Their father was a banking executive who suffered through the anomalies of being a successful financial guy when Mao offered his version of the New Deal. Seeing their father disgraced in this way, it's an amazing feat to me how this family turned their fortunes and reaffirms by belief that Chinese people are the greatest entrepreneurs on earth. I have done business with the older sister for many years in China and she has several remarkable gifts, one of which is the ability to look into a person’s heart and predict with great accuracy how they will behave in various circumstances. I have learned that it is pretty much fatal to do a deal in China without that older sister’s viewpoint and judgment.
Another gift is vision, and the ability to bring capital to bear to finance that vision. It's amazing to me that the older sister brings to any deal what Conrad Hilton called the greatest tradition of American business--your word is your bond, a deal is a deal, do what you say you are going to do. I’ve found that when things get really bad, older sister finds a way to keep to the deal, usually by going above and beyond the call of the deal. She expects to do business not just with me, but with future generations of me, and wants to build a trusted relationship--talk about investing for the long term.
And her third gift is the ability to convince large government entities to invest in her vision, which always helps ;-) To be sure she invests not for personal profit but for growth and the benefit of China. You see elder sister is a staunch communist party member and her mission in life is to build a better china than the one she grew up in. It shouldn’t be that much of a surprise to find this dichotomy in a communist country that has a for-profit government--any more than our democracy with the non-profit government ;-)
One of the advantages of being Australian, is you get used to being far away from everything; you understand just how different other cultures are; and you feel a little bit inferior to them, which means its easy to be humble and accepting of new environments. This is a big advantage when it comes to operating in other cultures, and one of the pitfalls suffered by many companies and investors when they tried to join the Chin-dia gold rush--it's critical to have locals on the ground to navigate the minefields for you.
Did I mention that their younger brother, the underachiever, spent 13years in Olympic soccer training camp, then after a critical injury did a PhD in Physics while in rehab……then founded a couple of US public companies, then…….but that’s another story ;-)
andmotion has left a new comment on your post "Marketing Power":
Interesting you mention brand, belief, religion and science here, Larry.
Its amazing what can be measured in our brain, there is a child psychology test that monitors frontal lobe activity and it's fascinating to see the neurons sparking in the really active and noisy kids and those quiet in the sedate ones. I just hope that the advertising agencies don’t get the hands on a way to monitor this direct reaction for us and feed us exactly what we want to hear in order to make us buy ;-)
1 comment:
Your first trip to China was in 1987, and Tiananmen happened in 1989, believe me, i was there! So your first visit was BEFORE rather than after Tiananmen
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