Archives 2007

How Do I Hire an IT Consultant?

Technology changes quickly. When choosing a consultant try the following:

Look for a recent, relevant work record.
Contact references who have first-hand experience of the consultant.
Check with businesses similar to yours, professional organizations, the local Better Business Bureau or chamber of commerce, or even your accountant or attorney.

Some vendors, including Microsoft, IBM and Sun, offer official certification programs that keep consultants current on new technology. You should also ask whether a consultant belongs to a recognized professional organization such as Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.

A US Leading Software Provider Wanted Senior Applications Engineer – DSP/COMMS with Competitive Pack,urgent!

Company Introduction:
Our client is a leading US base technical software provider nationwide, and open its business in China in April, 2007.

Location: Beijing
Job responsibilities:
The Applications Engineer’s primary role is to present relevant capabilities of the company’s products to customers while directing them towards using these products to accelerate their pace of development. The Applications Engineer is required to have strong knowledge in the field of Signal Processing and Communications.
• Providing technical pre-sales support and guidance to the China Sales organization. Working as a team, the Applications Engineer assists the salesperson first, in understanding and synthesizing customer requirements, then explaining the features and capabilities of our products and related third party products (Xilinx, Altera, TI, etc) relative to their specific needs.
• Preparing and delivering product presentations to customers and prospects. These are delivered during customer meetings and during marketing seminars where large audiences exist. These ‘product-centric’ sessions include, but are not limited to live MATLAB, Simulink, and Stateflow software demonstrations and associated PowerPoint slide presentations. Many seminars include the use of integrated third-party products focused on building embedded systems.
• Developing demonstration programs, application examples, and simulation models. These are generally used as support for a sales call or to make a solution clear relative to an application support assignment.
• Analyzing users’ problems to determine and implement the best computational approach. Occasionally, customers who are preparing to acquire software require guidance on how to use evaluation products. This requires assisting customers with the use of technical programs and models to solve specific problems.
Requirements:
• Strong knowledge of Signal Processing and Digital Communications.
• Experience with HDL and FPGAs is a big plus.
• Experience with TI or ADI Digital Signal Processors is a big plus
• Excellent verbal and Communication skills( in English/Chinese) and proficiency in the delivery of presentations.
• Candidate should be interested in working directly with customers to help them understand how to apply our products to their problems.
• Travel is generally throughout China specific to various seminars, customer visits, etc. The candidate should expect to travel about 25-50% of the time.

Education: Advanced Engineering degree in Electrical or Computer Engineering. Master or Doctor¡¯s degree preferred.
Salary Range: 224.3K, negotiable, based on experience and capabilities

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_eng055bj#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

A US Leading Technical Wanted Account Manager in Automotive with Competitive Package , Urgent!

Company Introduction:
Our client is a leading US base technical software provider nationwide, and open its business in China in April, 2007.

Location: Beijing
Job responsibilities:
The jobholder will be responsible for selling the company’s products and services via telephone and on-site visits to named OEM/Joint Venture and Tier 1-2 Supplier accounts. Responsibilities include qualifying leads, overcoming objections, identifying decision makers, managing executive level relationships and closing sales.
Responsibilities:
• Respond to general sales inquiries, and lead outbound initiatives and promotions to expand usage of The the company¡¯s tools.
• Investigate and understand the internal business processes of client; and strategize, present and demonstrate tailored technology solutions to the client.
• Work with cross-functional teams such as application engineering, technical marketing, product development, and consulting to set direction for the account.
• Develop accurate sales forecasts.
• 25-50% overnight travel required; daily/weekly travel
Requirements:
• BA/BS degree
• 3-5 years of direct automotive industry sales experience required
• Prior large account management experience preferred
• Field sales experience required
• Prior High Tech or technical software sales or engineering products experience preferred
• Strong verbal and written communication skills required (English/Chinese)

Education: BA/BS degree or above
Salary Range: 398.8K, negotiable, based on experience and capabilities

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_fi140bj#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

Western China Favors Green Investment

Officials in northwest China’s Shaanxi Province are calling for more green investment and urging local governments not to sacrifice the environment on the altar of economic growth.

