What’s Global and What’s Local?

With all the talk about globalization, as well as what is working and what isn’t about it, it’s time to drill down and find out what businesses are global by nature, and what businesses are local by nature.

For companies who are entering China, or are planning to go from China into international markets, this is a very important issue. There are some businesses which by their nature are global and others which are more local.

There are several businesses which by their nature are global. They are:

  • Raw materials and commodities
  • Transport, logisitics and distribution
  • Manufacturing
  • Commoditized services such as back-office operations and software outsourcing
  • Finance, especially wholesale banking
  • New technology development and research

Then there are other businesses which are more local/national in nature:

  • Retail and brand marketing
  • Most legal services
  • Internet services
  • Accounting services
  • Foods and food-related services

My experience is that the businesses which are more wholesale in nature tend to cross national borders and become more global in nature, while those which are closer to end consumers tend to be more local and national.

If there is an irony, it is that the least sexy businesses are the most global in nature, while the more sexy brands and Internet businesses are in fact, local. I believe that there are several reasons for this:

  • The large global businesses operate on smaller margins but make up for it on volume
  • Local businesses are more relation dependent. Most relationships are locally-based.
  • Relationships are location and context-dependent. Often this means culture.
  • Some of you may be surprised to note that I include Internet services in local businesses. If fact, they are. The struggle between Baidu and Google is largely a struggle over who has the larger local language search advertising market, Google, which gets most of its revenue from its home US market in English, or Baidu, whose services are almost entirely in Chinese. Even though China has four times the population of the US, the time when Baidu will overtake Google in terms of advertising revenue is still far far away.

    One of my pet peeves is the amount of hype first-time visitors to China swallow, thinking that they can plan their retirement on a “China strategy” without in fact coming and living in China and making an effort to understand the people and culture and building relationships on the ground. More often than not, the people who have dollar (or yuan) signs in their eyes come from the services sectors, which are in fact, more local in nature. The ones who are making the money in China are the big wholesalers, but they have enough presence of mind to keep their mouths shut.

    Lately, Dan Harris of China Law Blog has been talking about the opportunities opening up in the Chinese services sector because of policy changes. Most likely these changes will be led by another wave of service entrepreneurs coming into the country, or as is more likely, a new batch of local Chinese entrepreneurs offering services to China’s urban middle class. After all, they know the language, have the opportunities and can make the fast move.

    For businesses which are local by nature, and are mostly in retail, the challenges come in several forms. The costs of crossing national boundaries to establish a name presence are always huge. This is an area global ad agencies are designed to address, even though their market has undergone huge changes.

    The other huge challenge is human talent. How do you find the human talent who understand the needs of the parent company, and at the same time, can build relationships in a new market and understand what consumers want?

    This is the real challenge of globalization.

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    The Big Hole in Chinese Productivity Apps

    When I look at web apps and ideas in China today, practically everything I see has to do with the retail consumer. Popular fields are gaming, because it proven and China has a large gaming population, not to mention the success of the major players including Shanda and The9, and music and search.

    The result has been a plethora of startups in these fields. After all, they have a demonstrated and successful business model based on advertising. God knows that there are huge amounts of advertising dollars just looking for half-decent excuses to be spent in China. VCs can use these as references in their decision-making and in valuation, which is good.

    But the real money is always made when a new company breaks out in a field which was considered dead or dying. Right now, I think that field in China is web productivity apps.

    There is a big hole between Office (Word, Excel, Powerpoint) and the web. In the US and Europe, this area is occupied by Oracle, SAP and Salesforce. There are Chinese competitors such as Yongyou and Kingdee. Google has made some significant headway with Google Docs, but there is still a long ways to go.

    So far though, none of them have passed my Internet cafe test. This means that I have not seen anyone sitting on a computer in an Internet cafe using any of their apps. They are all playing games or chatting away.

    This creates a chicken and egg situation; VCs fund companies which get the eyeballs, and hold back on those productivity apps which do not get the attention, but are far more meaningful and productive. And the companies which are making productivity apps, which take far longer to develop and mature, have trouble getting funding. The investment cycle gets shorter and shorter, but it takes longer to develop meaningful apps. As a result, the productivity apps market gets starved.

    Something has got to change, and I hope that it isn’t too far away… Sometime soon, people will have to start earning money to play those games.

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