Smith School Experts Headline Forum
on China & India
 |
|
Smith
School Dean Howard Frank
(at podium) with
panelists (left to right)
Wei-Wu He, Emerging
Technology Partners LLC; S.
Tien Wong, Opus8 Inc.; Jai
Saboo, Saboo Business Group;
and Tony Surak, GlobalLogic. |
Smith School Dean Howard Frank,
Dingman Center Entrepreneur-in-Residence
Tien Wong and Smith School Fellow Wei-Wu
He were among the business leaders
providing insight into doing business in
China and India at a Northern Virginia
breakfast forum on February 28, 2007.
Dean Frank moderated an expert panel
that included Wong, Wei-Wu He and three
others at Surviving & Thriving in the
Flat World: China, India, and You!
The event, presented by Potomac
Executive Biz and co-sponsored by the
Smith School, drew more than 150 area
business people. Frank opened the forum
by describing the entrepreneurial
spirit, excitement and hard work he has
seen traveling in both India and China.
You become genuinely afraid for the
U.S. when you see the work ethic there,
said Frank, whose job was to engage the
panelists in the discussion that
followed. Much of the talk focused on
identifying business opportunities and
responding to challenges faced by
foreign firms with interests in the
worlds fastest growing economies.
Doing business [in China] has gotten
easier and easier over the last 10
years, said panelist Wei-Wu He, a
general partner and co-founder of
Emerging Technology Partners LLC.
Panelist Jai Saboo, a serial
entrepreneur and principal with Saboo
Business Group, said the same is true in
India, even for smaller firms.
One of the places where small and
medium-sized businesses are finding
success is by partnering in India, noted
Saboo. The panelists agreed that in such
partnerships, whether in India or China,
it is important for the foreign firm to
own the customer.
Whoever controls the customer wins in
China, said Wei-Wu He, who along with
Dean Frank noted that firms must also
know their customer. As an example, they
pointed to Wal-Mart, known for meeting
local tastes with live fish and sliced
pig ears in its Chinese stores.
Wong, who is also CEO of private
investment firm Opus8 Inc, believes
there will be a significant opportunity
in China for foreign firms providing
business services. Right now its a land
grab, said Wong referring to the rush to
meet the consumer product demand of
Chinas growing middle class. But Wong
believes producers will soon need to
compete on customer service and that
will mean opportunities for firms
providing service solutions. Opus8 is in
the process of raising a $50 million
East-West fund to invest in technology
and service companies in China and North
America, with a focus on CRM, business
process outsourcing and outsourced
marketing and information management.
The Smith School delivers its EMBA
program in Beijing and Shanghai, as well
as a customized MBA program in Tianjin,
for Otis Elevator China. In India, the
school has had a relationship with the
Management Development Institute (MDI),
one the country's leading business
schools, for the past two years. The two
schools have collaborated on executive
education programs, faculty research and
other initiatives.
Smith China Web Site:
http://www.rhsmith-umd.cn.
▓ Jeff
Heebner, Office of Marketing
Communications