Culture Shock! China - A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette, 2nd Edition

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234 CultureShock! China


The term ‘glass ceiling’ has become a buzzword in China,
to the extent that recent university graduates are referring
to ‘glass ceiling’ limitations in their potential career path.
To address concerns, employers must have transparent
hiring and promotion criteria, build strong training and
advancement opportunities, and lay clear career paths that
let Chinese employees feel confident in their future.
One of the most important elements to building a
solid team is assuring effective communication. Chinese
employees prefer Western companies because of merit-based
promotion and transparency. It is important to establish a
vision supported by actionable milestones so that employees

Do’s and Don’ts at Work


„ Do maintain global ethical standards in China, once
you consider compromising because ‘that is how
things are done locally’, it is a slippery slope that is
difficult to reverse.
„ Don’t ignore the advice of local colleagues on obstacles
or barriers that will exist when trying to accomplish
something. Oftentimes, this view is based on China
idiosyncrasies that they have a difficult time explaining
but have often experienced. There is an adage in China
that anything is possible and nothing is possible. You
need the insight of your local colleagues to accomplish
the ‘anything is possible’.
„ Do be clear on the business goal you want to accomplish
and link it to the personal success of your team.
„ Don’t be so strategic and macro that they do not have
a clear roadmap to implement from. Break down
expectations into incremental tasks that are clearly
defined and achievable. You are unlikely to hear
that someone didn’t understand or have the skills
to accomplish something until well past a critical
delivery date.
„ Do give clear feedback to individuals on performance
issues and actions to be undertaken to better
accomplish the job.
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