Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts

Monday, July 03, 2017

Brainpower: How China changes the world - Jeffrey Towson

Jeffrey Towson
Apple's Steve Jobs was the first American CEO to discover China's massive brainpower potential when he got the first iPhone produced in six weeks time, by 200,000 workers and 8,700 engineers. China's massive brainpower is a disrupting force for the world, says Beida business professor Jeffrey Towson, co-author of The One Hour China Book (2017 Edition) on his weblog.

Jeffrey Towson:
There are two important aspects to this story – which may have become somewhat embellished over time. The first is how incredibly fast, flexible, and smart the Chinese manufacturing ecosystem is. This situation was not about being cheap. It was about speed and flexibility. Figuring out how to redesign iPhone screens took lots of brainpower deployed quickly. In the US, the iPhone screens simply could not have been redesigned in such a short timeframe. 
The second is that Apple had 8,700 Chinese industrial engineers overseeing production. That is a lot of engineers. The New York Times reported that Apple had estimated it would take 9 months to find this many engineers in the US. In China, they found them in about 15 days. 
This is a story of Chinese brainpower as a game-changer in global business. The ability to mobilize so much talent, so many engineers, and so quickly, is something new in the world. 
But we have also heard this kind of story before. 
Twenty years ago, the scale of Chinese manufacturing began emerging as a similarly game-changing phenomenon. Suddenly, everything from shoes to bicycles began to become much cheaper than before. Low-cost Chinese manufacturing changed what was possible in industry after industry. “Made in China” became a household phrase. 
Businesses around the world have since incorporated the large-scale and low-cost of Chinese manufacturing into their operations. And it wasn’t really optional. Businesses either had to take advantage of the phenomenon or suffer as their competitors did. 
The large scale and low cost of Chinese brainpower is another game changer. Suddenly thousands of engineers can be ramped up in a matter of days. And this phenomenon is starting to ripple through industry after industry. What is the impact on the pharmaceutical industry if companies can now access tens of thousands of scientists cheaply? If your competitor is opening a research and development center in China with 10,000 technical specialists, how big of a problem is that for you? Chinese brainpower is starting to impact many industries – often in unexpected ways.”
More at Jeffrey Towson's weblog.

Jeffrey Towson is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form. 

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Thursday, October 14, 2010

Steve Jobs is too US-centric - Shaun Rein


Steve Jobs while introducing the iPad in San F...
Too America-centric via Wikipedia
Apple was able to cause some queues when their iPad hit its two stores in China, but according to Shaun Rein Steve Jobs is still too much focused on America, ignoring lucrative markets elsewhere, he tells the Mercury News.
"Apple has great products the whole world wants," said Rein, of China Market Research. "But Steve Jobs looks at America too much. The company is too Ameri-centric. This is a complaint you hear throughout the world."
For now, though, Chinese consumers are riveted with Apple's splashy presence in Beijing and Shanghai.
The average Chinese consumer might not have as much money to spend as the US baby boomers, but because they spend their income differently, they can still afford the expensive Apple products, Rein argues:
It's not uncommon for Chinese to spend two months' salary -- or more -- on an iPhone, which costs about $750 for a 16 gigabyte model without a China Unicom contract, though the relative scarcity of the devices has driven the price up among scalpers and resellers. Consumers can also get a 16GB iPhone 4 with a two-year contract that costs about $880. Some Chinese don't even use the device as a phone because it's too expensive for them to make calls; instead, it's used to send text messages, said Shaun Rein, managing director of Shanghai-based China Market Research Group.
"They use the iPhone as a status symbol to show their sophistication in the world, even though they can't afford it," he said.
Commercial
Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau and one of our specialists on marketing.
ShaunReinportraitShaun Rein by Fantake via Flickr
 Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.