Archives 2007

The Hunt For Chinese Talent

GUANXI (THE ART OF RELATIONSHIPS)
Microsoft, China, and Bill Gates’s
Plan to Win the Road Ahead

The Good Argues that Microsoft’s Beijing research lab has played a pioneering role in high tech.
The Bad Misses key developments and rarely goes beyond the lab to explore issues facing Microsoft.
The Bottom Line Flawed, but it shows the importance China has for American high tech companies.

Last summer a Taiwanese-born PhD named Kai-Fu Lee was at the center of an intense battle between Microsoft (MSFT ) and its latest challenger for high-tech dominance, Google. (GOOG ) Lee, an expert in speech-recognition technology, had been working at Microsoft for seven years, recently in Redmond, Wash., and before that at the company’s China research lab in Beijing, which he founded in 1998. But he had become increasingly frustrated by what he described as Microsoft’s “incompetence in China” and last July abruptly announced that he was leaving to join Google. A nasty lawsuit followed over the terms of a noncompete agreement. During the trial, another Microsoft defector revealed that Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer had vowed to “f—ing kill Google.” Lee ultimately won permission to leave, becoming a prime example of the recent talent exodus at Microsoft.

You might expect that a new book in which Lee is prominently featured and extensively quoted would have juicy insights into that drama. Alas, the flawed Guanxi (The Art of Relationships): Microsoft, China, and Bill Gates’s Plan to Win the Road Ahead, by journalists Robert Buderi and Gregory T. Huang, has little to say about this key moment in the Microsoft-Google rivalry. Indeed, it appears Microsoft executives weren’t the only ones surprised by Lee’s departure: Although Buderi and Huang seem to have spent many hours over many months talking with Lee, they apparently had no inkling of his dissatisfaction. They devote one late chapter to the custody battle. But it feels tacked on, almost as if they realized at the 11th hour that Lee had upended the whole premise of their book, which tells how Microsoft successfully built its Beijing research center.

Microsoft Research Asia was only the second center for high-level research opened by the company outside the U.S. (The first was in Cambridge, England.) The authors argue persuasively that Microsoft’s Beijing center has played a central role in developing products and served as a model for the company as it expands in countries such as India, where Microsoft opened a Beijing-like research center last year. In setting up the center in the late 1990s, long before most other multinationals had started to take China seriously as a research and development location, Microsoft was a pioneer in recognizing “the imperative of looking at emerging nations not just as potential markets but as sources of talent.” Contrary to the book’s subtitle, though, this is not a story about Bill Gates’s strategy in the world’s largest country, and the authors spend almost no time discussing Microsoft issues beyond the lab. For example, there’s very little about problems with China’s counterfeiters. And while mentioning a botched Microsoft pledge to invest $100 million in the country, they don’t offer any insights into what went wrong.

Guanxi is at its best when it describes the brilliant collection of experts recruited by Lee, such as multimedia whiz Ya-Qin Zhang. (Buderi and Huang use the Western convention of given name first, family name last for most of the Chinese in the book.) A former child prodigy who entered one of China’s top universities before his 13th birthday, Zhang took over as director in Beijing in 2000 after Lee relocated to Redmond. Zhang is adept at wooing Chinese officials. For instance, he scored a coup when he won permission from the government for the Beijing lab to award post-doctoral degrees, a first for a foreign company. And Zhang boasts about his ability to cut through red tape by making one phone call to the vice-mayor. “Problem solved,” Zhang tells the authors.

Buderi and Huang also profile Jian Wang, an engineering psychologist who at first was reluctant to give up his position as a professor at Zhejiang University but went on to lead the team that developed the handwriting-recognition software used in Microsoft’s Tablet PCs. Wang, who has come up with a “universal pen” that can instantly take writing from a piece of paper and put it on a computer screen, also created Thought Explorer, a computer interface custom-made for Gates that the chairman uses during Think Week, his semi-annual retreat.

Yet as fascinating as these characters are, the book suffers from its almost exclusive reliance on them for its information — and its numerous boosterish quotes. Significantly, we don’t hear from many Chinese officials, even though one of Buderi and Huang’s themes is the importance of building relationships, or guanxi, with government leaders.

For all its shortcomings, though, Guanxi does show the importance that China has for American high-tech companies. With Kai-Fu Lee now back in Beijing to launch another R&D center, this time for his new company, the competition for Chinese talent is only going to get rougher.

Finance & Operation Manager

Company: Our client¡¯s main business scopes cover all kinds of application services related to IT technology. The offshore software development outsourcing service is the core business, which focus on the application development and management, web services, system integration, software engineering and business process outsourcing, etc.

