Most Popular
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IMF lowers Korea's 2025 growth outlook to 2%
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Labor Ministry dismisses Hanni harassment case
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North Korean troops fighting alongside Russia, NIS confirms
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Reality show 'I Live Alone' disciplined for 'glorifying' alcohol consumption
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[Herald Interview] How Gopizza got big in India
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Yoon focuses on expanding global solidarity against NK-Russia military ties at APEC, G20 summits
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[KH Explains] Dissecting Hyundai Motor's lobbying in US
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Japan to hold 1st memorial for Korean forced labor victims at Sado mine
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[Kim Seong-kon] Farewell to the vanishing John Wayne era
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[Graphic News] 70% of S. Koreans believe couples can live together without tying the knot: survey
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French yogurt brand growing fast in Korean market
It has been four years since French food product maker Danone entered Korea and its Activia, the world’s best-selling yogurt brand, is already the second-best-selling drinking yogurt in local hypermarkets after Namyang’s Bulgaris.Last year, Danone joined hands with Korean fresh food maker Pulmuone and is aggressively expanding distribution channels here where home delivery accounts for 40 percent of the yogurt market.“We plan to gain a firm foothold for Activia in the Korean market this year in
May 6, 2013
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FDI will help Korea achieve 2nd Miracle on the Han
During her inauguration speech in February, President Park Geun-hye paid homage to her father’s legacy and his important role in laying the groundwork for Korea’s rapid economic development, which is often described as the Miracle on the Han. In the midst of ongoing economic uncertainty stemming from the global financial crisis, she pledged to revitalize the Korean economy to enable a second Miracle on the Han. While Park did not provide any specific commentary on the role of the foreign busines
April 22, 2013
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‘Korea saved European outdoor brands’
European outdoor wear and equipment brands such as Millet of France were hanging by a thread when demand in Korea began to jump over 30 percent each year as hiking became fashionable and hikers started to dress up.“Due to strong nationalism in terms of the brands and differences in tastes and sizing, the European market is very fragmented, meaning the French only buy Millet and the Germans only buy Jack Wolfskin,” Julien Provot-Ragueneau, senior executive officer at MilletEdelweissHoldings, said
April 22, 2013
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Finding pattern that works is the secret to success
As an executive search professional, and coach to company leaders, I work with many fine leaders from various countries within a variety of businesses in Korea. I often witness firsthand what works and what doesn’t in Korea. Life for me is not boring ― it’s a roller coaster.How can we smooth out the ride of our careers in Korea? Why do books not always deliver? Well, because life is not so cut and dried that it can be captured easily between two hard covers. In looking for a career, don’t assume
April 8, 2013
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La Prairie unshaken by economic slump
The economic downturn has dealt a blow to overall department store revenue in recent years, but sales of premium cosmetics have remained intact.The proliferation of “brand shops” of low-priced beauty products didn’t have an impact either, according to Allen Kim, chief of La Prairie Korea.“A high-end French restaurant won’t be afflicted just because a lot of McDonald’s spring up,” Kim said in an interview with The Korea Herald.“It’s good that those low-priced brands help expand the entire cosmeti
April 8, 2013
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No two chaebol are alike, author says
While Koreans’ rising presence on the global stage is hard to ignore, how to do business with them as a non-Korean is an increasingly tricky area little covered in English-language literature. Don Southerton explores the niche with his recently published book “Korea Facing: Secrets for Success in Korean Global Business,” which picks apart how to work with a Korean conglomerate from the ground up, for non-Koreans working in Korean branches overseas.“Over the years I witnessed firsthand cross-cult
April 8, 2013
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Time for insurers to rethink their investments
As we move into the new year and closer to full implementation of a post-crisis regulatory regime, global de-leveraging of the financial sector is taking firm hold. Regulatory reforms, including the Dodd-Frank Act, the Volcker Rule and Basel III, are putting pressure on banks to be smaller and more risk-averse. As a result, banks around the world are adjusting their business models to meet higher capital requirements while streamlining or closing their proprietary hedge funds and other alternati
March 25, 2013
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Search firm CEO advises staying with same employer for at least 3 years
The head of a search firm that has found more than 1,300 executives for its client companies since 2000 advises experienced workers to stay at one employer for at least three years.“My advice is to do your job as well as you can with sincere effort and to maintain good relations with your superiors, peers, subordinates and customers,” George Whitfield, president of Halcyon Search International in Seoul, said in an interview with The Korea Herald.“It is also best to stay at one employer for at le
March 25, 2013
