Informedi’s Weekly Business Insights

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Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles carefully curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 | Week 407 | June 27 – July 4 , 2025 | Archive

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Chinese brands are sweeping the world. Good

The Economist | June 26, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Ask a Westerner for an example of a successful Chinese consumer-goods brand, and until recently most would have struggled. Although China is the world’s premier manufacturing power, it has long lagged behind when it comes to imaginative home-grown retail brands and products, even as its factories have cranked out vast numbers of them for foreign companies. This is now changing. Innovative Chinese brands are popping up everywhere. Consumers and investors around the world stand to benefit.
  2. Chinese brands were long seen as poor-quality, unimaginative and unfairly subsidised. Scandals around food safety and labour standards did not help.  New firms are now overturning those old assumptions. Many happily advertise their roots.  Many brands now compete on quality as well as price.
  3. Western firms will have to wake up and smell the bubble tea. Within China, the premium that foreign brands command simply for being foreign is eroding. In the future they will need to try harder to understand Chinese customers’ particular tastes. Some may even do deals with inventive Chinese partners, to gain insight and inspiration.

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Topics:  Chinese Brands, Globalization, Competition

Namibia wants to build the world’s first hydrogen economy

By Jonathan W. Rosen | MIT Technology Review | July-August 2025 issue

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. To manufacture steel, factories have used fossil fuels to process iron ore for three centuries, and the climate has paid a heavy price. Purifying the ore involves extracting iron that is bound to oxygen, and removing the bond between the iron and oxygen requires a massive amount of energy.  
  2. But it turns out there is a less carbon-­intensive alternative: using hydrogen to extract the iron.  HyIron, a startup, which began processing test batches of iron, is one of a handful of companies around the world that are betting green hydrogen that can help the $1.8 trillion steel industry clean up its act. What sets it apart, above all, is its location. HyIron’s kiln was designed and prototyped in Germany, but the production site is in Namibia, more than 5,000 miles to the south. 
  3. Since 2021, when the government identified the gas as a potentially “transformative strategic industry,” it’s become something of a national obsession. There are at least nine other projects planned or under construction, including one, in Namibia’s south, that’s among the largest proposed green hydrogen investments in the world. The Namibian government’s Green Hydrogen and Derivatives Strategy, released in 2022, envisions the creation of three “hydrogen valleys,” along the southern, central, and northern coasts, with a target production of 10 million to 12 million metric tons per year by 2050. That’s equivalent to more than 10% of all hydrogen made annually today. As soon as 2030, the strategy document claims, the industry could create 80,000 jobs and raise GDP by 30% through a combination of tax revenue, royalties, and the knock-on effect of so many investments. 
  4. If even a fraction of this production comes to pass, it will give Namibia’s economy a major boost. But it is a gamble. Green hydrogen technology is still in its infancy, and long-term demand for its products remains uncertain.

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Topics: Manufacturing Green Steel, Namibia’s Green Hydrogen and Derivatives Strategy, Environment, Energy

The great trade rearrangement

By Olivia White et al., | McKinsey Global Institute | McKinsey & Company | June 25, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Amid pressure on US–China trade, firms may look to rearrange sourcing to alternative suppliers. If they cannot, firms might instead reduce purchases, replace imported products with something similar, or ramp up domestic production. These alternatives require a combination of sacrifice, resources, know-how, and time.
  2. The authors introduce a “rearrangement ratio” to quantify how hard the change might be. Thirty-five percent of US imports from China have a ratio less than 0.1, signifying a global available export market ten times larger than current US imports from China.  For higher ratios, rearrangement becomes harder, and for the 5 percent of trade with a ratio greater than 1.0—for example, rare earth magnets—US imports from China exceed available global exports.  Consumer goods are harder to rearrange than business inputs. Europe emerges as the fulcrum of trade rearrangement.
  3. Prepare for resilience in a reordering world. Strategies will need to handle continued uncertainty and ongoing shifts. Customers will buy new things from new sources and use them in new ways. Granularity is key. Shifts across many thousands of products will reshape the geometry of global trade.

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Topics:  Global Trade Rearrangement, Tariff, China, EU, USA

When Wait and See Is Smart Strategy

By Adam Job et al., | MIT Sloan Management Review | June 23, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Wait and see can be a dysfunctional response to change or uncertainty if it leads to missed opportunities or an increase in the eventual cost or risks related to actions.  However, wait and see can also be a smart strategy for delaying commitments while observing an evolving situation.
  2. Their viability hinges on two conditions: First, wait and see can be successful only if uncertainty is elevated temporarily.  Second, wait and see is especially reasonable when the context is reflexive — that is, actions taken may spark reactions that further increase uncertainty or even increase the probability of a negative outcome.
  3. If you have decided on a wait-and-see strategy amid the current political uncertainty, you should explore the following questions and be ready to explain the answers to your team.  Are we just drifting, or actively waiting?  Do we understand which decisions may lead to lock-in risks or political pushback?   How confident are we in our ability to detect signals on policy moves and competitor shifts?  What precise triggers will shift us from “pause” to “go” mode?  Do we have playbooks ready for reengagement, and have we practiced deploying them?

