Tag Archive for Korea Facing

Breaking Through the Contract Bottleneck: How Cultural Insight Saved a Stalled Korea-US Partnership

Photo by Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash

Photo by Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash

The Clients

A Fortune 500 company was finalizing a strategic partnership with a major Korean conglomerate. Despite eight months of productive technical discussions and mutual enthusiasm for the collaboration, the legal agreement had stalled. What began as a target to finalize by year-end had devolved into a frustrating cycle of endless revisions, threatening to derail a potentially transformative business relationship.

The Challenge

The Immediate Problem

A critical bottleneck emerged during contract negotiations. Each time either the Korean or Western teams proposed revisions, the changes required review by both working-level teams before submission to leadership. After leadership approval, American and Korean legal counsel had to review again. If counsel made any edits, the entire process restarted.

The Underlying Pattern

The American legal team faced unprecedented challenges:

– Korean teams questioned even the most basic boilerplate contractual language

– Departments with limited international experience repeatedly revisited terms that had already been agreed upon

– New Korean team members, unfamiliar with prior compromises, demanded fundamental changes

The root cause was a fundamental cultural difference in how contracts are viewed. In Korea, signing a contract formalizes the working relationship—a starting point that will naturally evolve as business conditions change. In the West, a legal agreement is meant to be fixed and unchangeable, binding all parties to specific terms.

The Business Impact

After eight months of effort:

– Legal costs were mounting with no resolution in sight

– Both working-level teams were frustrated and doubted an agreement would ever be signed

– Executive leadership on both sides questioned whether to continue the partnership

– The window for competitive advantage in the market was closing

The Cultural Bridge Approach

As their cross-cultural advisor, I identified three critical misalignments between the Korean and American teams’ expectations regarding contracts, communication cadence, and decision-making authority.

Step One: Establish Weekly Alignment

I organized weekly conference calls that brought together all stakeholders—working-level teams, leadership, and legal counsel. A second call was scheduled as needed, specifically for legal issues. This eliminated the “black box” effect, where each side assumed the other was being deliberately difficult.

Step Two: Reframe the Relationship

Despite mounting frustration, I pressed both sides to publicly acknowledge that the core business relationship remained sound and mutually beneficial. This reframing was critical: it separated contract mechanics from partnership value, preventing either side from walking away.

Step Three: Bridge the Cultural Gap

I facilitated education in both directions:

For the Korean team: Explained Western legal compliance requirements and why certain language could not be modified

For the American team: Clarified Korean expectations regarding contract flexibility and the cultural norm of ongoing adaptation

For both sides: Stressed the business imperative of compromise and limiting future revisions to reach an agreement

The Outcome

With all parties aligned on both the business value and the cultural context, the project moved forward rapidly. The agreement was signed within six weeks, ending an eight-month stalemate and preserving a strategically important partnership.

More importantly, both teams gained a framework for managing future contract amendments, reducing friction and maintaining the relationship’s momentum.

___

KEY INSIGHT

Korean contracts formalize relationships; Western contracts finalize terms. Companies that understand this distinction avoid months of frustration and preserve partnerships that would otherwise collapse under the weight of cultural misalignment.

Don

Now Offering Premium Korea Business Insights

Now Offering Premium Korea Business Insights

Now Offering Premium Korea Business Insights

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Don

The Signature Paradox

The Signature Paradox

Photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash

Over my 20 years working with Korean companies, I’ve repeatedly encountered what I call “the signature paradox.” Korean partners are enthusiastic about a collaboration, have invested months building the relationship, and clearly see the mutual benefit. Yet when it comes time to sign even basic documents, NDAs, non-binding MOUs, letters of intent, they hesitate or simply don’t sign.

This pattern perplexes Western companies. From their perspective, these preliminary agreements are routine steps that protect everyone and demonstrate good faith. They’re often caught off guard when Korean partners who seemed eager suddenly go quiet once paperwork arrives.

