Tag Archive for Bridging Culture Worldwide

Master Your Korean Business Skills


Master Your Korean Business Skills

For over 20 years, Korea 101 has provided insights and support to a generation of teams in Korean firms worldwide.

In my upcoming six-week Korea 101 Intensive, I will share insights into Korean business that will help you navigate the nuances of the Korean workplace more effectively.

The weekly discussions cover Korea 2025 and its impact on the global workplace.

You can register today to begin. $495.00. This includes one-on-one classes and a complimentary Korea 101 book.

When you register, we will coordinate meeting days and times.

Registration Link

https://buy.stripe.com/7sI03MdKl6rFgLu147

Master Your Korean Business Skills

Don Southerton

Navigating Tariffs and Trade Uncertainty: South Korea’s Next Moves


Navigating Tariffs and Trade Uncertainty: South Korea’s Next Moves
Featured image: Gwangjang Market – Shot by Crystal Jo

By Don Southerton

As in Branding in Asia

As U.S. tariff threats mount, South Korea’s key industries brace for impact, navigating shifting trade policies and economic uncertainty, writes Don Southerton.

When examining trade between nations, 2025 is particularly worrisome. Recent concerns are widespread. Specifically, the Trump administration’s threats of tariffs against countries like South Korea emphasize that there will be no exceptions, even with a Free Trade Agreement revised under Trump 1.0.

Newly appointed President Trump announced that he will introduce a 25% tariff on autos, pharmaceuticals, and semiconductor chips.

More immediately, levies on automobiles could be coming as soon as April 2.

For the full article, go to:

https://www.brandinginasia.com/navigating-tariffs-and-trade-uncertainty-south-koreas-next-moves

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Korea Business: Executive and Group Workshops

Korea Business: Executive and Group Workshops

We offer a full suite of programs, from executive-level Coaching to our popular group Korean Business Culture Workshops for the team and 6-week one-on-one individual classes.

Time proven since 2003.

All our courses provide participants with deep insights into Korean business, whether new hires, on a team assigned to Korea-related projects, or those of you who have been engaged for a long time.

Contact me today for the Executive, individual coaching, or group workshops.

All are excellent programs for anyone who works with Korea or Korean teams.

The classes will be solution-oriented and highly interactive, including Q&A and timely topics.

Call, Text, EM, or Message to discuss what program fits best…. Don

310–866–3777 Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

By the way, I invite you to visit our looping Korean business livestream 24/7.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=yJgVxVtG7JA%3Fsi%3DlR-xN6FH7qcvy2Ya

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Your 24/7 Korean Business Livestream

Your 24/7 Korean Business Livestream

I invite you to visit our looping Korea business livestream 24/7.

Current programming picks include:

The Business Insider

Blindsided

Korean Decision-making

10 Korean Culture Business Insights

Korean Business: Communicate Better, Yes and No

Korea 101

The Savvy Insider

Korean Business- Similar But Different Norms

The Other Side of Don Southerton

With more programming added daily.

Enjoy.

Don Southerton

BCW Korean Business Livestream

BCW Korean Business Livestream

February 17, 2025

We are launching our 24/7 live stream. With nearly 200 YouTube and Korean-facing business videos, I’ve picked the top video for the new Bridging Culture Worldwide: 24/7 Korean Business Livestream 2025.

I invite you to visit anytime, 24/7. Link in Newsletter!

LINK https://www.youtube.com/live/yJgVxVtG7JA?si=fUIIn0Esx7ukaGjc

Current programming picks include:

The Korean Insider

Korean Decision-making

10 Korean Culture Business Insights

Korean Business: Communicate Better, Yes and No

Korea 101

Korean Business- Similar But Different Norms

With more programming added daily.

Don Southerton

Best Market Entry Practices 2025

Best Market Entry Practices 2025..

By Don Southerton

I am a strong advocate for Korean global business. I see tremendous opportunities and am passionate about helping Korean brands succeed overseas and enabling international brands to thrive in the Korean market.

As I have shared, Korean and global companies must recognize the considerable upfront support and investment required to enter markets outside their home countries.

I want to share what I see as best practices for 2025.

Step 1: Do your homework

Invest time and resources in discovering the local market. Seek an expert knowledgeable about the local market and business sector to conduct an objective, detailed competitive analysis. The report should identify the strengths and weaknesses of the competition within the market, strategies that will give you a distinct advantage, the barriers that may hinder your entry into the market, and vulnerabilities in the competition that can be exploited.

