Archive for the 'Exporting' Category



Female Entrepreneurs Outnumber Male Entrepreneurs in Brazil

Out of all entrepreneurs in Brazil, 53% are women and 47% are men.  They have the most entrepreneurs among the G-20 nations after China. One of the country’s big challenges is to get more companies aiming to export.

According to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Brazil study:

15.3% of the country’s population have their own business, a rate second only to China’s.

What’s also noteworthy in the study is this:

Start-up enterprises have gone from 2.93% of the total in 2008 to 5.78% in 2009, of which 4.3% are enterprises out of opportunity.

When it comes to foreign trade:

89.5% of Brazilian entrepreneurs claimed that they do not plan on exporting. Paulo Okamoto, president of the Sebrae (English here), considers that this is not a good scenario for the country and claims that action is needed for Brazilian companies to internationalize themselves.

“It is desirable for Brazil to have more companies aiming to export. For such, we need to foster innovation and we need more sophisticated, higher quality products. The Sebrae is also developing programs in order to provide ongoing support to exporting companies.

According to Okamoto, there are now roughly 15,000 small businesses that already export, and the goal for 2010 is to increase that figure by 10%.

For the first time in a decade in which the GEM survey is conducted in Brazil, the number of women has exceeded the rate of male entrepreneurs. And here’s a good case study of a young woman entrepreneur, without any international experience, exporting her concept to the U.S.A.

Businesswoman Vanessa Carmona, currently 36 years old, established her business at age 23. With lots of creativity and work, Vanessa and her partner Flávia Almeida, then aged 32, opened the Mulata Brasil beachwear store, and turned a start-up capital of 5,000 Brazilian reals (US$ 2,800) into revenues currently exceeding 1.4 million reals (US$ 796,000).

The brand, which started out in a small 57-square-metre house, now has two shops in a wealthy area of São Paulo. Despite never having exported, it should open its first unit abroad in the first half of 2010, in Miami, United States.

Read the entire article here.

Photo credit:  Mulata Brasil as mentioned above; this is one of entrepreneur Vanessa Carmona’s swimsuit styles at her company!

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

High Potential Exports in Thailand

Thailand is working diligently to develop high potential products in order to push for an export growth of 10-15% next year.

Export Promotion Department Director-General Srirat Rastapana (pictured) stated that her department and the Thai Chamber of Commerce had drafted strategies to develop many kinds of goods with high potential to help Thailand become production and export hubs. The products and services include textile, food, spa, and entertainment businesses. The strategies can be implemented next year onwards.

In addition, Ms Srirat said the private sector had an initiative to make Thailand leader of the women-led businesses as women currently played a more important role in businesses such as in India.

Read more here.

Additional related resources here:

Thailand:  Fashion exports to surpass 9% in 2010

Set to Drive ASEAN Fashion Industry

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

How to Leverage Government Export Assistance to Expand Your Overseas Sales

If you are a U.S.A. manufacturer and wish to learn more about Exim Bank’s capabilities to help you grow your business globally, then listen up.

“Exports Live!” Seminar Series Successfully Brings Ex-Im Bank to Small Businesses

More than 1,500 attended a half-day interactive seminar series created by five federal agencies to demonstrate how local businesses can successfully leverage government export assistance to expand sales of U.S. goods and services in foreign markets and increase their bottom lines. The first seminar kicked in New York City’s Marriott Marquis hotel on Oct. 5, 2009 and was followed by similar sessions in Boston (Oct. 6), Miami (Oct. 26), Houston (Oct. 27), Chicago (Nov. 10), Los Angeles (Nov. 16), Seattle (Nov. 17), and Detroit (Dec. 11). The eight-city “Exports Live!: Real Deals, Real Profits” series reviewed strategies and partnerships used by local small and medium-size businesses that have already discovered how to increase profitability through exporting.

For all upcoming trade seminars visit:  www.exim.gov/seminars.

Women small business exporters

go here!

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

How To Sell To More Than 1.7 Billion People

Conducting business online with customers worldwide doesn’t have to be complicated.  It merely requires the discipline of reviewing ten factors to consider before you go global to make sure you have everything covered.

Here’s a snapshot of Factor No. 1:

  1. Get a company-wide commitment. Every employee should be a vital member of the world team, from the executive suite to customer service through engineering, purchasing, production, and shipping.

Read more here.

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

Hansiba Goes Global

Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA), names its apparel brand Hansiba, after a 92 year old woman, and takes it global.

Hansiba is 92 years old but her capacity for work can put a young athlete to shame. An average day in her life begins at 5 in the morning when she attends to the cattle. She milks the buffaloes, does the house work, cooks for the family, walks 2 km to the farm and back, runs the charkha for 2-3 hours, and does some ‘bharatkaam’ (embroidery) — all this in a day’s work.