I assume it’s risk avoidance, though the reluctance isn’t about the relationship or the project’s commitment.

Rather, it reflects deeply ingrained attitudes about written agreements. In Korean business culture, signing any document—even one explicitly labeled “non-binding”—creates a sense of obligation and potential exposure that executives prefer to avoid until absolutely necessary. There’s an unspoken belief that once something is written and signed, it becomes leverage in future disputes, regardless of what the agreement actually says.

Western legal teams find this especially frustrating. In their framework, unsigned preliminary agreements create MORE risk, not less. The cultural disconnect runs deep: Americans reduce risk through documentation; Koreans often see documentation itself as the risk.

I’ve watched promising partnerships stall for months over reluctance to sign basic NDAs. I’ve seen Western executives question whether their Korean counterparts were genuinely serious about the collaboration. Meanwhile, the Korean side doesn’t understand why Americans won’t simply proceed on the basis of verbal understanding and trust in the relationship. 

Even after agreements are signed, getting Korean partners to return the signed copies can take weeks or months. Not to mention, Korean management is very hierarchical; working-level staff who negotiate the terms often lack the authority to sign, and securing approval from senior leadership adds layers of delay. 

These issues often need to be formally addressed in quarterly Board of Directors meetings, elevating what Western companies view as routine administrative matters to executive-level agenda items.

The challenge becomes how to continue building the relationship while still pressing for the agreements Western companies need. This requires patience, cultural translation in both directions, and often a staged approach where informal understandings gradually transition to written terms as trust deepens.


Big take-away

The hierarchical point explains “why the delays happen,” authority sits higher up the chain than Westerners expect.

Brand Amplification: What Most Companies Get Wrong

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Brand Amplification: What Most Companies Get Wrong

I discuss why global trade shows like CES are built for brand amplification, not places to make deals, and what companies must do to approach market entry, credibility, and long-term growth more strategically.

I am watching it happen again. Startups and SMEs assume that investing in time, travel, and government-backed support will translate directly into deals and partnerships. They staff booths, pitch attendees, and wait for purchase orders.

Meanwhile, major brands like Samsung, LG, Hyundai, and Lotte are operating under an entirely different playbook.

What Major Brands Understand

For example, events like CES aren’t deal-closing events. They are brand amplification platforms.

Korea Strategic Services Don Southerton

Plan Now for 2026: Navigating Year-End Differences in Korean Business Culture

Don’t Wait Until January: Why Your Korea Strategy Needs Immediate Attention.

Getting ahead in 2026: Leveraging Korea’s Year-End Work Cycle

Overseas Korean companies’ teams often go into holiday mode; plants close for routine end-of-year maintenance; offices shut down; and employees take vacations.

In Korea, we observe restructuring, end-of-year team meetings, annual reports to leadership, and some members taking on new assignments.

That said, we should remember that most Korean expats still go to work every day…

In fact, I recall meeting with senior leadership on December 31, when the HQ parking lot and building halls were mostly empty—except for the Korean CEO and most of the expats.

Additionally, throughout the morning, newly assigned Korean expats visited the CEO’s office to introduce themselves, and colleagues joined during these visits.

My recommendation is to develop a strategy now so we can get a head start for early 2026—the Korean teams will be prepared. www.bridgingculture.com

Don Southerton

CES 2026 Update

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Why Work With Us

• Korea-exclusive focus – We understand your market and culture

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Take Action

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Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

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Why Western Executives Need More Than Experience to Succeed in Korea Business

This is the third in my “Executive Briefing” series.

When examining Korean global business, we first need to recognize that no two of us are alike, and the same applies to Westerners and Koreans. Each of us has our own unique cultural strengths, skills, and work experience.

I am often reminded of the false assumption that Western executives and teams doing business in Korea believe they will “get it” and “learn as they go.” Without continuous coaching, this common default rarely succeeds. Even more problematic is that some team members, without support and mentoring, may “never get it.”

Arguments that such support can wait often come with a price tag, missteps along the way, poor productivity, and miscommunications.