Location:Shanghai

Responsibility:
1.working with different finance teams to consolidate financial reporting from all teams
2.perform financial and operation analysis
3.manage operation related matters across GCG
4.prepare management/operation reports

Relevant Qualifications
1.CPA or equivalent
2.managed full sets of account previously, preferably in a outsourcing environment
3.performed budgeting and planning, financial analysis for large multinationals is better

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_fi143sh#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

Business Control Manager

Company: Our client¡¯s main business scopes cover all kinds of application services related to IT technology. The offshore software development outsourcing service is the core business, which focus on the application development and management, web services, system integration, software engineering and business process outsourcing, etc.

Location:Shanghai
Responsibility:
1.Perform review of processes and provide controls guidance in specific areas
2.Identify process risks, assess the reasonableness of controls in place to manage the risk, and raise significant process deficiency issues when they exist
3.Consolidate and submit overall control posture results
4.Provide control related education as required
5.Coordinate and assist in review and audit performed by company¡¯s Internal and external Audit and Business Control. Track all outstanding controls issues resulting from Audit’s, CAR’s, Peer Reviews, SOX reviews, etc
6.Provide business control framework and guidelines to various business teams

Relevant Qualifications
Mandatory
1.Degree in Accounting or Finance
2.3-5 Audit working experience in Audit firm or internal audit of Corporation – especially in the area of system and process audits
3.Internal control, SOX knowledge is a must
4.Strong communication skill, project management skill
5.Proficiency in both English writing and speaking
6.Skills of using Lotus Notes, Microsoft Power point
7.Experience in business process outsourcing environment especially in finance & accounting, HR services or call centre environment would be an advantage

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_fi144sh#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

US firm has eye on acquisition

GRACE Construction Products, a leading US construction and building materials maker, said it plans to complete at least one acquisition this year in China.

Jeremy Gray, Grace’s vice president for Asia Pacific, said in an interview that the company also plans to build one or two plants in 2007 in China’s underdeveloped western region to capture potential growth there. It now has four manufacturing sites in the country.

The company is a business unit of New York-listed W.R. Grace & Co.

China Legal Counsel

Company introduction: Our client is a leading, innovation-driven corporation committed to developing a growing portfolio of best-in-class and first-in-class pharmaceutical products that help people live longer, healthier and more active lives. Their products treat depression, schizophrenia, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, diabetes, osteoporosis and many other conditions. They are committed to providing answers that matter – through medicines and information – for some of the world’s most urgent medical needs.
In light of their business expanding, they are looking for a China Legal Counsel in Shanghai.

Job Description:
Report To:China General Counsel
Location:Shanghai
1.Support and provide advice on routine business operations and commercial transactions.
2.Review and draft commercial contracts relating to consulting services, procurement, distribution, clinical research, business collaboration and other business activities.
3.Counsel on corporate governance and compliance issues, advise on and handle governmental inspections.
4.Take a coordinative role and working with US patent team and China external litigator for IPR litigation cases.

Job Requirements:
1.3 to 5 years of solid experience acquired in a major foreign/local law firm and/or within the legal department of a multinational company.
2.Excellent legal academic credentials. First degree must be in law.
3.Confident to offer comments and thoughts at legal and business meetings. Self-motivated. Team player with excellent interpersonal and communication skills. Flexibility to work and communicate with colleagues in different time zones. Prepared to travel one to two times a month within China.
4.Able to integrate easily on the basis of a highly developed, open and practical communication style
5.Assertive and able to play an active role as a partner to the business team and as negotiator; ability to make difficult decisions and stand behind them. Should be able to work independently.
6.Knowledge of the healthcare sector is not mandatory but would be a definite asset.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_hl018sh#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

China vows neutrality in choosing 3G systems

CHINA will be “technologically neutral” when choosing standards for high-speed wireless services in the world’s biggest mobile market by users, Xi Guohua, a vice minister at the Ministry of Information Industry, said yesterday.

China approved the domestically developed time division synchronous code division multiple access, or TD-SCDMA, in January 2006 as a standard for third-generation services. The government has said it is considering two other technologies, wideband CDMA, or WCDMA, and CDMA2000, for 3G, which allows video conferencing and faster downloads of songs on to handsets.

“We will treat WCDMA and CDMA2000 equally,” Xi said at the Boao Forum held in southern China’s Hainan Island. “It has nothing to do with supporting a locally developed standard.”

Telecommunication equipment makers such as Ericsson AB are awaiting China’s issuance of 3G licenses to spur spending on networks, Bloomberg News reported. The government has said 3G services will be available for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, without giving a more detailed time frame or saying which other standards it will adopt.

No timetable

Xi reiterated that the government doesn’t have a specific timetable. The issuance of 3G licenses isn’t dependent on the outcome of a trial of TD-SCDMA being carried out by China Mobile Communications Corp, Xi said.

China will consider the maturity of the technology and how starting 3G services will affect the competitiveness of the domestic telecommunications market, Xi said. The government is hastening plans to reorganize the industry, he said.

