Entering the Chinese mid-market segment: key to long-term success?, by Heiko Gebauer, Thomas Fischer and Elgar Fleisch, is an academic report that I found interesting lately while studying a 2nd tier market plan, and as a followup to a recent conversation... ...full story at All Roads
from All Roads on Tue, Sep 08 2009
see also:
| 11 Dec 08 |
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7.30 Report (Anxiety over China Syndrome) »
YouTube video With recent market volatility, poor investor sentiment and undesirable
market conditions, it is very important to keep updated with relevant
information and updates. Yesterday on ABC 7:30 Report, Business Reporter
Greg Hoy interviewed Premium China Funds... |
| 21 Nov 07 |
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Capturing China's Middle Class Market -- "Good Enough" Is The Good Way » China Law Blog Interesting WSJ article By Orit Gadiesh and Till Vestring of Bain & Company, "Capturing China's Middle Market," positing how to capture China's fastest growing market segment with "good enough" brands: Historically, multinationals have focused on China's... |
| 13 May 09 |
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China becomes major diamond market » People's Daily Reporters learned from a news conference held at the "Jewelry Shanghai 2009," that in recent years, the diamond market was the fastest growing market in the entire Chinese jewelry market. As a result of continued increase in gross market sales, China has... |
| 23 May 07 |
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China’s High-End Market: Twin Peaks » China Solved We’re all looking for the top of whatever market we are selling into. In the China consumer market, we’ve been looking for Mt Everest. That unique place where wealthy Chinese factory owners, successful HK real estate developers, gold collar over... |
| 28 Oct 09 |
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China Pays Premium for Qatari Gas » China Journal A few years ago, China’s was frustrated in its efforts to sign big, long-term deals to import natural gas. The problem was that Chinese regulators were insisting that China’s huge market meant they should get preferential treatment and a cheaper price. |
| 01 Sep 08 |
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There Is No China Market » China Vortex One of my biggest complaints about western observers of China is the overly used term “China market”. In fact, there is no China market, just as there is no European market. While there is a European Union, which many Europeans complain about... |