0:06 Finding and managing international partners [Jon Engelstad] One of the things that I do
0:27 when I’m looking at a market, and I’ve had great success with this, is I will,
0:31 through our local U S Commercial Service office contact the Commercial Service offices
0:36 in the countries I may be interested in and then start a dialogue that way.
0:40 They’ll start researching that market for me, we can maybe do an Initial Market Search
0:44 or develop it into a Gold Key but, you know, we can sit down and talk
0:48 about what I’m looking for, what my product is, the kind of customer that I’m looking for,
0:53 and they’ll help me research that and kind of narrow things down so that when it comes time
0:59 to make those contacts I have the right people to talk to.
1:02 [Greg Moll] It’s the quality and vetting if these people even have an address,
1:07 and using the Commercial Service was probably our number one way of easily vetting
1:14 down a client rather than, I call it “chasing rabbits.”
1:18 It avoids chasing rabbits or throwing darts on a wall.
1:21 It’s an easy way to find out if a client is valid.
1:24 [Heather Ranck] What I found a lot of times is that small businesses
1:27 and small manufacturers are best partnered with other small companies overseas.
1:32 Sometimes companies make the mistake of thinking that they should partner with someone
1:36 who has hundreds of different products that they represent,
1:40 but a lot of times you don’t get the focus that you need from them
1:43 when the overseas partner is too unfocused or has too much on their plate.
1:48 [Jon Engelstad] Another thing about identifying partners is never second guess
1:52 where you might find them because the world is getting to be a much smaller place.
1:56 A really great example is, I was at a farm show in Kansas one time and I did not talk to anybody
2:03 for three days except the young gentleman from South Africa and is it turns out I was going
2:07 to South Africa about a month later, and that relationship developed into my first sale
2:13 in Soth Africa, which has developed into several other dealers that came from that.
2:19 So never second guess where you might find them, and never, you know,
2:23 close the door on options of where to look.
2:27 [Kent Gibbons] The market’s full of good products, but people buy from people,
2:31 and that’s one thing in the international market, is there is a level of trust.
2:35 Untilyou build that, as I said, can you talk to people on Skype you can talk
2:39 to people all day long on the phone, and until you show up in-country, at a trade show,
2:44 and meet them in person and develop a relationship,
2:47 a lot of times your international sales won’t go anywhere.
2:51 [Doug Hartley] Finding a good partner really comes down to you knowing your business.
2:55 If you can give clear guidance and instructions and you know clearly the kind
3:02 of company you’re looking for, and you can communicate that to me, I can find those guys,
3:08 if they exist, and I can give you a selection.
3:11 Then it comes down to your own judgment as to which one of those is a company that’s for you.
3:18 [Don Aberle] The thing about international sales,
3:21 you never know which one’s legit, which one’s real.
3:26 The key thing is respond to all of them, ask the appropriate questions,
3:29 quickly qualify them, and move on.
3:33 I go back to one guy in the one country that started off with four units.
3:38 You know, he asnwered their questions correct and we continue to follow-up with them.
3:43 [Heather Ranck] The US Commercial Service can also help screen potential partners.
3:46 Sometimes you’re approached by someone who wants to be your partner and you need
3:50 to mke sure they are legitimate.
3:52 US Commercial Service, with our foreign offices, we’re able to do background checks
3:56 on potential customers to make sure that they are who they say they are.
4:02 We can check their references, we can get financial statements, and prepare a report
4:06 for you called an International Company Profile, which is basically a vetting.
4:11 Our overseas offices can even interview your potential partner
4:15 and ask them specific questions that you want us to screen them for.
4:19 [Chris Harris] Partner management, ongoing partner management,
4:21 is as crucial and I see it as the next stage.
4:24 Once you’ve selected a partner, now you need to move into the role of,
4:29 quite simply put, business planning.
4:32 A proper business plan needs a vision you both need to know where you want to be, and what,
4:37 we use like a three year horizon as to where we want to be with this product in this region
4:42 with that particular partner in three years.
4:44 They also need to know that and that vision then leads to a plan, a fixed plan that’s on a piece
4:53 of paper, it’s got quantafiable numbers.
4:56 Next level, then, is the management of execution.
5:00 So you’ve got a plan, now you’ve got to stay in touch with them.
5:03 And the last thing that is important, on a regular basis, is the review.
5:09 So you’ve got to look at what that plan was all about, how you executed against it
5:16 and execution is never the same as the plan, so that’s ok.
5:21 You know, sometimes you exceeded it, you mustn’t ignore that.
5:24 Go in and find out why you exceeded, why did well and repeat that same, you know,
5:29 great thing you were doing and get rid of the stuff that you you were doing bad.
5:32 So there’s four elements that, there’s a vision, a plan, execution and then review.
5:36 We call it the viper strategy.
5:39 [Doug Hartley] Be flexible and be open minded.
5:42 There is no one way of doing business.
5:45 Don’t insist on one specific mode of payment because that’s how you’ve always done it,
5:53 things may be done differently in this particular market get to know your customer.
5:58 They want to trust you as much as you want to trust them.
6:02 They’re looking for a long term relationship.
6:06 Come prepared with good will, come having done your homework, talk to US Commercial Service
6:16 and any of your business colleges who may have already worked in the market
6:26 so that you know what local conditions are like.