Full Article

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Topics:  Waiting as a Strategy, Decision-making, Risk Mitigation, Uncertainty

How Pioneering Boards Are Using AI

By Stanislav Shekshnia and Valery Yakubovich | Harvard Business Review Magazine | July–August 2025 Issue

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. In 2014 Hong Kong–based Deep Knowledge Ventures formally appointed an algorithm to its board of directors, giving it voting power on the VC firm’s investment decisions.  Fast-forward a decade, and you might think that the remarkable advances in machine learning would have changed minds about the value of AI in the boardroom. But largely, that hasn’t been the case.  
  2. But in light of recent developments in AI technologies, and with virtual humans becoming commonplace business interfaces, the idea of an AI bot that engages in boardroom discussions doesn’t feel like a gimmick anymore.  AI can contribute to boards’ work in three ways.  Assisting individual board members.  Supplying the whole board with better information.  And AI can join the board.  While there certainly are risks, they are, for the most part, relatively easy to manage. Let’s review the concerns cited most frequently in our focus groups:  Information leaks.  Sample bias.  And anchoring in the past.  
  3. For the next decade or so, until a high level of digital literacy becomes a basic skill that virtually every professional possesses, directors will need to be trained in using AI.  How can we do it:  Create engagement.  Practice collective experimentation.  And maintain momentum.

Full Article

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Topics:  AI and Board,  AI and Strategy, AI and Advantage, AI and Competition

How Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s success discredits ‘stick to your knitting’ leadership advice

By Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and Stephen Henriques | Fortune | June 24, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. A key lesson advocated in the 1980s management bestseller In Search of Excellence advised leaders to “stick with your knitting” and remain “only with the businesses you know best.” That insularity may have hurt adaptiveness a generation ago and is surely not the wisdom for the AI generation. Two weeks ago, at 154th Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute CEO Forum, Nvidia founder Jensen Huang revealed to 175 top CEOs across industries how he tossed out his business plans not once but twice to embrace disruptive new advances on the frontiers of technology, drawing upon the model of his idol, Michael Dell.
  2. In the 1980s, Intel cofounder Andy Grove warned that “only the paranoid survive,” suggesting key inflection points in strategic decision making. These days, Huang says that this fluid mindset is daily and not episodic.
  3. Reflecting on his success, Huang shared what led him and Nvidia to where they are today: “We had the courage to break the problem down step by step and reinvented everything about our company and everything about how computing was done.”  Perhaps Huang’s most admirable attribute, however, is his humility.

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Topics:  Leadership, Vision, Strategy, Humility

8 Expensive Investing Mistakes And How To Avoid Them

By Catherine Brock | Forbes | Jun 28, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. A recent report from financial services consultant DALBAR concluded that the average equity investor earned a 16.54% return in 2024. That may sound like a win, but the S&P 500 grew 25.02% in the same period.   According to DALBAR, investors continued to under-perform due to their own behavior.
  2. Eight potentially expensive investing mistakes and how to avoid them:  A) Not Investing – If you want to grow your net worth, stock investing is one of the simplest ways to do it instead of depositing it in a bank.  B) Timing The Market – which you can’t predict so invest consistently every month, whether the market is strong or weak.  C) Following The Crowd – If you feel the need to take action in a down market, increase your holdings in high-quality stocks when their prices are down.  D) Going All In – Spread your wealth across at least 20 individual stocks plus some Treasury securities if you can.  E) Paying High Fees –  Dive into your brokerage account and funds to list the fees you’re currently paying. Then look for lower-fee alternatives for the account itself or your investments.  F) Skipping The Research – Spend time educating yourself.  Use it to research securities or investing strategies.  G) Getting Emotional – Document what you’re trying to accomplish and how you will do it.  The next time you feel like making a rash decision, go to your documentation and follow the methodology you defined in calmer times.  And H) Investing What You Can’t Afford To Lose – Build a cash emergency fund before you start investing. Use that fund for unexpected expenses, so you won’t have to reach into your portfolio.

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Topics:  Investment Decision, Investing in Stock Exchange

6 Reasons Your Perfect Product Isn’t Selling — and How to Avoid the Marketing Mistakes Behind Them 

By Murali Nethi | Edited by Kara McIntyre | Entrepreneur | Jun 30, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. It’s a frustrating feeling — you’ve built a product that solves a real problem. But for some reason, it just is not working. 
  2. Some reasons that might be happening:  You are too focused on features.  You are targeting the wrong people (or too many at once). The first impression isn’t built for the channel.  Your content is not helping people make a decision.  You’re relying too much on one tactic.  And the product itself isn’t positioned enough.
  3. What to look at before you throw more money at another campaign are: Walk through the actual moment a person would use the product.  Refine your audience to narrow your focus enough to actually connect.  Every channel has a different kind of attention span and expectation. People don’t just want to know what your product is — they want to know how it compares to what they’re already using, what setup is involved, whether it’ll work for their use case and how others are using it.  A more balanced approach can mean thinking through three different ways someone might discover you: search, social and referral.  And position well – a product that solves a boring but urgent problem usually wins over a product that sounds amazing but feels irrelevant.

Full Article

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Topics: Marketing, Digital Marketing, Positioning

What It’s Really Like Taking Over a Family Business

By Dan Furman | Inc | July 2, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Taking over the family business sounds like a natural next step for many people, but in reality, it’s often anything but simple. 
  2. At Soft Touch Furniture, a Girard, Ohio-based manufacturer of commercial restaurant furniture founded in 1974, a second-generation owner is learning how to carry forward a legacy while confidently building something new, with buy-in from everyone in the building.
  3. Here’s what she has to say about taking the reins from her parents.  According to her even if you eventually go in a different direction, you need to understand the foundation first.  Having a genuine interest really matters. Running a company is all-consuming. If your heart’s not in it, it eventually shows.  There’s a strong emotional layer. You’re not just managing a business – you’re carrying a legacy. That brings pressure. There were definitely moments where our (with the founder) perspectives clashed. Not out of malice, but because we simply see things differently.  The key is open communication and mutual respect.  I have to remind myself that his (founder) advice is invaluable. This is because he’s lived through market changes, tough customers, staffing issues, you name it. But I also must interpret that advice through today’s lens.

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Topics:  Generational Wealth, Family Business Succession, Family Business