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8 Ways Brands Can Fight Counterfeits in China

Harvard Business

Counterfeit luxury goods are big business in China. Together, China and Hong Kong are estimated to be the source of 86% of the world’s counterfeit goods—an amount that the U.S. of China’s exports in 2016, according to the same report. Here are eight ways to start: Register your trademark in China at once.

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A Cool Place to Look for CFO Domains

Free Agent CFO

I like strategicgrowth.com, but the price tag is $23,477. Sorry, FreeAgentCFO.com is not for sale–not for all the tea in China. Would you pay that much for this domain name? Is it possibly underpriced? Strategicbusinessplanning.com is a mouthful, and it’s asking price is $27,300. Use Sedo to Prime the (Creativity) Pump.

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Is Gathering Real Time "Inflation" Data With Smart Phones a "Game Changer"?

MishTalk

Software automatically tags the location of the products down to the individual store and analyzes the images—items such as meat and produce—to gauge quality differences. Prices for popular food items—bread in the Middle East, corn in Mexico or pork in China—could be tracked well ahead of popular unrest.

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Case Study: Should a Direct-to-Consumer Company Start Selling on Amazon?

Harvard Business

The market for electric bikes had exploded in the past few years, especially in China, and it showed no signs of slowing down. The bike was targeted at price-sensitive riders, people who were willing to trade higher battery life and motor power for a lower price tag. She’d had an idea for a new kind of tablet stand.

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The Biggest Challenges of Data-Driven Manufacturing

Harvard Business

Another is when a machine that was planned to perform the next manufacturing step goes into (unplanned) maintenance mode, triggering the part carrier, which has an RFID tag with information about the right sequence of production steps, to “negotiate” with different machines to find the best way through the factory floor.

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KPMG Consulting Interviews and Culture

Management Consulted

A major part of their worldwide marketing campaign was the tag line, “It’s time for clarity.” Paul Glasson – National Vice President for the Australia China Business Council. As growth continued, the firm sought to further to unify and centralize its operations while boosting brand recognition.

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The Mental Benefits of Vacationing Somewhere New

Harvard Business

When researchers in China gave a survey to 197 adults before and after traveling, they uncovered similar influences on the exertion of effort to attend to pronounced cultural differences in normalized values and behavioral patterns in everyday social interactions. You and Your Team Series. The Data-Driven Case for Vacation.

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