Since the first COVID cases hit the news, China has taken rigorous measures. Travel restrictions and quarantine requirements have restricted foreign business people from visiting their China operations and complicated expat assignments. At the same time, the local market environment has become more challenging, with slowed growth, disruption in the supply chain, and geopolitical uncertainties.
Under these circumstances, we have seen overseas head offices and shareholders face the following issues in their China operations:
- Tension with JV partners. We've observed tensions rise between Chinese and international shareholders. This sometimes results in delays or even blocked new investments. Root causes are, among others, diverging business interests in the JV operation or cultural misunderstandings. As the Chinese and global markets have all suffered from the pandemic, businesses are not performing as well as before, which exacerbates the tension.
- Lacking transparency. Many international shareholders used to communicate primarily with two or three top executives of their China operation. Regular business and financial reporting formats do not always contain sufficient information. Critical information may even be held back.
- Mismanagement. We've also seen cases where the in-country management team fails to provide enough financial transparency or make reliable forecasts. The financials show a significant deviation between budgets and actuals. The returns on investments are unclear or far away from business cases, and operational efficiency doesn't seem to be satisfactory.
- Irregularities. Past incidents may cause head office management concerns about the professionalism or ethics of their in-country management team. Or maybe there are signs of potential compliance issues coming from whistleblowers. Overseas head offices could not necessarily perform regular internal audits in the last few years due to travel restrictions, and it is unclear whether the internal control system is still working.
Our experience has taught us four golden rules in dealing with those situations.
1. Stay focused and act quickly to achieve tangible changes.
Maintaining business operations is a top priority. We use an initial hypothesis/assumption-based approach to remain focused on the key issues instead of a boiling-the-ocean approach, whether it's about e.g., acquiring transparency in specific incidents or facing difficulty in moving a strategic project forwards. Our senior team performs interviews, reviews documents, and digs into financial reports to verify the assumptions based on our local market know-how and experience. As time is usually critical, targeted measures are better than perfect solutions with lengthy analyses. Our clients always rely on our hands-on support to quickly take actions and relief their stress.
2. Safeguard high-value investments first
China often plays a critical role in international companies' global strategy. The market is huge and changing rapidly, requiring companies to constantly make high-value investments in the local supply chain, production facilities, or IT infrastructure. We know well that it's important to pay special attention to those projects and ensure their successful implementation.
3. Communication is key
We've seen many issues originate from misunderstanding or lack of trust. Whether it's about aligning understanding with JV partners or gaining support from the in-country management team to fully implement the global strategy of the overseas shareholders, our clients need us to act as a mediator between the parties to help achieve mutual benefits. In addition, we support our overseas shareholders in building direct communication with other local stakeholders such as financial institutions, customers, or suppliers.
4. Knowledge of local market practices is invaluable
Having unique political and cultural backgrounds, business practices in China differ from western countries. One major issue lies in the transparency of rules and regulations. Our clients often hear from their JV partners saying that "things don't work this way in China." It is, however, hard for them to judge whether or not this is true. Our clients often appreciate hearing our views as an independent advisor with deep knowledge of the local market practice.
AlixPartners has helped boards of directors and overseas head offices overcome those situations with seasoned professionals who don't just consult but deliver operational execution. Our interim managers bring a wealth of experience to the table, gained from in-house management roles and years of sector-specific advisory work. Moreover, our deep expertise in business turnaround enables us to support a full transition from old to new management. With our focused and hands-on approach, we quickly get to the core of the issue and quickly help fix the major concerns for our clients.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.