Another banquet in Diaoyutai for a mystery Taiwan seminar

Sometimes life in Beijing for a foreigner can be both challenging and interesting. Like in my case, with my Chinese being reasonable for social contacts but pretty useless for business, it also sometimes leads to frustration.
The Chinese side (whatever that means) insisted I joined some big Taiwan seminar and banquet in Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, most probably the most prestigious location of the city, food being normally better than in The Great Hall of The People.
I managed to escape from the seminar, luckily, as everything was in Chinese without translation. On top of that all the speakers (idem in the Banquet) were shouting like hell, making it also rather annoying. My daughter was getting tired of the noise in the banquet.


So, what was it actually all about? I still have no clue. My entourage just tells stuff me on a need-to-know basis. No extras.
The seminar was in one building and the banquet in another one. Nice walk.
During the banquet I also escaped by not having to sit at the VIP table. There was just one more foreigner in the whole hall and he was sitting pretty lonely on that long VIP table. Nobody seemed interested in him.
I got however a lot of attention as many of our Chinese friends were there and many other came to take picture with me. So, smile, give business card, say cheers and then next one. Who they were, mostly again clueless.
Oh well that is part of Beijing life. A must to stay connected to the “important people”.
The food was good, the red wine was pretty good and some of the performances were nice.
The gardens of Diaoyutai are meticulously maintained and are lovely, and we were so lucky with the weather.. Once I was there for a night party and it was really pretty with all the lights on the trees.

Alcatel: why the company imploded by incompetence

When I joined Alcatel in 1990, it was ranked the world’s top telecom company.
That changed dramatically over the years, the “employee shares” I bought became just junk. Their management was sclerotic, authoritarian and lacked any sense of a looking-forward strategy.
Not able to survive, the former champion slimmed down and merged with Lucent.
Now, NOKIA is to take them over.
Sweet revenge for me. I intend to one day write the story in detail, in a book.
Indeed, something like in 1992 we were sent to the London Business School for a seminar to reflect on the future of the company. I need to dig up the details as well as my recommendation. That time I was stationed in Bangkok, as the Alcatel regional director for Indochina – Burma. I was impressed how people in Thailand jumped into the mobile world and how NOKIA was at the forefront.
So, I wrote my report suggesting Alcatel to buy NOKIA. That was received with near ridicule: “Come on, that company is just in Hi-Fi stuff and alike”.
Around the same time I had internal opposition to quote to the Vietnamese DGPT a mobile network around Hanoi. Only after I complained to the President of Alcatel France, I got a quotation. The French lack of interest was explained as follows: “Why talking to the Vietnamese about a mobile network, they even don’t have a phone!”. Obviously a very ignorant reaction.
We soon signed the GSM contract. Guess what? It was the first GSM contract of Alcatel in Asia. Still today I can’t believe that: no contracts in China, Singapore or something? Kidding right.
Later in 1994 in Brazil, same story. I urged Alcatel do Brasil to focus on mobile and private markets. Nope. “We are a company of switching” (= the traditional telephone exchanges).
The rest is history. They completely lost the mobile market, among others.
Good luck to NOKIA. Hopefully they will make better use of the excellent engineering in the company: the incompetence was always with the management.
More details on the expected take-over:
Nokia to snap up Alcatel for $16.6b, China Daily 16 April 2015.
http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/epaper/2015-04/16/content_20449647.htm

Beijing finally decides a new policy for e-cars, as I had suggested

In my reports to the Beijing mayor (at that time, Guo Jinlong) and vice mayor I urged the Beijing government to allow e-cars to drive every day in Beijing, unlike other cars that are taken off the roads one day in the week.
See: Exclusive Dialogue with Vice Mayor of Beijing Ms. Cheng Hong,
https://blog.strategy4china.com/?p=5343
Well, finally they did it and as for now the e-cars face no more restrictions as from 11 April 2015 till 10 April 2016. Hopefully they will extend that as in my opinion this could be a major factor to convince people to buy an e-car. Other incentives are that it is practically easy to get a license plate, while for normal cars the lottery is pretty hard to get one. Obviously there is still a lot to do to increase the amount of charging stations.
Indeed, the government goals for e-cars are 500,000 new energy vehicles on the road by the end of 2015 and 5 million by 2020, but sales in 2014 were well below the target: 74,800 all-electric and plug-in hybrids.
It will be interesting to see the impact on sales later this year.
Read the full story here:
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/motoring/2015-04/13/content_20420375.htm

Opening one more Jiamei Dental Clinic: Finance Street

On Saturday 18 April I was invited to participate in the official opening of the enlarged Dental & Beauty Clinic in Finance Street, address:
Jiamei Dental Clinic – Finance Street
4/F, Bldg B, Touzi Guangchang, 27 Jinrong Dajie
金融大街27号投资广场B座4层
The clinic already existed but is now larger with beauty treatment and more space.


The clinic was opened by its chairman, Mr. Liu Jia (pictured). I am part of the management team as well as one of the investors.
The clinic is impressive as always, installation, equipment and … (let’s be honest!) very cute staff. Their HR seems to be very selective…
I think Jiamei Dental Group must have already something like 100 clinics in China.

Speaking to EMBA and MBA: cocktail of ISP and Vlerick School

On 16 April I participated in the ISP cocktail. I have been working with International Study Programs since many years and it has been a pleasure. The company is based in Prague (see http://www.studyprograms.com/). At the occasion I meet some familiar faces and new friends, all involved in the program. Location: Café Zarah (Gulou Dong Dajie).


 
I also had another talk to Vlerick (Belgium) MBA Group the same day, in the form of a two hour Q&A (good formula), along with Prof. Tony Liu. This directly organized by BIMBA:
National School of Development at Peking University (NSD), Beijing International MBA at Peking University (BiMBA). It is called “All The Questions You Have About China (and did not dare to ask)”.
BIMBA is ranked as the best business school in China by Forbes in 2014.
This time the session was at BIMBA in Beijing University. I did not bring along enough books of Toxic Capitalism… All I brought was sold out in a wink…