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GE Lighting taps LED market through local partnerships
The light-emitting diode is like the hydrogen-powered car of the lighting industry. One day, energy-efficient LED lighting will replace all fluorescent lamps. Inefficient incandescent bulbs will soon be nonexistent in Korea as the government banned their production and sale from next year, as in many other parts of the world. But for now, the LED lighting industry is just blossoming, with government offices taking up most of the local demand. The Korean government is replacing old lighting equip
March 11, 2013
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Acuvue continues growth in Korea, its 4th-largest market
When Johnson & Johnson Vision Care introduced its first daily disposable contact lenses in 1997, it didn’t know its next major product would be developed in Korea.“Circle lenses produced by local makers became popular from around 2000, and we saw growth potential in the Asian market, so we made a proposal for research and development to our headquarters based on our own market research,” Chung Byung-heon, chief of JJVC’s Korean arm, told The Korea Herald.“One-Day Acuvue Define circle lenses were
Feb. 25, 2013
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Media-planning agency sees growth in Korea
Marketing and advertising used to be all about the creative side, but in this fast-evolving digital world, weaving the latest technologies into an effective formula is increasingly important, according to David Holtham, chief executive of Aegis Media North Asia.“Creative is important, but it’s not everything anymore. The advertising industry is now more about how you interact with your clients,” Holtham said in an interview with The Korea Herald.“For example, when a consumer sees a television co
Jan. 28, 2013
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Time to struggle for return: HSBC
The year 2013 will be the investors’ struggle for a comeback amid a low-yield environment, making high-yield bonds and emerging market equities attractive, said Philip Poole, global head of macro and investment strategy at the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. on Monday.According to HSBC’s scenario, the key developed world interest rates will stay close to zero for at least another two years. Poole advised investing in emerging countries rather than developed countries, and to go for private b
Jan. 14, 2013
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‘Asian bonds, Chinese real estate promising in 2013’
Global asset management firm BlackRock has predicted that bonds of Northeast Asian countries and Chinese real estate will be the best pick for global investors in 2013.“Asian and emerging market fixed incomes experienced strong inflows in 2012 relative to other fixed income markets, and we anticipate this trend continuing into 2013,” said Joel Kim, BlackRock’s managing director and head of Asia-Pacific fixed income, at a press conference last week.The Asian fixed-income market will show a positi
Jan. 14, 2013
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Top-end mattress sales bounce as more Koreans seek quality sleep
Like Coca-Cola, nobody knows what it is made of.The viscoelastic material was initially developed to cushion and support astronauts’ backs from the massive pressure during lift-off in the early 1970s. The pressure-absorbing material was temperature-sensitive and it evenly distributed body weight. NASA released this material to the public in the 1980s.It took about a decade for scientists in Sweden to develop it into Tempur material for use in mattresses.Ju Jong-kyu, chief of the Korean arm of Te
Jan. 14, 2013
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Foreigners planning start-ups invited to workshop next week
Nonprofit organization the TIDE Institute is hosting a three-day workshop in English for foreigners planning start-up ventures at Kyungil University next week.Developers, designers and entrepreneurs are invited to come together to share ideas, form teams, build prototypes and find out if their start-up ideas are viable at the “Start-up Springboard” to be held from Jan. 16 through 18 at the university in Gyeongsan, North Gyeongsang Province.The event begins with an open pitch session on Jan. 16 i
Jan. 8, 2013
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AllianceBernstein faces FSS probe for late filing
The Financial Supervisory Service is fine-tuning details to launch an investigation into the Korean operation of U.S.-based asset management firm AllianceBernstein Ltd., which made public its stock trading four years after the required timing, regulatory officials said Monday. While the financial regulator said it has yet to launch an official investigation, officials said the case has been under close watch. Its probe generally involves a paper-based review as a preliminary step. “At the presen
Jan. 7, 2013
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Over 500,000 foreigners pay tax here
The National Tax Service estimated Monday that the number of non-Korean taxpayers would surpass 500,000 in 2012, up from 465,000 in 2011 and 403,000 in 2010.The NTS released the figure as it is preparing for the year-end tax settlement. Responding to the growing population of foreign workers here, the NTS unveiled a set of guidelines for foreigners who are to file for the year-end tax settlement.Foreign residents are to submit their tax forms on the same schedule as Korean nationals, but their t
Jan. 7, 2013
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Yu-Tsui from China to lead IBM Korea
IBM said on Sunday it has appointed Shirley Yu-Tsui, general manager of IBM’s global business services for China, Taiwan and Hong Kong, as the new chief executive of IBM Korea.Yu-Tsui has been named one of China’s top 10 women professional management leaders in 2004, and person of the year in China’s IT service the following year.She will be replacing Lee Hui-sung, who has headed IBM Korea for the past eight years. Lee was promoted to vice president of strategy for the growth market unit at IBM
Jan. 6, 2013