Yuan Chunqing, governor of Shaanxi Province, says that local governments in northern Shaanxi should carefully assess the environmental impact of investments, especially energy exploration projects, and should not promote those which threaten the environment. Yuan made the remark at the 11th Investment and Trade Forum for Cooperation between East and West China which kicked off on April 6 in Xi’an. Domestic investors have signed contracts worth nearly RMB172 billion up 36.7% from the previous year, at the forum.

According to Yuan, the underdeveloped western regions should be on the watch for industries seeking to transfer pollution from the east.

Waste water processing, healthy coal mine exploitation and other environmentally friendly programs were also the focus of the forum. Local media report that Climate Change Capital from Britain are going to invest US$500 million in the next five years into China’s clean resource utilization and the company says that western China’s actions in energy conservation has brought them great business opportunities.

CSR Agenda Imperialists

By David Wolf

The client was a Fortune 500 company that had just celebrated completing two decades in China. They had been through all of the phases of the localization process. They understood the market and were leaders in their sector. China was their largest market in the world. They knew what they were doing. Then came the day when we started talking about their corporate social responsibility program.They were spending upwards of US$10 million a year on their CSR efforts, and there was nothing that they could recognize as return-on-investment. Company executives couldn’t understand why. They were doing all the right things: well planned programs, leveraging the company’s core competency, and genuinely doing a lot of good on the ground. They were even winning awards in the United States for their efforts in China.

And yet, nobody in China seemed to care. The press weren’t picking up the story. Most government officials knew nothing about the program, and those that did, shrugged it off. The company was so frustrated they were considering dumping their China CSR program entirely.

After the executive we were meeting finished, one of my colleagues asked a simple question. “How did you develop your China CSR program,” she asked?

“Well, our team here worked with our CSR people back in the States,” came the reply.

My colleague probed further. “Did you involve the government in the process at all?”

Puzzled silence. “No. We didn’t see the need to. We saw a problem that needed fixing, knew we had the core competence to fix it, and went and did it. We’ve done great work.”

This, of course, was the problem. Our client was an Agenda Imperialist.

Seeing a problem that you know you can fix, then going out and fixing it, is by no means a bad thing. That is, after all, the core of the entrepreneurial spirit that drives successful businesses throughout the world and, increasingly, in China.

The instincts that serve us so well in commerce, however, do not always serve us as well when seeking to better the communities in which we operate, but especially if we want to get something more than quiet satisfaction for our CSR efforts.

Simply showing up and unilaterally deciding you’re going to go out and fix something in China – even if it is driven by a global CSR agenda with the best of intentions – is not going to make you friends here. At best, you’ll get no credit for your work. At worst, you’ll be branded a paternalist or a neo-imperialist.

Creating great corporate social responsibility in China is a matter of balancing three agendas: your company agenda (what it seeks to accomplish in the PRC and globally), the global agenda (the clear social challenges upon which most of your global audiences would agree), and the China agenda (the social priorities of the Chinese government and people).

The plain truth is that the more you weight the China agenda in your calculations, the more people in China will acknowledge the value of your efforts.

That’s not rocket science, but it’s apparently not terribly obvious. A few years ago, I was peripherally involved in a major project auditing the CSR efforts of multinational technology companies in China. Of all the companies we researched, only one was getting significant ROI, acknowledgement, and appreciation from Chinese. Not surprisingly, it was the only company who dumped its global CSR program, bypassed the prescriptive, company-and-global-viewpoint-centric approach, ignored the imprecations of well-meaning NGOs, and instead based its program on an interactive process that engaged government, academics, and media.

The message is fairly clear. There are many ways to create meaningful change in China, even as an agenda imperialst.

But if a core goal of your CSR is acknowledgment, appreciation, or even support from audiences here in China, you had better make sure you are addressing the issues that Chinese find most pressing in a manner Chinese can understand that attains results Chinese can appreciate.

Job data may see Aussie rates rise

AUSTRALIAN employment climbed in March and the jobless rate fell to a 31-year low as builders and retailers hired more workers, raising expectations the central bank may raise interest rates as soon as next month.

Employers hired an extra 10,500 staff after adding a revised 23,200 in February. The jobless rate dropped to 4.5 percent from 4.6 percent, the Bureau of Statistics said yesterday in Sydney.