A push back attributed to the costs for support is often cited, too, as well as what appears to be dismissing or delaying any action until there is a real, unavoidable need. 

The latter can range from denial with hopes that things will work out, to concealing these issues because they might reflect poorly on local Korean management. Again, regardless of such hopes to dismiss and not engage fail to recognize what I see as decades of history to the contrary.


Most non-Korean executives hired to lead Korean business divisions are industry veterans. They understand business well and are experts. Unfortunately, they often know little about Korean business practices or feel their previous experience is sufficient.

Even more significant, I found that some feel that given time, they will get Koreans to do business their way and follow the model and methods they polished and acquired working for other firms, often Japanese or German.

Contrary to this hope and recognizing the considerable work practices and corporate structure changes underway in Korea, such as dress codes, fewer hierarchical titles, and a more balanced workday, I do not see overseas Korean firms changing much in their core and deeply rooted business values and processes. Moreover, American, German, or Japanese business practices like those in Korea are rooted in their own respective intrinsic cultures.

My suggestion for Western executives eager to bring change is to become fully versed in Korean methods. Learn about the company and its partners. Learn how Koreans manage. Drill deep.

This learning does not occur without considerable insight, mentoring, and coaching. In turn, once this groundwork is completed, they can offer some sound approaches for introducing new business methods and practices without pushback.

In both cases…
Ongoing support of non-Korean management is a must for all Korea-facing organizations. Mentoring and coaching are the keys. Experience and skills vary, so support must be tailored to address individual needs.

More significantly, mentoring requires a deep mutual understanding of both Korean and Western business, not to mention the specific Western and Korea-based firms and the industry in general.

About Don Southerton

Don is a long-time C-suite advisor providing strategy, consulting, and mentoring to Korea-based global businesses. He writes and speaks frequently on Korea and Korean business-related topics.

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Executive Briefing #2: Why we need Korean business cultural training 

By Don Southerton

Q. Why do we need Korean cultural training

A. This may be the first time working with a Korean team. This opportunity brings with it a great opportunity and the need to better understand the new partner’s culture, workplace norms, and expectations.

In most cases, Western teams will interact with Korean HQ and expatriate teams. Some of the teams will hold a line managerial position with day-to-day responsibilities alongside Western managers, while others will hold key management C-level positions, such as CEO, COO, or CFO. In many, if not most, cases, these teams may operate as a “shadow management” with considerable oversight and operational control over local operations.

With the best of intentions, the Korean teams will look to build strong collaboration and teamwork and try to avoid a sense of us and them. However, they do bring Korean work norms that can conflict with Western work-life balance and Western working methods. 

More so, Korean teams may make seemingly one-sided decisions with the company’s best interest in mind but without consulting local teams, causing mistrust.

A solid training and coaching program followed by ongoing support can address differences, such as sharing work styles, hierarchy, and comfort levels, plus providing workarounds.

Q. What are some typical issues that arise, especially without training or coaching?

A. As with all individuals, no two of us are alike –and the same goes for Westerners and Koreans… Each has their unique strengths, skills, experiences, and personalities.

Expecting local teams to “get it” without support and training seldom works. Even if a better understanding of the work culture eventually occurs over time, this “learn as you go” approach is costly, contributing to stress, poor productivity, and even employee turnover. Sadly, the most common mistake I see is waiting to see if tensions rise, and workers quit before acting. 

 Q. Can you cite an example of misunderstandings resulting in mistrust, loss of time, resources, and profits?

A. A challenge I was recently asked to address was the intervention by the expatriate partners in decisions that are best handled by local Western teams.

Probing the issue, I learned that based on extensive experience in the market and industry, the local Western management felt these decisions were often short-sighted, reactive, and not aligned with their well-thought-out strategy. Some saw it as a “cut twice, measure once” approach and “ready, fire, aim.” 

