Three Minutes of Clarity
Most Swiss SMEs that fail abroad were not rejected by the foreign market. They were abandoned by the home one. The pattern is quiet and common. A company commits to international expansion. The first year is hard, as it always is. Then the best people get pulled back to domestic priorities. Nobody decides to stop. The initiative starves until it fades - and the company concludes "the market was not right." Drawing on years of operating experience, Christoph Walser sets out the mistakes that kill international momentum and how to avoid them: * Why the home market, not the foreign one, is the real threat * Ring-fencing: the budget, timeline, and metrics to commit to before launch * Why the first 18 months should be judged on activity, not short-term P&L * The "mini-me" trap: replicating the Swiss operation instead of adapting it * Why internationalisation is proof of repeatability, not ambition Half measures are worse than not starting. They burn money, exhaust your best people, and leave a poor impression in the market. Three Minutes of Clarity with Christoph Walser. Sharp conversations on Swiss SME growth, transformation, and value creation.
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