The median estimate of 22 economists was for 15,000 new jobs and an unchanged unemployment rate, according to a survey by Bloomberg News.

A worker shortage is driving up wages and consumer spending, underpinning an economic expansion now in its 16th year. Futures and currency traders have bet the Reserve Bank of Australia may soon raise interest rates after it warned last month inflation is likely to be “too high” this year.

“The Reserve Bank’s concerns about wages growth putting pressure on inflation are justified,” said Jarrod Kerr, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co in Sydney. “It’s a very resilient, very tight labor market.”

The Australian dollar rose to as high as 82.73 US cents from 82.45 US cents immediately before the report. It traded at 82.56 US cents at 4:30pm in Sydney. The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond rose 1 basis point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 5.93 percent.

The number of full-time jobs rose 31,200 in March, the report showed, and part-time employment dropped 21,200. About 10.4 million of Australia’s 20.8 million people are employed, and the economy has created 276,600 new jobs in the past 12 months.

The Reserve Bank raised its benchmark interest rate three times last year after annual inflation breached its target range of between 2 percent and 3 percent for three straight quarters. The overnight cash rate target is at a six-year-high 6.25 percent.

A Credit Suisse index of futures contracts put the probability of a May interest-rate increase at 63 percent.

Top 10 Hiring Don¡¯ts In China

By Frank Mulligan – Recruit China

In a War for Talent market like China you might want to consider your hiring process your Number 1 priority.

You can run as many Six Sigma FMEA projects as you like to improve quality and speed of hiring but sometimes it¡¯s just easier to tell line managers what they should not do. It¡¯s a quick and dirty solution that might give you time while you work out a more detailed, nuanced approach.

This advice is specific to what line managers in China should not do but it could just as easily cover other hot markets likes India or Ireland. Please copy, paste, modify and email as you see fit.

Top 10 Things Line Manager¡¯s In China Should Not Do

Do not wait more than a few hours before you begin to review applicant emails or online application links sent to you by your internal Recruiter.

Do not wait more than one day to respond with a decision about which candidates you want to actually meet. Recruiting is sales and you wouldn¡¯t keep a hot sales lead waiting, would you?

Phone screen all applicants and take the time to cull unsuitable candidates. Aim to bring in only two to three people and hire one.

Don¡¯t assume anything. Tell your Recruiter in detail why you thought his/her presented candidates were unsuitable, or suitable.

Never tell your Recruiter that you will only interview when he has enough candidates ie. more than 4. Interview what he presents now. If you wait more than a week you are likely to lose the current slate

Never miss interviews unless it absolutely critical. When you have to reorganize timing, be flexible and show the candidate that this is not how you normally work. Above all pay them the respect they deserve.

Once you have decided that someone is suitable, get an offer to them within a day or two. If you cannot do this, ask why, and take steps to ensure you are ready the next time. HR can support you with standard contracts etc.

Do not allow yourself to be unduly influenced about not hiring someone. On the other hand if everyone agrees act fast, the time for thinking is over.

Communicate with the successful candidate at least 5 times before he comes on board and meet him at least once. This is not HR¡¯s job.

And finally, be there when the candidate arrives for his first day and make sure you have thought through what you will do with him for that first day.

The Responsibilites Of A Recruiter

When you first start recruiting, the world is your oyster. You get the opportunity to help people find jobs, a noble way to earn your bread and one that promises a good living if you work hard.

Making phone calls, meeting with candidates, and finding new ways to uncover resumes is all part of the fun. Most people enjoy taking your calls, and in terms of respectability, most people really do like recruiters. Ask any parent, and the job of recruiter is a very respectable one. You may not be a doctor, but you help people and you make money.

But very soon, the recruiter runs into the hard facts about employment. The control of the process is all in your mind. The real task of recruiting is not finding candidates or finding job orders, but rather making a connection between an employer and a job-seeker. And at the end of the day, working with people is infinitely harder than working with widgets.

After 3 months or so of getting battered and bruised and quite honestly, failing to place people, as many recruiters do, most newbies start to wish for a job that is less sales oriented and more creative. Recruiting is hard work, but it’s not always smart work.