Too often, I see a company scratch the surface of its market discovery. Sometimes, this controls initial investment costs by assigning in-house teams to work remotely and conducting research via a Google search.

In other cases, the headquarters staff dispatches a team to do “field work,” attend trade shows and perhaps arrange to visit a few potential partners.

These fall short of a legitimate competitive analysis.

Step 2: Get in front of the right people

For highly recognized U.S. or global brands, setting up meetings is less of a barrier because product or service name recognition does open doors. This recognition at least generates enough interest for a potential partner to want to learn more.

Korean brands entering an overseas market need significant effort to establish credibility upfront.

Arranging solid introductions involves an upfront cost and can be very time-consuming for both international and Korean market entry.

Furthermore, anyone with the skills, savvy, and reputation to facilitate introductions, especially with decision-makers, should not be expected to do so as a favor.

Step 3: Present the brand, product, and service as if it were a first date.

Although this was best done in person in the past, I recognize that introductions and first contacts today are often “virtual.” Any content presented at this stage should be high-quality and well-localized.

I often see repurposed PDF and PPT presentations — not unique, custom-tailored content.

Then, double-check the grammar, spelling, and punctuation of a native speaker and ensure the pages are free of format glitches.

At the very least, interested parties will Google a company—and often you personally—before any meeting, so it’s advisable to have a professional website. Even better are postings by third parties, such as press releases and media articles, that showcase the company as a legitimate business.

Step 4: Share the Vision

During their screening and selection process, global companies will select a top candidate among potential partners based on criteria, the foremost of which is the partner’s solid vision and business plan in the market. They will ask if the local partner has performed a detailed competitive analysis (see Step 1) and then ask for a comprehensive Go-to-Market Business Plan. As a best practice, the Business Plan needs to be detailed, not a three—or four-page company overview.

Like the PDFs or PPTs shared during introductions, the Plan must be free of glitches, poor grammar, and spelling errors. The documents should present an appealing and solid business opportunity.

By the way, a Company PDF highlighting your brand is fantastic, but most potential partners are primarily interested in a solid business and go-to-market plan.

These four steps are best practices that can lead to a successful Letter of Understanding, clarifying in writing the terms that may have been discussed via email and in conversation.

These steps require time, resources, and commitment — there are upfront costs, unlike past and current practices in Korea that traditionally required less investment or were absorbed by the company.

Experts like BCW, with a proven track record, rarely work on a contingency basis. They seek a retainer to cover their time and expenses, with a bonus when a deal is signed or a development fee transaction occurs.

Regarding local market legal support, navigating the cultural and legal nuances of contract negotiations and drafting, and regulatory frameworks, “A little money carefully spent at the front end of market analysis, and during initial negotiations will always save a lot more money later in the process.” — as a trusted legal colleague has noted.

Frankly, global business presents challenges and risks. The effort requires embracing a new model and taking bold actions by committing resources to a project that leads them into uncharted waters, even when a more practical approach seems to involve tackling each stage as it unfolds.

I am open to talking with you about any questions.

I’m also happy to steer you in the right direction.

Plus, we can provide the support and resources needed for your market entry.

Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

www.bridgingculture.com

Trump, Mexico, Carmakers, Tariffs

Trump, Mexico, Carmakers, Tariffs

I note in the recent NIKKEI ASIA article Trump tariffs shake Asian carmakers’ Mexico production strategies: Policy could backfire on GM and Ford while also harming Nissan, Mazda, and Kia.

South Korea’s Kia, an affiliate of HyundaiMotor Group, said during its earnings call that if the tariffs go ahead, the company would have to consider a new destination for the 120,000 K4 sedans it planned to make in 2025 at its Mexican factory then ship to the U.S.

Don Southerton, a consultant to Hyundai, Samsung, and other South Korean companies operating in the U.S., said his clients and their suppliers have been growing increasingly concerned about the potential impact of 25% tariffs on imports from Mexico.

He added that although the additional costs will burden Kia, they noted that “the tariff policy is not at a level that would undermine Kia’s system.”

We’ll see… Feb. 1, 2025, is just around the corner.

By the way…

I’d add that when most OEMs entered the Mexican market under the North American Free Trade Agreement (replaced by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) in 2020), it opened the doors for the flow of goods tariff-free between Canada, Mexico, and the U.S.

That said, before the treaties, substantial goods were produced by Maquiladoras, factories in Mexico that assemble, manufacture, or package products for export to the United States or other countries.

