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A 2016 round up on international trade

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The toy industry has to deal with some of the world's most fickle customers—children. Product life-cycles are short and, although some toys can become runaway successes, others can entirely fail to ignite. Supply chain management is also notoriously difficult: underestimate demand and shelves remain empty at crucial times, such as Christmas, but overestimate it and the surplus stock may be impossible to sell.

Holiday Inn’s image improves as teams overhaul brand

Intercontinental Hotel Group (IHG), the world's largest hotelier as ranked by number of rooms, has implemented knowledge-sharing by bringing team members together in a dedicated room for the duration of the project – whether three months or one year. Tom Conophy, executive vice-president and CIO, is using these teams to achieve a company goal: making IHG's technology a key brand differentiator.

Collaborative virtual teams evolve at CERN

Some of the world's largest collaborative virtual teams work at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, straddling the French-Swiss border. The research groups, involving thousands of scientists and students from dozens of countries, use a massive particle accelerator to look for the components of dark matter.

How to deploy collaborative virtual teams

"If a global perspective isn't everywhere in the company, you're holding yourself back," says Chris Satchell, chief technology officer of U.S.-based $2.1 billion International Game Technology (IGT). For IGT, which has facilities on every continent but Antarctica, that perspective involves more than knowing overseas sales projections.

American Leather: US company on a global journey

 American Leather is a Dallas-based producer of high-end furniture with annual revenue of around US$90m. Bob Duncan, CEO, explains that the company was initially reluctant to test foreign waters largely because “the US market is so substantial that you don’t have to expand [overseas] to have a significant business. There was always enough opportunity and no need to go to the expense and trouble [of working internationally] when in the US you know the market and know the regulations.”

Edit The UAE: A fertile environment for entrepreneurship

If the Middle East and Africa have seen the biggest improvement in the climate for entrepreneurship, then the United Arab Emirates is the country within that region where change to the business environment has been most dramatic. The 2006 Global

Entrepreneurship Monitor study, an influential report on enterprise around the world, ranked the UAE 41st out of 62 countries for the promotion of an environment for start-up businesses and entrepreneurial activities. In the 2007 study, it had risen to 25th.

Richard Moross, founder of MOO.com

Richard Moross is the 30-year-old founder and Chief Executive of MOO.com, a venture-capital backed on-demand printing company. Mr Moross had the initial idea for MOO – personal business cards – in 2003, when he was 25. A few months later he came up with a unique process that uses a proprietary digital printing technology to mass-produce short-run, variable print jobs.

Today, MOO has 35 employees and has shipped its products to more than 181 countries.

Hinduja Global Solutions

In recent years, the Indian business process outsourcing provider Hinduja Global Solutions (HGS) has conducted a series of cross-border acquisitions in North America, Europe and Asia. So familiar has the process become that Partha Desarkar, CEO of the company, describes M&A as a "core competency" of the firm.

Eden Springs

In the 15 years since its launch, the Switzerland-based company Eden Springs has made 77 acquisitions, all in Europe and most outside Switzerland. To deal with this volume of transactions, the company, which sells watercoolers and related technology, has established a team that identifies risks and works through a standard due diligence checklist. "Good preparation saves a lot of mistakes," says Ranaan Zilberman, Eden Springs&; CEO.

Pictet Asset Management

In 2002, Pictet Asset Management (PAM), the investment business of Pictet & Cie, one of the largest Swiss private banks, decided to create a separate risk function. Set up by Gianluca Oderda, head of risk control, it has demonstrably saved the business from investment losses while proving an attractive selling point to PAM's institutional investors, which provide the bulk of its SFr122bn (US$100bn) in assets.

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