Understanding Culture in International Business

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Understanding Culture in International Business Robert Carroll All people are the same, it’s only their habits that are so different, Confucius

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Transcript of Understanding Culture in International Business

Page 1: Understanding Culture in International Business

Understanding Culture in International Business

Robert Carroll

All people are the same, it’s only their habits that are so different, Confucius

Page 2: Understanding Culture in International Business

Topics•introduction

•role of culture

•etiquette

•presentation

•negotiations

•reference

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IntroductionOne dog barks at something, the rest back at him.

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Foreword• “only 1 in 5 businesses are involved in international trading” and >1% represent

<70%” US Dept of Commerce

• international business is expensive, difficult, time consuming, complicated, frustrating, and, at times, incomprehensible!

• majority of international business information only local etiquette not cultural awareness

• common mistake is focus on surface cultural differences not awareness

• recent major auditor study found 69% of outsourcing deals fail. Main reason lack of cultural compatibility between vendor and client and poor relationship management.

• understanding the role of culture in international business situations is a critical success factor for global business success.

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What is Pictometry

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Pictometry’s International Business• reasons Pictometry went global:

• new technology easily internationalized

• reuse R&D investment and increase market reach

• force foreign competitors to use resources internationally instead of domestically

• Kodak may have adopted this strategy by opening a plant in Japan shortly after Fuji began building its first plant in US

• beat competitors to new markets

• using geographically-exclusive technology licenses with regional leading geospatial data and services companies

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Role of Cultural Everyone must row with the oar he has. English saying

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Behavior and Conditioning• “world-view” is learned as a child from observing immediate family

• behavior becomes unconscious, we no longer think about them we “know”

• influences how we interpret the world around us, how we perceive ourselves, and how we relate to others.

• this world-view varies by country

• leads to assumptions/stereotypes

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Cultural Awareness• goes beyond factual cultural knowledge

• based on research and theories by Edward T Hall, Geert Hofstede, and Fons Trompenaars

• requires developing skills to interpret cultural differences

• key global employee skills

• flexibility and adaptability: 24x7x365

• interpersonal: friendly, outgoing people

• entrepreneurial: need to make sound decisions without immediate backup

• technical competence: need to know the business of the company

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Ways to Increase Cultural Awareness Skills• continuing education/class (international studies)

• ex-pat assignments, international travel, exchange student program/gap year

• attending cultural events

• networking with international business assoc.

• learn foreign language

• Depts of State (country desks) and Commerce

• research, research, and research

• keep learning

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EtiquetteHe who wants the rose must respect the thorn, Persian saying

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Meeting/Greeting/Entertaining• greeting: handshake, bow, kiss, touch noses, hold hands, or all of the above

• relation developing: business is done on a relationship basis not transaction

• gift giving: integral to business relationship in Japan/China/SE Asia (How the gift is given is more important than the gift), damaging to business relationships in other countries.

• diet concerns: west vs east, kosher vs treif, halal vs haraam, ahimsa/vegetarianism/veganism

• alcohol consummation: South America, east Asia, and Europe important, Middle East, Africa, and parts of SE Asia none

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Relationships• individual vs group

• individual: introduce yourself, state your own views directly and challenge what people say

• group: introduce yourself in relationship to company, speak calmly and slowly, work in large team, real business done over meal or at bar

• flat vs hierarchical power/decisions

• flat: take responsibility for your area, deal with colleagues directly

• hierarchical: communicate to senior management, hold valuable information, high respect to decision-makers, be autocratic

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Relationships (continued)• acquired (what you do) vs given status (age, gender, religion, education, race)

• given: respect elders, dress appropriately, bring in older co-worker

• functional (business first) vs personal (relationship first)

• personal: allow plenty of time, small talk, socialize, exchange favors and small gifts

• physically distant vs close

• distant: give plenty of space

• middle: firm handshake and look people in the eye

• close: don’t be surprised or embarrassed if they get too close

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Time• West, Japan, China “clock conscious”

• South Africa, south Europe, Middle East, SE Asia no sense of urgency

• North American and north Europeans need to do something useful every second, while less competition emphasis cultures let time “fill itself”

• what year is it? 2008 (Gregorian), 1429 (Islam), 5768 (Hebrew), Heisei 20 (Japan)

• work week: West Mon-Fri vs Middle East Sat-Wed vs Asia Mon-Sat

• work day: US 9-12~1-5 vs Spain 9-2~4-6

• holidays: “everyday of the year is a holiday somewhere in the world”

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Time (continued)• serial vs parallel

• serial: book appointments weeks ahead, send agenda before, arrive on time, start meetings at agreed time, keep to schedule, give bad news early

• parallel: short notice appointments, plenty of time between appointments, be prepared to wait, fix agenda at start of meeting, don’t rush meetings, soften bad news

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Communications and Presentations

You have two eyes, two ears, and one mouth. Japanese saying

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Communications• direct vs. indirect, how something is said is more important that what is said.