Interestingly, today’s Hyundai Translead was one of the 1st Maquiladoras.

LA Times noted in 1989.

Hyundai Will Build Container Plant in Tijuana : Maquiladoras: South Korean company is the second heavy-industry firm to announce plans in Baja in the wake of relaxed Mexican guidelines.

By the way, cost savings and lower labor costs have not been the sole drivers of carmakers building plants in Mexico.

Mexican government regulations force car companies to assemble cars in Mexico using local and imported components. Thus, all the major car brands have plants in Mexico. I

In other words, for an OEM like the Hyundai Motor Group and KIA to sell cars in Mexico, it needs to also manufacture cars in Mexico.

Do you have a Korea-facing question, business opportunity, or challenge? Let’s talk.

dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

Korean Culture Alert: Lunar New Year 2025

Don Southerton here…

Lunar New Year 2025

Lunar New Year is one of two leading Korean traditional holidays– Seollal.

Next week, Seollal Day falls on Jan. 29, KST.

This year, Monday, Jan. 27, is also a temporary public holiday thanks to the Korean government’s designation. Many will enjoy a six-day break.

The extended holiday will be from Saturday, January 25, through January 30. Many will also take Friday, January 31, off.

Questions? Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

Korean Culture Alert- Christmas 2024

By Don Southerton

Korean Culture Alert- Christmas 2024

Christmas is a popular holiday in South Korea. I am incredibly impressed by the decorations in popular locations across Seoul city, such as Yeouido, Myeongdong, and Cheonggyecheon.

That said, it is also a distinctly Christian holiday.

As the holiday approaches, you may wish to greet Korean colleagues with a common greeting. Sae hae bok man i ba deu say yo!

Hint: When speaking, break the greeting into: sae hae bok—mahne—bah deu say yo.

Sae hae bok man i ba deu say yo! works well both in person, in a card, text, IM, or an email.

It is the best seasonal greeting for New Year’s, too.

Given the time differences, vacations, and work schedules, plan to wish Korea-based friends and colleagues a holiday greeting on Thursday, December 19 (USA/ EU time), Friday KST.

Another option is next week on Monday, December 23, USA/ EU, which coincides with Christmas Eve Day AM in Korea.

Questions on the holidays in Korea? Urgent business issues?

Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

https://www.bridgingculture.com

The Impeachment of South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and the International Business Implications

By Don Southerton

The National Assembly (Parliament) has passed a motion to impeach President Yoon Suk-yeol for issuing a short-lived martial law on December 3rd. The motion suspends Yoon’s role as South Korea’s president.

Prime Minister Han Deok-soo will step in as acting president to lead the nation until Yoon returns to office or until a new president is elected.

The Constitutional Court has six months to review the impeachment motion. If the court upholds the motion, a new presidential election will be held within two months of the court’s decision.

I assume he will be impeached, as most feel the reasons President Yoon’s grounds for martial law were political rather than his reason to “investigate election fraud manipulated by North Korea.”

His motives stem more from frustration with advancing the administration’s agenda and his desire to prevent the opposing party from meeting.

My takeaway is that South Korea’s democracy is vibrant after decades of authoritarianism. Politicians embrace free speech and confrontation, and massive public rallies are typical. What is apparent is that Korean democracy remains strong and resilient.

Concerns about potential trade restrictions regarding the impeachment’s international impact on business have been raised. 

Although the incumbent Trump administration has not explicitly mentioned tariffs on South Korea, there is potential for tariffs on Korean-made goods and services.

More to the point, during the previous Trump administration, in which President Trump met with the former Korean president and engaged in ongoing negotiations, we saw exemptions for Korean products subject to punitive tariffs.

The status of the South Korean leadership in limbo could pose a challenge until the Korean presidency is resolved.

That said, in my opinion, President-elect Trump seems to have greater concerns about U.S. military troops in South Korea than about any bold mention of trade restrictions—unlike with the EU, China, Mexico, and Canada.

About Don 

Don Southerton has a long history of offering Korea-facing market entry, strategy, and consulting services to businesses around the globe.

On business issues, Southerton has contributed to CNBC, The Economist, Automotive News, the BBC, CNN Fortune, Korea Times, Yonhap, tbs eFM, Wall Street Journal, Branding in Asia, and Forbes.

Southerton is the author of more than a dozen books, including, most recently, Korea 101: The Book (2023) and Hyundai Way: Hyundai Speed (Third Edition, 2023).

https://www.bridgingculture.com

https://www.bridgingculture.com

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