Home Library Translate
A A A
Share »
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on LinkedIn
Connect »

Blog: Project Management

Menu

  • This Blog's Home
  • Guest Writer Submissions
  • Policies
  • To Subscribe to a Blog
  • About
  • Feedback

A Project With China

By Alicia Trelles-Duckett on December 1, 2014

The 21st century has brought a great increase in projects with companies in the growing economies of Brasil, Russia, India and China (for which Goldman Sachs coined the acronym of “BRIC” countries). There is no denying that, with the emphasis of multinationals in fulfilling the demands of those growing middle classes, many project managers can expect to perform projects with team members from those countries sooner or later.

A good friend recently was asked to go to Shenzhen to manage a project for his company’s Chinese business partner. As any good international traveler would do, my friend Fareed did as much research as possible before going to China. He read plenty of books on Chinese culture and customs; he got a Chinese cookbook; he even rented Chinese movies in Mandarin (with subtitles in English of course).

All this research yielded the following picture: the Chinese are a hard-working, collectivistic society. They are quite accepting of people in power and are highly contextual (which means that they take their cues from the situation more readily than from what is written).

I saw Fareed after his trip and asked him how the trip, and the project, had gone. “Great” he said “but instead of highly collectivistic I found everyone in China to be highly individualistic”. Based on his research, he had gone expecting people to act based on what was best for their group. Yet, everyone from the local builder, developer, driver, even the secretary took initiative and performed tasks depending on what was best for them, not necessarily their company. That came as a surprise.

We chatted about it at some length and finally arrived at the following conclusions, which we will apply to our future projects: (1) although a highly collectivistic culture in the past, given recent economic and other liberalization, Chinese culture may be changing from highly to moderately collectivistic. Maybe some day they will become an individualistic culture, much like the American or the Australian. And (2) whatever ideas you may have about another culture, even when based on research or experience, be ready to toss them out the window, as cultures are alive and constantly changing.

« Previous Next »

Search Our Site

Recent Blog Posts

  • Agile project management
  • Project or Operation?
  • To RAID or not to RAID
  • Project management certification just got easier
  • The PMO Blues
  • Agile Reporting From Waterfalls
  • Green project management
  • The Pareto Thing
  • My own moving country project
  • Cultures In The Project

Categories

  • Agile Projects
  • Basics and Overviews
  • Basics and Overviews
  • Career
  • Communications
  • Earned Value
  • General Resources
  • Implementing Plans
  • International Projects
  • Monitoring
  • PMO
  • Program Management
  • Project Reporting
  • Project Startup
  • Project Termination
  • Requirements Definition
  • Risk Management
  • Team Building, Leadership
  • Tools and Software
  • Uncategorized

Related Library Topics

  • Communications
  • Coordinating Resources
  • Creativity and Innovation
  • Decision Making
  • Group Skills
  • Leadership
  • Management
  • Management by Objectives
  • Operations Management
  • Organizational Change
  • Organizing Resources
  • Performance Management
  • Planning (General)
  • Problem Solving
  • Program Management
  • Risk Management
  • Systems Thinking
  • Project Management

Library's Blogs

  • Boards of Directors
  • Building a Business
  • Business Communications
  • Business Ethics, Culture and Performance
  • Business Planning
  • Career Management
  • Coaching and Action Learning
  • Consulting and Organizational Development
  • Crisis Management
  • Customer Service
  • Facilitation
  • Free Management Library Blogs
  • Fundraising for Nonprofits
  • Human Resources
  • Leadership
  • Marketing and Social Media
  • Nonprofit Capacity Building
  • Project Management
  • Quality Management
  • Social Enterprise
  • Spirituality
  • Strategic Planning
  • Supervision
  • Team Building and Performance
  • Training and Development
About Feedback Legal Privacy Policy Contact Us
Free Management Library, © Copyright Authenticity Consulting, LLC ®; All rights reserved.
  • Graphics by Wylde Hare LLC
  • Website maintained by Caitlin Cahill

By continuing to use this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy.X