Latest Posts
Explaining China’s internet for the outside world – Kaiser Kuo
Image by Fantake via Flickr Kaiser Kuo does a brave effort to explain the internet in China for the outside world of non-geeks, an almost impossible thing to do. At Chinalogue of Bonlive he talks about BBS’s, human flesh searches and how older Chinese can work on the internet anyway.Read More →
Unbottoning Mao’s straightjacket – Zhang Lijia
Image by Fantake via Flickr Celebrity author Zhang Lijia tells at Chinalogue of Bonlive about the 1980s, when women started to find their sexuel liberation after Deng Xiaoping started to open China’s doors for the outside world at the end of the 1970s and other women’s issues. Related articles byRead More →
Most-sought speakers for August 2009
Annette Nijs by Fantake via Flickr The summer is drawing to a close, the first full summer we have been in business as a speakers bureau. That means that after a pretty lazy month, requests are hitting our mailbox again, including the first few panic calls for as early asRead More →
Douglas Maclellan joins China Speakers Bureau
Image by Fantake via Flickr A veteran of the US-China business, Douglas Maclellan, has joined the China Speakers Bureau. Maclellan has a distinguished career that roots back into the Reagan era. Douglas Maclellan has extensive experience in telecom, pharmaceuticals and other industry. Currently he also is Chairman & CEO atRead More →
Why business in China differs from Russia – Arthur Kroeber
Arthur Kroeber by Fantake via Flickr The world might have feared China was following Russian style of business when it arrested Rio Tinto executives on state-security charges in Shanghai on July 5, writes Arthur Kroeber today in the Financial Times. By Russia, we mean a country in which ordinary commercialRead More →
Finding a job in China not that easy – Shaun Rein
Fudan University via Wikipedia Shaun Rein reacts on an article in the New York Times, describing US youngsters moving to China to find the work they could not find at home. It is not that easy, he says in Forbes. Often government regulations, like in media or telecom, prevent foreigners fromRead More →
Top brands look into consumer needs – Shaun Rein
Shaun Rein by Fantake via Flickr China might be the second-largest consumer market in the world within five years, consumer researcher Shaun Rein tells in this interview with CBS. “Top brands need to look into the needs of consumers,”, explain Rein, not only because they have hugely different tastes fromRead More →
Crisis politics: the Great Wall of Borrowed money – Arthur Kroeber
Arthur Kroeber by Fantake via Flickr Arthur Kroeber explains in the Financial Times why China did not use a magic trick to keep on growing, but 34 percent of extra credit: The fact becomes even less remarkable when we recognise that nominal GDP (the appropriate comparator for nominal credit growth)Read More →
FP’s top twitterati – Kaiser Kuo
Kaiser Kuo by Fantake via Flickr Kaiser Kuo, one of the top-speakers at the China Speakers Bureau, just made another benchmark. Not only is he having his own entry in Wikipedia, today he was also mentioned in the prestigious magazine Foreign Policy as one of the world’s top 100 twitterati.TwitterRead More →
Women, China’s secret economic force – Shaun Rein
Wu Yi, a powerful woman via Wikipedia The West has not yet a clue about the importance of women in China, both in society and as powerful consumers pushing the economy into the direction of double-digit growth, says Shaun Rein of the Shanghai-based China Market Research Group in Forbes. WomenRead More →
China story partly based on fear and ignorance – Zhang Lijia
Zhang Lijia by Fantake via Flickr Author Zhang Lijia often describes the growing freedom in China in a rather positive way, while Western media regularly take a more critical approach, the reporter of the Dutch website OneWorld.com asked her during a recent visit to Amsterdam. (Here in a translation fromRead More →
How to deal with racial riots – Howard French
Howard French by Fantake via Flickr Former China correspondent for the New York Times Howard French notes in his former paper the way how the US deal with the racial riots in 1967 Denver, and draws some lines to the racial riots in China’s Xinjiang earlier this year. The so-calledRead More →