focusing on China, says Chinese entrepreneurs turn to VCs(风险投资?) precisely because it is so hard for them to get a loan.
Chinese entrepreneurs also don't have any semblance(类似) of a legal system to support them. One lawyer who worked in Shanghai for nearly two decades says that, despite laws passed in recent years designed to modernize(使现代化) the judiciary(司法制度), most cases are still adjudicated(审判裁决) in back rooms by Party leaders. "One case I had, there was a three-judge pane(全体陪审员)l that was supposed to decide it. One of the judges read the newspaper throughout the case and never even looked at the lawyers during the trial," he says. "Later I found out that those judges merely wrote up a summary of the case, gave it to a Party official, and the official made the decision."
Meanwhile, in the past three months, a series of successful Chinese entrepreneurs, from agriculture businessman Sun Dawu to flower magnate Yang Bin, have been arrested by the police, often for crimes that the government hasn't clearly defined. Some Chinese businesspeople say that the entrepreneurs were arrested merely because they challenged established businesses with Party links. "Yang Bin didn't do anything that other businesspeople don't do," says one Chinese academic familiar with his case.
Partly because of the lack of a functioning(起作用的) legal system, intellectual property piracy continues to be an enormous problem for Chinese entrepreneurs. Though the Beijing government has pledged(保证) to crack down on(镇压制裁) piracy(非法翻印), copies of the latest Hollywood movies, Microsoft software and hottest video games are widely available in Shanghai street markets.
And even those Chinese entrepreneurs who do successfully wade(跋涉) through the red tape, prevent their goods from being pirated, avoid being arrested, handle infrastructure problems, cater to Party officials and get funding still may not match U.S. competitors. Indeed, several experts on Chinese business say China still doesn't have many business leaders who understand how to run and
market a company effectively.
Given all these problems, there are actually few Chinese companies in anything other than low-end industries that are truly prepared to challenge American firms. Despite the influx(流入) of foreign capital into China, which mostly goes only into a few sectors located near Shanghai and Hong Kong, Chinese businesses' rankings of the World Competitiveness Scoreboard, a global rank of business productivity, has actually fallen in the past five years.
But what does the situation in China mean for U.S. entrepreneurs? First, it means that U.S. small businesses can still make up for the advantages China enjoys in cheaper labor and lower worker benefits. In fact, Chinese high-tech companies still spend less than one-twentieth as much on research as their American counterparts, and the Chinese education system's rigid(死板的) curricula(课程) still does not encourage ground-breaking(开创性的) thinkers with new ideas. Not surprisingly, the few Chinese companies that have tried to expand outside their home market have yet to prove breakthrough successes. Haier, the most successful, remains a minor player in America.
To make up for China's advantages, U.S. entrepreneurs will have to invest more heavily in research and development. One U.S. executive of a small high-tech company that does business in both China and the U.S. says that his company is able to maintain its central office in the United States by concentrating the highest-value research in America. Several leading textile companies in South Carolina and North Carolina have revived(使复活) their fortunes by going into industrial textiles and the high-end textiles used in medicine, both of which require considerable research and development to perfect. Similarly, savvy small American manufacturers have been able to remain competitive by exiting(退出) low-value fields like basic machine tooling and moving into specialty(专门的) manufacturing.
What's more, China's continued weaknesses in high-value products and in marketing mean that U.S. entrepreneurs willing to plunge into(投入) China will have a window of opportunity to sell their high-value goods and services in China, before Chinese companies become savvy marketers. In fact, U.S. companies making high-tech products in a range of industries have made enormous profits in China selling cutting-edge(尖端) machine tools, hospital equipment and wireless technology. "If
you look around at what technology Chinese executives use, even executives of high-tech companies, they're using Nokia phones, Dell computers," says one Chinese-American executive based in Beijing. "They know foreign higher-end things are better quality."
And American entrepreneurs in the retail and services sectors, which have been hit hard by the slowdown in the US economy, have a huge opportunity in China. As Mark Clifford, Hong Kong bureau(局) chief for Business Week, has noted, Hong Kong has managed to survive even as nearly all its manufacturing jobs have migrated to China, because it's become the most service-centered economy in the world, with nearly 85 percent of its gross domestic product coming from services. Similarly small U.S. firms in several key white-collar services fields--for example, shipping, business consulting, advertising and architecture, for example--have already made headway into China, becoming major players on the Mainland and, by marketing their foreign expertise(专门技术), already gotten a leg up on (胜出,占优势)potential Chinese competitors.
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