Posted by ShopMesh on 1st March 2010

Small Businesses Learn Intercultural Communication Difficulties – Grow International Business

Small Businesses Learn Intercultural Communication Difficulties - Grow International Business

Small businesses not used to intercultural communication, can easily find dealing with international prospects challenging. It is sometimes hard to figure out exactly how your sales message has been received. You may have difficulty understanding what your international prospect needs to hear from you.

Just like with your own local leads, some of international prospects can appear to be ready to make the sale, some are hesitant and some just do not appear to be interested. With international clients, it is often not easy to interpret their reactions. How do you know if you should step up your sales pitch, slow down or if it would be better to pass the ball to one of your colleagues who is a different gender than you are?

Often you naturally realize that you need to do a little more adjusting in your communication style to fit your international prospect. This is especially true when your client is not following you, or appears to want to be someplace else in your sales process. The result is that you may appear less professional than you would want.

Destabilizing situations can arise.

Things can even become comical. Or worse, you can have a frustrated prospect losing patience with you and moving on. Your international clients like to feel understood

How do you avoid this type of scenario? There is only one thing to do.

Open your high power listening antennas and proceed slowly. Ask your prospect simple questions to confirm what he needs to have addressed. Adjust your communication accordingly. If your prospect appears excited about your product or service, reconfirm this a few times. This will give him the time to assimilate things more deeply.

If your prospect appears to be uninterested, do not assume you should not spend time with him. This may be normal for him. He might be used to different sales practices and needs time to adjust to yours. Again, put on your high power listening antennas and proceed slowly. Ask questions to confirm what he needs to have addressed. If you prospect seems to be hanging around, find out what is of interest to him in your product or service and get him to open up.

Sometimes international prospects require a little more personal attention in the beginning. Creating a multicultural relationship requires time and effort for both parties.
The extra time can well be worth the investment. International prospects can become very loyal long term customers if they are happy with your products and services. Good international clients will often provide you with much more word of mouth advertising than your local clients.

When you think you have mastered the international communication skills to handle your international prospects, remember to set up a systematic case study and referral strategy.

At the time of sale when your international prospects actually become your clients, gently initiate conversation about your company’s Case Study plan. Talk to them, ask what they are hoping to get out of your product, if they have had any specific problems they are hoping to solve with your product,

And then tell your new international client that you have a company plan where you follow up with clients at the appropriate time to see how they liked the product. Ask if you could do that with their company. Who should you call?

International clients will often be happy for such communication. This will also show them you are very interested in serving them even if they are located far away.

Question about business learning

I want to start my own business, a learning center for children, are there loans to help me get started?
My goal is to have a center that first serves as an afterschool /weekend program, that will give the children, whose parents have to work when school is out, something positive and constructive to do with their time. Rather than go to a daycare where there are little or no activities at all. They will be learning skills that are needed in life and be exposed to many different sports and subjects that will give them a better idea about who they want to be when they grow up. The center will focus on all sports, learning different languages, music, home economics, and trying to develop the children into well-rounded individuals. Later, I want to add a childcare facility for those with younger siblings, to get them early exposure and most importantly convenience for families.

    12 Responses

  1. garlin104300 says:

    Business Ethics teaches you what you can get away with and how to do it.

    I have yet to meet anyone above the title of Supervisor that has, or practices, any kind of "ethics".

  2. nacao says:

    Flexibility is the one they had in America and UK where the laws and labor law matter, not the Chinese of hyper corporatism so dear to the WTO and the EU.

  3. Fishy says:

    Apparently not. No answers after 2 days.

    I am a life long Catholic Christian and have never exposed to concepts of "fear of being roasted alive on Satan's BBQ."

    About teaching with age appropriateness in mind, the Catholic Church states:

    Whoever teaches must become "all things to all men" (? I Cor 9:22), to win everyone to Christ. . . Above all, teachers must not imagine that a single kind of soul has been entrusted to them, and that consequently it is lawful to teach and form equally all the faithful in true piety with one and the same method!

    Let them realize that some are in Christ as newborn babes, others as adolescents, and still others as adults in full command of their powers

    Those who are called to the ministry of preaching must suit their words to the maturity and understanding of their hearers, as they hand on the teaching of the mysteries of faith and the rules of moral conduct.

    For more information, see the Catechism of the Catholic Church, section 23 and following: http://www.nccbuscc.org/catechism/text/prologue.shtml#23

    With love in Christ.

  4. guzen says:

    lmao u talk so much shit. stop embarassing urself dumbass

  5. Rainy day says:

    Mandarin Chinese is the best!

  6. godsamor says:

    "Everybody is learning mandarin [sic] now."
    If you're going to major in business, you need to try and be an important, worthwhile asset to your company. While, yes, it is strongly speculated that China will be the next big thing and will probably come to be true, this doesn't mean Japan will be out of the market and will plummet into a third-world country. It will still be making innovations in all fields and companies will still want to deal with them.
    While all those people who spent their college years learning Mandarin are battling for the same jobs, you can have a step up on them for you can aid your company in gaining profits from the Japanese. Besides, who's to say you can't learn Mandarin as well?

  7. AKA says:

    A typical BS in Business covers basic accounting, business law, management principles, etc. The focus is on generic things someone in management would address as part of their job. Like many degrees, the curriculum covered by most colleges and universities is pretty much the same.

    Nearly every college and university offers business degrees via distance education, ie. online classes, versus traditional classroom learning. You can also CLEP many freshman business classes (see http://www.collegeboard.com) if you are a good cram and test person.

    The challenge you face with a degree is business is that it is a "me too" degree. Meaning, you say you have a degree in business and the other guy says, "me too". Also, business degrees lack in industry specific knowledge, ie. business in widget manufacturing or business in the chemical industry.

    So, what do you end up getting having only a degree in business? You get entry level jobs in lower to middle management. Starting salaries can range from mid $20Ks to lower $30Ks.

    That said, my advice is a minor in some thing that is also of interest to you, ie. chemistry, biology, psychology, etc. Then you have both a broad degree in business with industry specific knowledge. Makes your marketability much better.

    Hope that helps.

  8. psychic says:

    Nonsense, China its destroying our economy with dumping and trust… Yeah lets go to China say the Soviet EU slogan repeated by all past left wing and european socialist partyes; so in this way all economy went in crysis thanks to China, will collaspe definitely and we will talk all chinese before dinner..NO THANKS !!!

    who was then the Soviet European Union colludes with China is something well-known.
    Flexibility ? Better say illegal underestimate of labor cost, slavery and much propaganda.

  9. garlin104300 says:

    I think ethics in business is a thing of the past.
    Most businesses now only care about one thing, money.
    They dont care how they get it as long as they keep getting more of it.
    In general, customer service is at an all time low, greed and increasing profits is at an all time high, and business ethics got kicked to the curb long ago.

  10. Angel says:

    it's perfectly legal and i recommend that you do it if you are a capable web designer. you don't need teacher certification to be a tutor, you only need to be an expert in your subject area. i advise against joining a tutoring website. the pay is ridiculously low and you could make 2 or 3 times more as an independent tutor.

    Good luck!

  11. THEKASE says:

    I would say your best option is an SBA loan. They are backed by the government. You will have to put some kind of business plan and proforma.

    Just call 3 or 4 banks and ask for their SBA specialist. They can assist you more.

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