Of even more significant concern were one-sided decisions not resulting from the collaboration. In any case, local management felt their input and expertise were being marginalized. As pressure to meet HQ expectations, avoid any negative news, as well as missing Sales or Production “Targets” they saw increased intervention by the expatriate teams.

In this case, I worked with the Western teams to provide some proven workarounds, particularly tempering the Korean teams’ pressing for immediate results.

Specifically, I shared ten steps.

1. To soften jumping to implement a stop-gap plan with hopes of producing immediate results, look to minimize the anxiety for both the local Korean team and the headquarters team. Please be sure to show confidence that the challenge can be overcome.

2. Acknowledge your team’s high engagement and assure the Korean teams that action will be taken promptly.

3. As a next step upon receiving a directive from Korea, have an informal discussion with local Korean teams to brief them on action steps that enable the team to work through what needs to be explored more deeply.

4. Follow up with email correspondence confirming the verbal discussion.

5. Allow a day or two for the Korean team to review your action plan. In many cases, the Korean teams are not familiar with local practices and the vocabulary used to describe Western technical nuances.

The local expat teams may also want to report back to Korea on progress. HQ leadership is ultimately responsible, so the better informed they are, the more trust they will have in local teams — Korean and Western — that the project will progress.

6. Remember that you may receive only some feedback promptly because of time differences.

7. Conducting informal daily updates to the Korean teams and sharing the steps undertaken with the local Koreans can also be helpful.

8. Even better is reporting positive accomplishments in your review process.

9. It is essential to address the potential trade-offs and risks as action steps leading to solutions and assuring the team that these steps will not impede the project and may, in fact, avoid costly setbacks.

10. Finally, having said all this, maintaining trust through strong relationships between Korean and Western local organizations is essential.

Q. What have Koreans told you about Americans? Work habits, commitment, etc.

A. If you ask Korean expats how they perceive Americans and Westerners in general, responses would be very positive and respectful, especially toward Western work ethics and work habits. Koreans see great value in American and Western teams providing them with new insights, perspectives, and best practices.

Q. What might be covered in Korean business culture training?

I see the training as twofold — 1) providing teams with an understanding of the Korean partner’s affiliate company history, heritage ( challenges overcome), trends, and expectations! , and 2) sharing the Korean workplace and its norms, practices, and workarounds. One nuance I share is that Korean overseas operations can differ from those in Korea, something I am most familiar with. 

Above all, a best practice is to celebrate similarities and shared values when possible, along with instilling an awareness of and respect for cultural differences.

Addressing the team’s questions and concerns is also vital with issues, such as work-life balance, safety and quality processes and procedures, and Korean partners’ overall expectations.

Q. Anything else?

A. To conclude, the need for cross-cultural training programs for local employees and management is a high priority.

The assumption that local and expatriate teams can bridge cultural gaps through practical on–the–job experience might work with those few highly intuitive individuals with the exceptional ability to assimilate cultures.

What stands out in numerous studies, however, is the need for ongoing multicultural training, that can successfully impact people, especially those who need to quickly adapt to new or changing business culture and values, while fostering sensitivity and teamwork among all company members.

Finally, I have found a tiered service model — training, mentoring, and ongoing strategic support- to be the most effective approach for an organization. For leadership, they most often benefit from one-on-one coaching, too.

C-Suite, Executives, and Teams

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https://bridgingculture.com/executive-briefing-1-understanding-decision-making-in-korean-business-culture

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Hyundai Raid 

Hyundai Raid 
© Parker Puls/Bloomberg News

I contributed to a Wall Street Journal article on last week’s immigration raid at the Hyundai plant in Georgia. Reporting continues. Don Southerton

The Trump administration wants tougher immigration enforcement. It also wants Asian manufacturing powerhouses to pour investment into U.S. factories.

Those goals are now clashing because Asian companies are having trouble getting enough work visas for personnel needed to get the U.S. plants running, say immigration specialists.

Last week, the contradiction was highlighted when the U.S. carried out an immigration raid in Georgia and arrested some 300 South Koreans helping to build a Hyundai Motor joint-venture battery plant.

