POPULARITY
"Entrepreneurs don't complain about problems -- they solve them". This quote is from Porter Erisman, the former Vice President of Alibaba Group, joining the company just as it moved out of founder Jack Ma's apartment. In Porter's new book, Alibaba's World, he wrote about this concept and it hit me hard! Could this be why people often refer to me as positive? Are all entrepreneurs positive? Perhaps, and, either way, it got me thinking about different personality types, and what makes an entrepreneur tick. Through my lens, problems really are just opportunities that are yet to be solved. What could be an interesting way to reframe this, is that not all problems need to be solved, and when you look like that, the problem becomes a choice. To solve or not to solve, that is the answer! Yes, no, or not yet... Either way, the problem is no longer a problem, and there is no need to complain.
Tháng 9/2014, một công ty Trung Quốc mà hầu hết người Mỹ chưa từng nghe nói tới đã tổ chức cuộc lên sàn niêm yết lần đầu (IPO) lớn nhất trong lịch sử - hơn Google, Facebook và Twitter cộng lại. Alibaba, giờ đây là một trong những công ty thương mại điện tử lớn nhất thế giới, gần như thoát khỏi nhận biết của phương Tây suốt cả chục năm, trong khi đó xây dựng một cơ sở khách hàng lớn hơn gấp đôi quy mô cơ sở khách hàng của Amazon, và xử lý một lượng giao dịch thương mại điện tử khổng lồ ở Trung Quốc. Chuyện này đã xảy ra như thế nào? Và nó đi cùng với công cuộc cải cách ra sao? Trong Thế giới Alibaba Của Jack Ma, tác giả Porter Erisman, một trong những nhân sự người phương Tây đầu tiên làm việc cho Alibaba và là người dẫn dắt chiến lược marketing quốc tế của công ty này từ năm 2000 đến 2008, cho thấy Jack Ma là một thầy giáo dạy tiếng Anh người Trung Quốc hai lần trượt đại học, từ vô danh nổi lên thành nhà sáng lập Alibaba và dẫn dắt công ty này từ giai đoạn khởi nghiệp chật vật gian khổ trở thành đối thủ áp đảo lĩnh vực thương mại điện tử của thế giới. Ông chia sẻ những câu chuyện tan nát trong sự sụp đổ dotcom, đối mặt và đánh bại eBay và Google, thương lượng với các quan chức chính phủ khó lường, và chịu đựng những tư vấn sai lầm của chuyên gia nước ngoài, tất cả để xây dựng nên đế chế thống trị thương mại điện tử toàn cầu ngày nay. --Về Fonos:Fonos là ứng dụng sách nói có bản quyền. Trên ứng dụng Fonos, bạn có thể nghe định dạng sách nói của những cuốn sách nổi tiếng nhất từ các tác giả trong nước và quốc tế. Ngoài ra, bạn được sử dụng miễn phí nội dung Premium khi đăng ký trở thành Hội viên của Fonos: Tóm tắt sách, Ebook, Thiền định, Truyện ngủ, Nhạc chủ đề, Sách nói miễn phí cho Hội viên.--Tải ứng dụng Fonos tại: https://fonos.app.link/tai-fonosTìm hiểu về Fonos: https://fonos.vn/Theo dõi Facebook Fonos: https://www.facebook.com/fonosvietnam/Theo dõi Instagram Fonos: https://www.instagram.com/fonosvietnam/Đọc các bài viết thú vị về sách, tác giả sách, những thông tin hữu ích để phát triển bản thân: http://blog.fonos.vn/
Resumos de Livros de Negócios, Marketing, Finanças e Desenvolvimento Pessoal - Idiomus
Baixe nosso aplicativo e teste gratuitamente, acesse: https://go.idiomus.com/pod-2 Esse é um resumo do livros: Por Dentro do Alibaba - Como a maior empresa de e-commerce do mundo está mudando os rumos dos negócios on-line, do autor Porter Erisman, produzido pela nossa equipe. Se você quiser ter acesso a ele em inglês, no formato de áudio e texto, com a tradução, acesse: https://go.idiomus.com/pod-2 Estude inglês com resumos dos maiores livros de negócios, finanças e desenvolvimento pessoal. Só na Idiomus você melhora o seu inglês enquanto aprende sobre oratória, finanças, vendas, produtividade, liderança e inteligência emocional.
