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      • January 2021

        Winning in China

        8 Stories of Success and Failure in the World’s Largest Economy

        by Lele Sang and Karl Ulrich

        If Amazon can’t win in China, can anyone?When Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos visited China in 2007, he expected that one day soon China would be a double-digit percentage of Amazon’s sales. Yet, by 2019, Amazon, the most powerful and successful ecommerce company in the world, had quit China. In Winning in China: 8 Stories of Success and Failure in the World’s Largest Economy, Wharton experts Lele Sang and Karl Ulrich explore the success and failure of several well-known companies, including Hyundai, LinkedIn, Sequoia Capital, and InMobi, as more and more businesses look to reap profits from the demand of 1.4 billion people. Sang, Global Fellow at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and Ulrich, Vice Dean of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the Wharton School, answer four critical questions: Which factors explain the success (or failure) of foreign companies entering China? What challenges and pitfalls can a company entering China expect to encounter? How can a prospective entrant realistically assess its chances? Which managerial decisions are critical, and which approaches are most effective? Sang and Ulrich answer these questions by examining the stories of eight well-known and respected companies that have entered China. They study: How Norwegian Cruise Line’s entry into China displays how cultural differences can boost or sink different companies; How Intel, one of the oldest, most respected firms in Silicon Valley, thrived in a country that seems to favor agile upstarts; How Zegna, the Italian luxury brand, has emerged as another surprising success story and how it plans to navigate new headwinds from the COVID-19 pandemic. Through these engaging and illuminating stories, Sang and Ulrich offer a framework and path for organizations looking for a way to successfully enter the world’s largest economy. History can be a teacher, and China, a country with 3,500 years of written history, has much to teach.

      • Children's & YA

        Lele’s Little Lantern

        by Min-I Yen

        LeLe has a small lantern, always twinkles with light. Wherever Lele is, the night is decorated beautifully. One day, LeLe’s little lantern is broken, and all the animals gather together to think of solutions.   Will the candles work? Or should we collect the moonlight? However, all of these measures seem useless to fix LeLe’s little lantern. What should LeLe do? Lele’s Little Lantern is about a warm journey of searching and finding oneself. Human beings often rely on pursuing external things to prove self-worth without realizing oneself is a unique existence. The illustrator, Yan Ming-Yi, implies pursuit of glowing as the pursuit of oneself.   Through the illustrations that are full of warmth, vividly captures the journey of repairing the lantern, which at the same time is also a journey of healing oneself.

      • Frida : My long lost grandmother’s war

        by Nina F. Grünfeld

        The first time Frida Grünfeld was registered in a police record was spring 1931. She was Jewish, a prostitute, suspected of espionage – and she was pregnant. Frida was born in Leles, Slovakia in 1908, which was Austria-Hungary at the time. She lived a vagrant life the newly established Czehcoslovakia after WW1. In Bratislava she gave birth to a son, Berthold; but gave him away when he was only a week old. He later came to Norway as a refugee and became one of Norway’s most recognised psychiatrists. But what happened to Frida? In this book, the grandaughter Nina F. Grünfeld returns and searches for her grandmother. Through archives she finds interrogation files and court documents revealing clues and information, and she learns how the web is winding ever closer around Frida. The authorities were looking for people like her. Then the Nazis came to power. The story of Frida is a shocking tale of belonging, want and loss.

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