• “It would be great if you could ... by end of the week” in Italy means optional but not a problem if they don’t perform

• Japan: “16 ways of saying ‘no’ without saying no, including yes”

• meaning of silence

• British English vs American English vs Global/International English

• “I am going to get English pissed because I am American pissed!”

• different meaning for ‘to table’, turnover, ‘pear shaped’, boffin, diary, pension scheme

• accents, spelling, and pronunciation

• e.g. Northern State Shift, Canadian Rising “rider vs writer”

• Romance verb usage instead of Germanic for ESL audience

• “obtain, examine, install, inform” vs “get, go through, put in, tell”

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Communication (continued)• explicit vs implicit

• explicit: take what they say literally, don’t be offended direct disagreement

• implicit: look beyond the words to body language and intent, be patient to grasp the key message

• speak when relevant vs open dialogue

• relevant: listen and don’t interrupt, don’t try to win them with charm, and pause before replying

• dialogue: don’t be offended if they interrupt you, show active listening

• written vs verbal

• written: take lots of notes, lawyers early, agreement is made at signing

• verbal: don’t take many notes, lawyers home, careful on oral promises

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Nonverbal Communication• eye contact:

• good: Northern Europe, Americas

• bad: Japan (rude)

• personal space:

• North America 2-3 feet

• South America and Middle East, tactile

• China, 4+ feet

• body language:

• soles of feet, crossing legs, arm position/folding, sitting position

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Presentation Style• short vs long term view

• upbeat vs low-key

• upbeat: find an upbeat central message looking forward, conscious effort to sound positive and optimistic

• low-key: support with relevant details, respond realistically, and don’t emphasize your own success.

• short/concise vs long/eloquent.

• short: concise and keep to schedule

• long: avoid oversimplification, support position with facts and data

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Presentation Style (continued)• persuade/hard sell vs inform/soft sell

• persuade: give your opinions and recommendations

• inform: allow them to draw their own conclusions and avoid the hard sell.

• creative vs logical

• creative: allow for surprises and intrigues

• logical: well formed and sequential

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Distortions in World View• Which is bigger Greenland or Africa?

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Distortions in World View• Which is bigger Greenland or Africa?

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Distortions in World View• Which is bigger Greenland or Africa?

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NegotiationsWith time and patience the mulberry leaf becomes a silk gown. Chinese saying

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Negotiation• patience to make right decision vs analysis paralysis

• don’t try to force pace

• future vs past orientation

• future: new solutions, focus on future in relationship to past results

• past: fix old problems, include relevant background even in future proposals.

• team (individual vs group)

• Japan use teams and consensus agreement (newamashi)

• written vs verbal agreements

• West emphasis clear documentation vs diagrams or maps

• personal choice vs destiny

• destiney: how can a document define what will happen in the future? e.g. Muslims use the term Inshallah (God willing) during negotiations

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Negotiating Advice• SOPHOP (soft on people, hard on points)

• preserving the relationship highest priority

• avoid using the word “you”

• countering: keep everything conditional

• “if you ...., then we can ...”

• open-ended questions

• “how do you feel about...?”

• allow them to set place and pace.

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References, Additional Sources

Time gives good advice, Maltese saying

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References• Books

• “Bridging the Culture Gap”, Penny Carte and Chris Fox

• “Kiss, Bow, or Shake Hands”, Terri Morrison and Wayne Conaway

• “Do’s and Taboos Around the World”, Roger Axtell

• “Global Competence”, Jonamay Lambert, Lambert Jonamay, Myers Selma, Selma Myers, George Simons

• Internet

• Executive Planet (executiveplanet.com)

• International Business (cyborlink.com)

• Geert Hofstede Cultural Dimensions (geert-hofstede.com)

• Lonely Planet (lonelyplanet.com)

• WorldAtlas (worldatlas.com)

• World Time with meeting planner (timeanddate.com)

• US State Dept (state.gov/travelandbusiness)

• XE Travel Expenses Calculator (xe.com/tec/table.shtml)