Now the South Koreans are expected to head home soon under a diplomatic deal, and experts say it might take longer and cost more for Asian companies to build their U.S. factories without the specialists they need.

President Trump hinted at such concerns when he wrote on social media that his administration “will make it quickly and legally possible” for foreign investors “to LEGALLY bring your very smart people, with great technical talent to build World Class products.”

One cause of the issue is America’s shortage of skilled technical workers, which stems from a long-term decline in manufacturing employment and the offshoring of production. The U.S. lacks the workforce needed to support advanced industries such as semiconductors and biotechnology, according to a July report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.

That is why it is common for hundreds of employees from the home country to descend on big project sites. Companies such as Hyundai and its battery-making partner, LG Energy Solution, often bring along the same contractors they work with at home. Around 250 of the roughly 300 South Koreans arrested worked for contractors, LG Energy said. Japan said Tuesday that three of its citizens working at the site were also detained.

The detainees largely held temporary visas suitable for short-term training and supervising purposes, such as the B-1 visa, and many were working at the site as instructors, according to South Korean officials. Some had arrived in the U.S. through a visa-waiver program that allows entry for up to 60 days for travel and certain limited business activities, they said.

Don Southerton, a consultant who has advised South Korean companies including Hyundai on operating in the U.S., said some Korean firms and their contractors in the past used visa-waiver programs for short-term travel or business visits without triggering scrutiny.

“I don’t think they ever had to worry about it,” he said. “And there has been so much encouragement for these plants to be” in the U.S., he said.

U.S. authorities said those arrested illegally crossed the border, entered through a visa waiver program that prohibited them from working or overstayed their visas.

Hyundai said it was reviewing its processes to ensure that its partners “maintain the high standards of legal compliance that we demand of ourselves.”

Other nonimmigrant employment visa types allow companies to bring in workers for longer periods, but they aren’t easy to get.

The H-1B visa lets companies operating in the U.S. hire foreign workers in specialty jobs such as tech and engineering. The annual cap recently has been under 100,000 visas.

The E-2 visa is designed for specialized workers at U.S. units of companies from regions with commerce treaties with the U.S., a category that includes Taiwan, South Korea and Japan. Approval standards have been getting tougher as applications surge in South Korea, whose firms are overseeing many large projects in the U.S., said Hong Chang-hwan, a lawyer at Seoul-based firm Kookmin Emigration who specializes in U.S. immigration matters.

“The U.S. might say such workers can be hired locally, but Korean firms say such talent is difficult to find and deploy quickly in a plant that you’re trying to get going on schedule,” he said.

In 2023, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing sought to bring in some 500 experienced workers to accelerate construction, igniting a protest by Arizona’s construction unions. TSMC said the workers were there only for short-term support, with no impact on local hiring.

South Korea’s trade and industry minister said last year that visa challenges have made it hard for many South Korean conglomerates to dispatch workers to the U.S. and increase investments there.

In July, Rep. Young Kim (R., Calif.) and others introduced a bill that would allot 15,000 visas for South Koreans with specialized education or expertise. The bill, proposed in varying versions over the past decade, hasn’t moved forward.

Similar visa categories have been created for countries such as Australia and Singapore through free-trade agreements. The U.S. grants more than 10,000 E-3 visas annually to Australian nationals in specialized fields, enabling them to work for up to two years in the U.S., renewable indefinitely.

Wendy Cutler, a former U.S. trade negotiator who is now at the Asia Society Policy Institute, said South Korea pushed hard for special visas like those granted to Australia and Singapore when it negotiated its own free-trade deal with the U.S., which took effect in 2012. Seoul ultimately didn’t get them, although it did get included in the visa-waiver program.With investment a U.S. priority, “a longer-term solution is urgently needed,” Cutler said.

Jiyoung Sohn at jiyoung.sohn@wsj.com and Yang Jie at jie.yang@wsj.com

Questions?  Comments?   Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

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