Learn more about Hansiba and her story to see how this remarkable woman has emerged as an international fashion icon and is now something of a brand ambassador for Gujarat’s traditional handicrafts industry here.

Photo:  SEWA’s Hansiba Store (Secretary Clinton is visiting)

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

Despite Global Recession, Woman’s Winery Is Expanding

Norma Ratcliffe (pictured) is the first female winemaker to become commercially successful in South Africa.  She is from Edmonton and seen as one of the pioneers of contemporary South African winemaking, an industry that has boomed globally in the post-apartheid years.

The company she runs, Warwick Estate, has gained recognition as one of the best wineries (one of their labels pictured above) in the world, with its products often landing in the annual top 100 lists of leading wine magazines. Even in the midst of a global recession, her winery is expanding.

Think Norma had experience before starting her business and taking it global?  Guess again.

Lacking any background in the wine business, Ms. Ratcliffe started at the bottom. She studied the Afrikaans language, took classes in winemaking, pored through books, bought second-hand equipment, learned to fix pumps and patch leaks in barrels and worked for months at a wine cellar in the Bordeaux region of France. In 1984, she released the first Warwick vintage, a cabernet sauvignon, which became an instant hit.

Learn how she does it here.  Visit her blog here.

Toast to Warwick’s success and to 2010!

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

Growing Business Trend: Women Entrepreneurship in Ethiopia

MulmulBakeryEthiopia

Women entrepreneurship in Ethiopia is slowly but surely making headway.

The formation of the Ethiopian Women Exporters’ Forum is fitting manifestation of this growing trend.Established in January 2000, the Ethiopian Women Exporters’ Forum (list of members) aims at bolstering the organizational and technical capacity of members and arm them with that extra competitive edge to excel in the export trade and the entrepreneurial capacity to stand up to the challenges of international trade and commerce.

Read more here.

Check out a listing of business development services in Ethiopia here.

Ethiopian Women’s Promotion Center

Sample business profile of Ethiopian woman exporter: Mulmul Bakery (as shown above).

Posted by: Laurel Delaney

Women Artists Export

Chicago (Rogers Park), Illinois, U.S.A.

Chicago (Rogers Park), Illinois, U.S.A.

It’s a spectacular day in Chicago.  Wherever you are at this moment, make the most of it.  I am getting ready to head over to the Glenwood Avenue Arts Festival where folks in the community exhibit their wares, many of which can quite easily be exported.

Photo credit:  Laurel Delaney, Women Entrepreneurs GROW Global

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

Exporting To An American Audience

JuliaChild

Everyone is awaiting the new filmJulie & Julia” which portrays cookbook author and iconic TV teacher (and entrepreneur) known as much for her warbling near-falsetto voice as for her impact on American cooking:  Julie Child.

To a country infatuated with cake mixes, TV dinners and instant foods that would not mess up the kitchen, Child and co-authors Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle brought a French sense of tradition, art and quality in food. Then for a decade starting in 1963, Child’s wildly popular television program, “The French Chef,” persuaded home cooks to venture into complicated territory.

These days, Americans have entered a new era of the homemade, and the film could help bring this generation of foodies back to Child. To coincide with the opening, the publishers have released new editions of “My Life in France” and Powell’s book “Julie & Julia” with Streep and Adams on the cover. Even the latest edition of “Mastering the Art of French Cooking” is being sold in a wrapper promoting the movie.

Photo:  American television chef Julia Child.

More on Julia Child:

Julie Child:  Lessons with Master Chefs

Julie Child:  The French Chef  1972:  Cheese Souflee (PBS Video)

Julie Child:  Biography

Bon Appetit!

Posted by:  Laurel Delaney

Vera Bradley Grows From Local Shop to Global Empire

PatriciaMiller+BarbaraBradleyBaekgaard

Two young entrepreneurs in 1987 set out to find quality driven luggage for women. When their search didn’t pan out, Barbara Bradley Baekgaard and Patricia Miller (pictured L-R) decided to make their own.

After stealing the show with neighborhood clothing displays, Baekgaard and Miller knew they needed to meet the growing demand and come up with a solid business plan. The two fashion forward women contacted SCORE in Ft. Wayne. They met with mentor George Cook who gave them the business advice they needed to grow their company into a fashion empire.

With help from SCORE, Vera Bradley Designs transformed from a neighborhood trend to a global brand. Even as a global, multimillion dollar company, the two owners say they never hesitate to contact SCORE for business advice.

Read more here.

Posted by: Laurel Delaney

« Previous PageNext Page »


Join 137 other followers

Best of the Best

Alltop

ACCESS SMBs Guide

AboutBADGE1

Ask a Question

Copyright Notice

©2008-2012 Laurel Delaney.
All rights reserved.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 137 other followers