Three Minutes of Clarity

Internationalisation Mistakes That Kill Momentum

2 min · I går
episode Internationalisation Mistakes That Kill Momentum cover

Description

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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8 episodes

episode Internationalisation Mistakes That Kill Momentum artwork

Internationalisation Mistakes That Kill Momentum

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.

Yesterday2 min
episode Asia-Pacific Market Entry - Lessons From the Field artwork

Asia-Pacific Market Entry - Lessons From the Field

"We want to expand into Asia." – That sentence usually signals a company is not ready - not because the ambition is wrong, but because the thinking is too broad. There is no single Asia-Pacific market. Singapore is nothing like Indonesia. Japan operates on completely different principles than Vietnam. If you cannot name the country and the city, the work has not started. Drawing on years of operating experience across Asia-Pacific, Christoph Walser sets out what Swiss SMEs consistently underestimate when they look East: * Why specificity is the first test of market readiness * Which markets fit which sectors - from precision manufacturing and medtech to consumer goods and digital services * Why speed, not strategy, catches most Swiss executives off guard * The most common mistake: flying in, holding a few meetings, and expecting results * Why presence and patience open doors that product quality alone cannot Asia-Pacific rewards curiosity and punishes arrogance. For a Swiss SME with the right capability, it is not a gamble. It is a discipline. Three Minutes of Clarity with Christoph Walser. Sharp conversations on Swiss SME growth, transformation, and value creation.

30. juni 20262 min
episode Entering the DACH Market - Easier Said Than Done artwork

Entering the DACH Market - Easier Said Than Done

Most Swiss companies treat Germany as a natural extension of the home market - same language, short distance, low perceived risk. That instinct is precisely what gets them into trouble. In this episode, Christoph Walser makes the case that familiarity is a liability, not an advantage: the closer a market feels, the less rigour it receives. He looks at why German procurement, formalised decision cycles, and price-driven negotiation catch Swiss SMEs off guard, why Austria is often the smarter first step, and the three operational mistakes that undermine most DACH entries - underestimating local presence, failing to defend the Swiss premium, and underinvesting in visibility. The takeaway: treat Germany with the same strategic rigour you would apply to entering Japan. Three Minutes of Clarity with Christoph Walser. Sharp conversations on Swiss SME growth, transformation, and value creation. Concept, argument, and editorial line: mine. Audio production: AI.

15. juni 20262 min