“Yo’ dawg,” as some say.
Click HERE and HERE (scroll down a bit for this second video) and check out this NPR story and two short videos on rap daddy Eli Sweet, who is breakin’ it down in Chengdu in Western China. For some time NPR has been running such spotlights on China and its growing influence on the world. I have enjoyed many of these features as I sip my morning cha.
But the purpose of this post is not to suggest that we travel to China to admire and hang out with rappers.
Instead, and notwithstanding the artistic and cultural intrigue of these videos on our man Eli, this post recognizes that Eli the rapper is an entrepreneur and in business, regardless of whether as an “artist” he will cop to such a label.
To be more specific, his hometown of Atlanta appears to be over saturated with rappers, he sees a possible need for what he has in another place - an emerging market called China — he is trying to fill said need, and he is trying to make money doing it (gotta pay the bills). MBAs and business students could no doubt teach him a thing or two about business, but he could also teach them a thing or two about guts, stepping off the ledge, getting on the plane, and seeing where moving out of one’s comfort zone can take you. That too, is an unappreciated part of business.
There are also two money quotes in the first video I want you go back and replay and listen to closely. First, where he says, “There is always a possibility [here in China] that you will see something today that you have never seen in your entire life“. And second, “I didn’t come [to China] because I thought that the life would be better than it was in America. I came here because I couldn’t envision a great life for myself in America.”
I agree with most of that, but I am not sure that I would agree that a great life cannot still be had in the USA with some hard work and luck. But you get the point — emerging markets such as China present business opportunities that we either don’t have or may no longer to be able to reasonably access in the West. One of the reasons we go to China is to explore its business opportunities (and challenges).
So welcome to the first of these online readings, videos and assignments I give you during the course. They will help bring you up to speed on some of the “China basics” and they will also help keep the drumbeat of China fresh in your mind during the course. Once we arrive in China, I don’t want that to be the first time you have given any thought to this trip, the firms and industries we will visit, China, and/or any of its history, culture and business practices.
Cal Poly students, “Welcome to the People’s Republic of China!,” where, as the saying goes and as you will learn, “Anything is possible, but nothing is easy.”
- Professor Carr