Alibaba, ahora la empresa de comercio electrónico más grande del mundo, escapó de la atención del mundo occidental durante más de diez años, mientras construía una base de clientes que sumaba más del doble de la de Amazon y se encargaba de la mayor parte de las transacciones de comercio electrónico en China. ¿Cómo pasó? ¿Y qué significó ser parte de tan revolucionario proyecto?En este libro, Porter Erisman, uno de los primeros empleados occidentales de Alibaba y jefe de marketing internacional entre 2000 y 2008, muestra cómo Jack Ma se levantó de la oscuridad para fundar Alibaba y dirigirla, desde que era una startup en dificultades hasta convertirse en el jugador de comercio electrónico más dominante del mundo.A partir de historias sobre cómo resistió el desplome de las puntocom, enfrentó a eBay y Google, negoció con el impredecible gobierno chino y soportó los consejos equivocados de expertos extranjeros, el autor analiza el papel de Alibaba como un heraldo del nuevo panorama global de negocios, con su enfoque en Oriente en lugar de Occidente, en los mercados emergentes sobre los desarrollados, y el ágil emprendedor sobre el titán de la industria. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
6 Billion Shoppers is written by Porter Erisman and is a travelogue of E-Commerce. Join me on this amazing journey and share your feedback on feedback.amansidhu@gmail.com, on Instagram (@amanssidhu), Twitter (@amandeep412) and on Facebook (@Amandeep Singh). Subscribe and share this with your friends and do suggest if you would want me to review any book. Cheers...
6 Billion Shoppers is written by Porter Erisman and is a travelogue of E-Commerce. Join me on this amazing journey and share your feedback on feedback.amansidhu@gmail.com, on Instagram (@amanssidhu), Twitter (@amandeep412) and on Facebook (@Amandeep Singh). Subscribe and share this with your friends and do suggest if you would want me to review any book. Cheers...
En el programa de hoy les trajimos a Porter Erisman uno de los emprendedores más influyentes del mundo, hablamos de cómo ayudar al crecimiento de su hijo con alimentación y cómo prepararnos para la muerte.
En el programa de hoy les trajimos a Porter Erisman uno de los emprendedores más influyentes del mundo, hablamos de cómo ayudar al crecimiento de su hijo con alimentación y cómo prepararnos para la muerte.
Yesterday our host Chloe Thomas attended Europe's largest dedicated marketplaces event - Retail Without Borders. Listen for her takeaways on the future of eCommerce, emerging markets, China, Tmall, Taoboa and more. This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
(Bloomberg)--Bloomberg Markets with Carol Massar and Cory Johnson.u0010GUEST:u0010Porter Erismanu0010Former Director:Corp Communicationu0010Alibaba.com Corpu0010Discussing his book "Six Billion Shoppers" on companies will the global e-commerce boom. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
(Bloomberg)--Bloomberg Markets with Carol Massar and Cory Johnson.u0010GUEST:u0010Porter Erismanu0010Former Director:Corp Communicationu0010Alibaba.com Corpu0010Discussing his book "Six Billion Shoppers" on companies will the global e-commerce boom.
Alibaba is one of the world’s most dynamic and powerful digital brands today, and yet it originates not from Silicon Valley but from China. As a former Vice President at the business, Porter Erisman had front-row seats to the development of Alibaba from Jack Ma’s apartment into what it is today. In his book, ‘Alibaba’s World’, Porter details the rise of the company against the backdrop of China’s digital revolution and the challenges faced by US web giants trying to crack the local market. In our conversation, we discussed how Jack Ma wrote the operating system for e-commerce to work in China, what brands can learn from the innovative ways that Chinese sell things online, and how everything from wealth management to insurance will soon be re-invented by these new digital platforms as they move from retail to financial services.