Maybe this is why so many experienced recruiters are jaded. Having seen the employment process up close, they know that is is unpredictable, and that keeping your word is not a valued commodity for hiring managers or jobseekers when their job is on the line.

It’s a results-driven business. If you want to eat, you do what you can to survive, and that hardens you. You can’t afford to let emotion get into your decision-making process, but emotion is exactly the right selling technique you need to be successful.

So the question this leads to are what are your responsibilities as a recruiter? The client pays you, and so perhaps your responsibility lies in helping them? The problem is you have many clients, and so who gets your best effort? How do you manage your time?

And what about the candidate? Surely they are a client, too? But they don’t pay you, and you can’t afford to be their career counselor in any meaningful way, especially when their job is to get a job, not make you money.

There is no single answer to this question – there is no should here that can be defended. There is no “one right way” that protects all parties and leads to a gleaming city on the hill of profit, respectability, and happy clients. Every situation is different, and in the end, everyone gets burned at some time.

So the real question is not, what is your responsibility as a recruiter, but rather, what is your responsibility to yourself.

Financial Controller – a Sino-German joint venture

Company introduction: Our client was found in June 2004. It is a Sino-German joint venture. The total investment is 5 million EUROs. The German partner has 75% and the Chinese partner has 25% shares. Its main products are automotive mirrors. The German partner, headquarter in Fuerth Germany, is a company well-known for manufacturing automotive mirrors and specialized flat glass products. It has many well known customers like Magna, Schefenacker, Ficosa etc. The Shanghai branch has all the technical support from HQ Germany. The Chinese partner is one of the leading rear view mirror producer in China and a supplier for most of automotive companies in China.

Job Description:
Report To: GM_(German People)
Location: Shanghai Jinshan
1.Take in charge of the budgeting related work where all the required input is mostly related to production performance and production costs.
2.Investigate the situation from budget.
3.Direct costs (consumables, raw material, labour, transport, energy and others) per piece
i.per production step
4.Stock levels
5.CAPEX situation (Investments)
6.Controlling the costs and raises a finger when anything is noticed what is not according to plan.
7.Investigating, collecting information on the shop floor, setting up data collection systems where improvements are necessary
8.Other tasks assigned by GM.

Job Requirements:
1.Bachelor degree in finance, in costing / cost management
2.English: Written and spoken CET-6 (English is a must requirements)
3.Minimum 2 to 3 years experience in a production company
4.High working accuracy
5.High self-motivation

Supply Chain Manager – a Sino-German joint venture

Company introduction: Our client was found in June 2004. It is a Sino-German joint venture. The total investment is 5 million EUROs. The German partner has 75% and the Chinese partner has 25% shares. Its main products are automotive mirrors. The German partner, headquarter in Fuerth Germany, is a company well-known for manufacturing automotive mirrors and specialized flat glass products. It has many well known customers like Magna, Schefenacker, Ficosa etc. The Shanghai branch has all the technical support from HQ Germany. The Chinese partner is one of the leading rear view mirror producer in China and a supplier for most of automotive companies in China.

Job Description:
Report To: Operation Manager
Location: Shanghai Jinshan
1.Planning, scheduling, ordering and arranging transport of raw material (glass & Tape)
2.Raw material warehousing organization and management of related warehouse staff
3.Processing information about customer orders, forecasts, schedules, stock levels of finished goods at company / consignment stocks / vendor managed inventories, production capacities into production orders.
4.Sequencing and release of production orders is done by production planner in the production department.
5.Follow up production orders closely together with production planner.
6.Keeping close contact with planning/scheduling personnel at customer side. Especially when the supply situation might get tight.
7.Planning, organizing, overviewing dispatch of transports of finished goods to our customers.
8.Transport company selection based on costs, service level, speed.
9.Constantly updating the person(s) in charge of purchasing supplementary materials about the production schedules.

Job Requirements:
1.Bachelor degree. Studies should have contained subjects about logistics,production planning, scheduling and warehouse management
2.Minimum 3 to 5 years experience in same or at least similar position
3.English : Written and spoken CET-6( Must requirement)
4.High working accuracy
5.High self-motivation
6.Evidence of successful trouble shooting
7.Extrovert character
8.Reliable

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_mn150sh#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)