21 April 2012
SYS-CON MEDIA
The third PharmaAsia Summit to be held September 24-26 in Shanghai will feature experts discussing the strategic challenges and potential solutions leaders of biopharmaceutical companies confronting stalled growth. The conference will feature the release of an exclusive report, prepared by Elsevier, BayHelix, and Monitor Group, exploring how China could disrupt the existing innovation paradigm in the industry.
Read more
|
29 March 2012
CNBC Asia
Joe Fuller, cofounder of Monitor, was a guest panelist on CNBC Asia recently in Singapore to discuss the topic: Awaiting Judgment Day; the implications for Asia of Europe’s permanent crisis.
Read more
|
28 March 2012
Bizcommunity.com
Pedro Arboleda, a Partner and co-leader of the Regional Competitiveness practice, recently worked with Endeavor South Africa on a white paper entitled, The State of Entrepreneurship in South Africa — The Key Archetypes of an Entrepreneurial Culture. He also facilitated a breakaway session on the External Trigger Model, which is about fate, good and bad, and how local stakeholders can turn fate into an opportunity for greater and better entrepreneurship.
Read more
|
26 March 2012
TED 2012
In early March, Sherry Turkle took the main stage at TED2012 and received an enthusiastic standing ovation for her insights into how today's society, with it's constant digital interactions, needs to find comfort and appreciation in self reflection and solitude.
Read more
|
21 March 2012
Revista Exame
Ydir Visssers, a Partner at Monitor Group, speaks to Exame and says that the world is increasingly urban and that, in a very short time, the influence of mayors will increase.
Read more
|
13 March 2012
Fox Business
On a day when the stock markets saw their biggest gains of 2012, book author Chris Meyer said future growth opportunities will come from emerging markets. Meyer, founder of the Monitor Talent, spoke about his book, Standing on the Sun: How the Explosion of Capitalism Abroad Will Change Business Everywhere, on the Lou Dobbs Tonight program on Fox Business.
Read more
|
6 March 2012
The Financial Times
The Oreo cookie turned 100 years old this month and The Financial Times reports that Kraft celebrated one of the world’s most successful brands by decorating landmarks in Shanghai with Oreo imagery and staging a fireworks show. The Oreo’s success in China showcases Kraft’s masterful adaptation of its cookie brand to local tastes, by changing its shape and baking flavors such as green tea ice cream. Kraft’s practices are also followed by other successful firms catering to the Chinese market, such as PepsiCo’s creating cucumber and blueberry potato chips, Torsten Stocker, a partner in Monitor’s China practice, told the newspaper.
Read more
|
29 February 2012
Wall Street Journal
McDonald’s Corp. plans a new advertising campaign emphasizing its quality offerings in the increasingly competitive fast-food market in China, The Wall Street Journal reported. McDonald’s seeks to make gains in a market dominated by Yum Brands. Monitor’s Torsten Stocker, an expert on the Chinese retail market, told the newspaper that Yum was one of the first restaurant chains to expand across China, gaining access to prime locations and smaller cities, insulating the company from a growing number of rivals.
Read more
|
21 February 2012
MSNBC
In 2000, advanced economies accounted for 75 percent of global economic output. In 2050, that share is projected to dip to 32 percent—largely because the developing economies will grow at a much faster rate, according to figures cited in the new book, Standing on the Sun: How the Explosion of Capitalism Abroad Will Change Business Everywhere by Christopher Meyer and Julia Kirby. Meyer, founder of Monitor Talent, spoke about lessons from his book on MSNBC’s The Dylan Ratigan Show.
Read more
|
20 February 2012
Financial Times
Retail giant Wal-Mart is increasing its stake in the growing Chinese e-commerce website Yihaodian to 51 percent, The Financial Times reported. Torsten Stocker, a Monitor partner and expert on the Chinese retail market, said the move showed “how seriously Wal-Mart is developing their e-commerce platform in China.”
Read more
|
|