Alibaba is one of the world’s most dynamic and powerful digital brands today, and yet it originates not from Silicon Valley but from China. As a former Vice President at the business, Porter Erisman had front-row seats to the development of Alibaba from Jack Ma’s apartment into what it is today. In his book, ‘Alibaba’s World’, Porter details the rise of the company against the backdrop of China’s digital revolution and the challenges faced by US web giants trying to crack the local market. In our conversation, we discussed how Jack Ma wrote the operating system for e-commerce to work in China, what brands can learn from the innovative ways that Chinese sell things online, and how everything from wealth management to insurance will soon be re-invented by these new digital platforms as they move from retail to financial services.
Porter Erisman, the author of “Alibaba’s World” and filmmaker of “Crocodile in the Yangtze”, joined us to offer an insider’s perspective to the early days of Alibaba, now the largest ecommerce company in the world. We discussed the interesting period of his tenure in Alibaba from the company taking the funding from Yahoo! to the The post Episode 39: Alibaba’s World with Porter Erisman appeared first on Analyse Asia.
How did Jack Ma, a teacher with no business training, become one of China's - indeed, the world's - most successful entrepreneurs? The BBC's business editor Kamal Ahmed looks at the man behind the online retail giant Alibaba Group - a company described as a mix between Amazon and Ebay - which is due to list on the New York Stock Exchange later this month, making Alibaba one of the most valuable internet companies in the world. Jack Ma is no ordinary business leader. How many other global tycoons like to fill a stadium with their employees only to step on stage, be-wigged, to deliver not bland corporate messages, but Lion King songs? Producer: Ben Crighton Presenter: Kamal Ahmed Archive clips from the film 'Crocodile in the Yangtze: The Alibaba Story' (by Porter Erisman).
完整文稿请登录我们的网页或关注微信、微博:http://english.cri.cn/7146/2014/05/16/2582s826797.htm This is NEWS Plus Special English. I'm Mark Griffiths in Beijing. Here's the news. The number of registered nurses in China reached almost 3 million by the end of last year, raising the overall share to 2 nurses per 1,000 people. The total number of the country's registered nurses by the end of last year was double the number in 2005. That's according to Ma Xiaowei, vice minister of the National Health and Family Planning Commission. Ma says that doctors used to outnumber nurses in China, but the doctor to nurse ratio have been leveled to one-to-one since the end of last year, and has even reversed in large hospitals. Ma noted that an increasing number of nurses have expanded their practices to non-communicable disease management, long-term nursing, rehab and hospice care. However, the official says China still has a shortage of nurses, particularly skilled nurses. This is NEWS Plus Special English. Even before Alibaba went online, its founder talked about making the fledgling e-commerce company a global player. At Alibaba Group's first staff meeting in 1999, a video recorded by an employee shows Jack Ma rallying a workforce of 17 of his friends. They met in a cement-floored apartment in Hangzhou near Shanghai. That was a time when few Chinese people were online; and Ma was an English teacher with no training in business or computers. Ma says in the video that their "competitors are not in China but in the Silicon Valley". This is included in a documentary about the company "Crocodile in the Yangtze River". The documentary was made by a former Alibaba vice president, Porter Erisman. Ma continues by saying they "can beat government agencies and big, famous companies because of their innovative spirit". Such Silicon Valley-style bluster was new to China, but Ma delivered. Over the next 15 years, he helped propel Alibaba through technical and financial challenges and a battle with eBay Company to become the world's biggest online bazaar. The company is now planning to list in the United States; and analysts say its initial public offering this year may raise up to 20 billion US dollars. Last year, more than 200 million customers spent almost 250 billion dollars with merchants on Alibaba's platforms, more than Amazon.com and eBay combined. Along the way, Alibaba had to develop e-commerce infrastructure its Western counterparts took for granted. Few Chinese people used credit cards, so it created Alipay. This is a payments system that helped online sales win acceptance by allowing wary customers to receive goods before releasing money to sellers. The company worked with shippers to improve their reliability and held trade shows to encourage entrepreneurs to go online. Today, the company's main platforms are its original business-to-business service Alibaba.com, consumer-to-consumer site Taobao and T-Mall for brands to sell to consumers. You're listening to NEWS Plus Special English. I'm Mark Griffiths in Beijing. The People's Public Security University of China will recruit 80 students across the country for its newly set subject of anti-terrorism. The university says the move was aimed at facilitating the fight against violent terrorism which is seriously threatening national security and social stability. The subject is set under the department of public security intelligence. Major courses include research on terrorist organizations, international cooperation against terrorism, security risk assessment as well as reconnaissance and evidence collection of cybercrime. Practical courses are also offered to enable students to master tactics for dealing with terrorist attacks.