Xi’s comments come after European Union Media Commissioner Viviane Reding on April 12 cited the same pledge by China’s Information Industry Minister Wang Xudong to be “technologically neutral” and to issue more than one 3G license.

Most 3G networks in Europe are based on WCDMA.

Compensation disputes on the rise at work

DISPUTES over compensation for terminations of work contracts are on the rise, according to the Shanghai Labor and Social Security Bureau in its quarterly report released yesterday.

The arbitration division received 1,400 disputes about work contract termination during the first quarter of this year. Of those, about 75 percent were over compensation.

“Nowadays most employees choose to get compensation when it is illegal for the company to terminate a contract instead of insisting to stay in the company,” said Sui Wei, vice director of the bureau’s arbitration division.

“Most of the employees involved in these kinds of disputes are between the age of 18 and 40, and it has become a trend to prefer compensation,” Sui said.

Most disputes occur in private enterprises.

Other main causes of disputes are wage and insurance benefits, according to the report.

“But the number of disputes over arrears of wages has decreased by about 30 percent,” Sui said.

The number of dispute applications that can be handled by arbitration has been increased, Sui said.

Arroyo to sign US$2b deals on China visit

PHILIPPINEP President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was due to depart for a shortened visit to China today to conclude deals amounting to US$2 billion worth of Chinese investment, The Associated Press reported.

The visit, originally set for five days, was cut short to 12 hours after Arroyo’s husband underwent open heart surgery April 9. He was expected to be released from a hospital tomorrow, when Arroyo returns to Manila.

Apart from signing and approving several investment agreements, Arroyo was scheduled to take part in the weekend Boao Forum for Asia meeting of top government officials and business leaders, presidential spokesman Ignacio Bunye said.

Microsoft Corp Chairman Bill Gates, Bangladeshi Nobel peace laureate Muhammad Yunus and Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz also were expected to attend the forum in southern Hainan province, Bunye said.

He said Arroyo “brings to the forum her expertise and strong grasp of regional and geopolitical matters in her capacity as president and as chair of ASEAN,” the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Arroyo has said earlier the investments in the Philippines will be funded by the Chinese government. She did not elaborate. Her visit to China in 2004 yielded US$1.2 billion in combined investment commitments and soft loans.

Strategic Sourcing Consultant

Job Description:
Company introduction:
One of the biggest venders of GM and SGM.

Report To:GM, Geography
Location:Shanghai
Responsibility
1.Provide technical liaison and consultation services for the procurement function to assure effective communication, coordination, and interaction.
2.Evaluate engineering designs from the conceptual phase through production design to assure that the engineering direction is compatible with the manufacturing process to assure supplier first time capability with superior part quality.
3.Direct early supplier participation in advance product feasibility assessment
4.Review supplier quality control plans and provide advise/assistance/training to obtain compliance, e.g. APQP, PPAP, R@R, Statistical Process Controls, Process Capability Analysis, Failure Mode and Effects Analysis, etc.
5.Participate in the source evaluation and approval of potential suppliers.
6.Prepare status reports and maintain documentation for continuous improvements.
7.Analyze the plant(s) purchase part quality concerns and establish supplier visits consistent with these quality issues.
8.Assist in the development and formalization of partnership agreements to assure maximum supplier contribution toward practical application of new process, productivity and quality oriented designs to prove out manufacturability.

Qualification
1.At least a four-year Engineering degree
2.Extensive experiences in purchasing, manufacturing, supply chain in automotive industry
3.Strong organizational skills
4.Strong launch experience
5.Excellent communication skills
6.Fluency in Chinese & English

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_mkt183sh#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

McDonald’s China To Set Up 40 Trade Unions In East China

According to the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, McDonald’s China has promised to establish trade union branches in its 40 restaurants in Zhejiang province this year.

An ACFTU spokesman told local media that Zong Hao, central region human resources director with McDonald’s China, made the remarks when visiting the Zhejiang Federation of Trade Unions.

The move would boost the development of labor relations, upgrade the fast food giant’s social image in China and help it fulfill its social responsibilities, said Chen Dingxin, ZFTU vice chairman. Chen said he hoped McDonald’s China would lose no time in fulfilling its promise in accordance with China’s regulations on trade unions.

Earlier this month, Kong Xianghong, vice chairman of the Guangdong Trade Unions Federation, said McDonald’s had promised to set up trade union branches in the southern Guangdong province before July this year. But a spokesman for McDonald’s in Guangdong refused to confirm Kong’s claim and would not comment to local media.

McDonald’s, KFC and Pizza Hut have been criticized for paying their part-time employees in Guangzhou just RMB4 per hour, up to 40% less than the city’s statutory minimum wage of RMB7.5. However subsequent government inspections found no problems with the foreign fast food operations.