The digitalisation of SME Finance in Asia

The alternative financing sector is growing rapidly in Asia and disrupting traditional access to capital in the region. This brings about new funding opportunities, especially for small and medium-sized companies (SMEs) who large banks have, in the past, hesitated to lend to. However, this also introduces new risks and tensions with traditional capital-funding models.

Asia’s digital millennials: Mobile, social and borderless

The world’s millennial generation is a major driving force behind the digital economy. Their consumption patterns and preferences underpin the growth of new interconnecting ecosystems of recreation and commerce. Asia’s digital millennials: Mobile, social and borderless, an Economist Intelligence Unit report commissioned by the Singapore Economic Development Board, examines the ways in which the consumer behaviour and digital habits of millennials in Asia converge or diverge from those in other parts of the world.

The digitalisation of commerce in Asia

The digitalisation of commerce in Asia has created an explosion of new marketplaces that have democratised buyer and seller access to new opportunities. People have more consumption choices than ever before, and sellers have many new digital pathways towards previously unreached markets. However, millions still remain excluded from these digital marketplaces. What can policymakers and business leaders do to drive more inclusion and maximise the potential of the digital economy?

The state of the global digital economy

 Sponsored by DXC, the podcast series aims to help business leaders understand the way in which digital technology affects their companies, their teams, and their careers. 

“Stressful” disruption offers UK business leaders the chance to grow

The UK is one of Western Europe’s most digital societies. According to the Ecommerce Foundation, the UK e-commerce market is bigger than those of Germany and France combined [1]. And the UK leads the world in the provision of government services online, according to a UN study [2].

Empathy helps German leaders overcome legacy structures

Digital transformation has been high on Germany’s national economic agenda since at least 2011, when the government launched its Industrie 4.0 initiative to revolutionise the country’s celebrated manufacturing base.

Amid digital disruption, French executives must focus on the customer experience

French business leaders have largely welcomed the recent labour law reforms championed by Président Emmanuel Macron [1]. They hope for a boost to productivity through greater employment flexibility. They will need all they can get as France plays digital catch-up.

There is often a feeling that corporate France has trailed other nations in facing up to digital disruption, thinks Malika Mir, group chief digital officer at biopharmaceutical company Ipsen, based in Paris. That situation is evolving fast.

For Dutch executives, adjusting to a digital career path will take time

Historically, international trade delivered prosperity to the Netherlands, but Dutch executives are less convinced that digital disruption will deliver similar benefits.

The Netherlands has a population of just 17.1m [1], yet it is an economic powerhouse. Ranked the 18th largest economy [2] in the world, it is well ahead of Argentina (with a population of 44m) and Saudi Arabia (32m) [3] in the GDP league tables.

Sales leaders seek opportunities for growth

Where customers go, sales executives must surely follow. Today, of course, that means online, and digital techniques to identify sales leads, engage with them, understand their needs and close deals are an essential component of any salesperson’s toolkit.

The impact of this digitisation is not lost on today’s sales executives. They see the impact of digital transformation all around them, from the way in which their teams are organised to the career paths available to them.

Digital experience fuels marketers’ career ambitions

Digitisation has changed almost everything about the way that today’s customers engage with companies. They’re exposed daily to a barrage of online advertising. They use review sites, social networks and price comparison services to decide on purchases. And later, they broadcast their experiences, both good and bad, to global audiences online.

All this has huge implications for marketing professionals, who must be equally adept at using digital tools and approaches to maximise reach and engagement and understand better why consumers make the choices that they do.

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