Fifteen years ago, as Amazon and EBay dominated the tech headlines, few would have predicted that China's e-commerce industry would surpass its western counterparts. At the time, the Internet barely reached 1% of China's population and the barriers to e-commerce seemed almost insurmountable. But 2013 marked a watershed moment for e-commerce in China, with more products sold online on China's "Singles Day" than the US online sales on Cyber Monday and Black Friday combined. How did China's entrepreneurs use social commerce to overcome the barriers to e-commerce's development? And what can the west learn from e-commerce innovations taking place on the ground in China?
My guest today is Porter Erisman, a former Vice-President at Alibaba Group (2000-08), China's internet giant. He witnessed it grow from humble beginnings into the world's largest e-commerce company. The topic is his documentary Crocodile in the Yangtze. In this episode of Trend Following Radio we discuss: What it was like working with Jack Ma Short-term vs. long-term entrepreneurs The lack of knowledge/insight America has for China The perceived threat of China to America Whether nationalism played into Ma's success The commonalities between the greatest internet entrepreneurial success stories Government interference with Alibaba How eBay was defeated by this small startup in China Jump in! --- I'm MICHAEL COVEL, the host of TREND FOLLOWING RADIO, and I'm proud to have delivered 10+ million podcast listens since 2012. Investments, economics, psychology, politics, decision-making, human behavior, entrepreneurship and trend following are all passionately explored and debated on my show. To start? I'd like to give you a great piece of advice you can use in your life and trading journey… cut your losses! You will find much more about that philosophy here: https://www.trendfollowing.com/trend/ You can watch a free video here: https://www.trendfollowing.com/video/ Can't get enough of this episode? You can choose from my thousand plus episodes here: https://www.trendfollowing.com/podcast My social media platforms: Twitter: @covel Facebook: @trendfollowing LinkedIn: @covel Instagram: @mikecovel Hope you enjoy my never-ending podcast conversation!
Michael Covel talks with Porter Erisman. His documentary film “Crocodile in the Yangtze” is the story of Chinese entrepreneur Jack Ma. Jack has assembled a net worth of over 3B USD all started from one little e-commerce site called Alibaba. Erisman’s film is a great window in to the cultural differences and similarities that exist across the countries of our planet. Even more specifically, it is an entrepreneurial manifesto for EVERYONE. Covel and Erisman discuss what it was like working with Ma; short-term vs. long-term entrepreneurs; the lack of knowledge/insight America has for China; the perceived threat of China to America; whether nationalism played into Ma’s success; the commonalities between the greatest internet entrepreneurial success stories; government interference with Alibaba; and how eBay was defeated by this small startup in China. More information can be found at www.crocodileintheyangtze.com. Free Covel trend following DVD: www.trendfollowing.com/win.