Pros
Here’s a refined English version of your observations, highlighting the key challenges of Chinese companies operating abroad:
1. HR Issues as the Core Challenge
Recruitment difficulties, high turnover rates, and uncompetitive salaries are common among Chinese companies expanding overseas. The root cause often lies in their "physically global, mentally domestic" mindset. These companies fail to adapt their HR practices to local market expectations and cultural nuances, creating a mismatch that hinders their growth.
2. Suffocating Leadership Style
Authoritative Leadership: Many Chinese leaders tend to maintain an overly hierarchical approach, placing themselves on a pedestal while treating employees as subordinates rather than equals. This contrasts sharply with the more egalitarian leadership style preferred in Europe.
Lack of Boundaries: Leaders often intrude into personal time, contacting employees during non-working hours, weekends, or even during approved leave. This disregard for work-life balance alienates staff.
Failure to Self-Reflect: Instead of examining their own management flaws, many leaders blame external factors like “cultural differences” or “poor employee quality.” Respect for individuals and their value should be the first lesson in cross-cultural management. Without this, companies will struggle to attract and retain top talent—after all, skilled professionals won't tolerate irrational behavior.
3. Double Standards
Chinese leaders often display a stark contrast in their treatment of local employees versus Chinese staff. They tend to be overly accommodating to locals while imposing much harsher expectations on their fellow Chinese. This double standard is not only unethical but also detrimental to team cohesion and morale.
4. Weak Legal Awareness
In international settings, all employees, regardless of nationality, are protected by the same labor laws. However, Chinese leaders in this company act as though locals are untouchable while assuming Chinese employees will "put up with it." This lack of awareness is shortsighted, as an increasing number of Chinese workers are standing up for their rights, sometimes with legal action. Discrimination based on nationality or ethnicity is unacceptable and unsustainable.
Cons
While these companies may achieve strong short-term results outside of China, their reliance on outdated management practices makes long-term success uncertain. Talented employees are unlikely to stay in a toxic work environment, and high turnover leads to increased recruitment costs and a loss of institutional knowledge. Without addressing these systemic issues, sustainable growth will remain out of reach.