@shoei
international trade isn't a game for amateurs. @incomm made a major error in vetting the opportunity, so I give them the benefit of the doubt - always willing to help a legitimate business or someone trying to earn an HONEST living, time permitting. I defined the due diligence process for his firm to research, to help them develop an in-house process for vetting future opportunities.
The analysis of vetting opportunities - although the numbers may be off - since I haven't looked at this stuff internationally for over 15 years - the numbers should have gone up by around 2x, the 2008 financial crisis impacts notwithstanding. That was in response to comments marginalizing @incomm's company's loss. Although I'm sure it wasn't in the USD 100k regime - for them it was still a significant investment of time and resource, to include money out of pocket. The object was to understand that this kind of fraud doesn't just affect out of pocket costs for a few cases of cigarettes - it can have significant financial impact to struggling companies - especially SMEs (small to medium enterprises).
I didn't respond to @incomm to make him feel better about being sodomized by a group of thieves. I responded to offer sound professional advice - take it or leave it.
@incomm posted here to warn others about his company's experience - which indicates a degree of social responsibility, which I respect. So I responded out of respect, as opposed to proffering useless sympathetic rhetoric. I offered FREE professional consulting advice based on over 30 years of professional experience dealing with frauds, thieves, corrupt employees, corrupt managers, and occasionally, some seriously dangerous people, that you should hope you NEVER meet (introduced into our company by a well-meaning moron, hoping to score a derivative contract).
I am an eminent professional in this field and even I've been screwed, despite strong anti-fraud processes. I've experienced circumvention, political risk resulting in fraud to associated financiers (to the tune of USD 15 million) and significant financial loss to our firm, wasted bad faith negotiations with the legal rep for a major multinational during final contractual negotiations, resulting in some hefty legal bills that we had to write off as a loss (like USD 400k in legal fees). In this world - incompetence, negligence - doesn't matter whether you're well intentioned or not - you're still perceived as a fraud when you can't engage or negotiate professionally. We negotiate fairly. Buyers and sellers perceive this as a weakness to exploit - that's their dream. We're NOT stupid - just professional.
White collar fraud is globally pervasive even in developed countries and RARELY prosecuted - which is why it's pervasive and NOT limited to just China. It's pervasive in the USA and Japan also. Business is war and thieves and frauds (and incompetent negligent people) make it even more complicated.
International trade is an order of magnitude more complicated than domestic trade and also rife with fraud - even from established and regular clients. We have to analyze and account for force majeur issues such as political risk, war, social unrest, natural disasters, for continuation of operations and disaster recovery. That's the world of professionals and professional pro-active management, versus a clod of dirt.
I frequently come across as an abrasive, arrogant grade A A-hole - but that's the world I live in and THAT's the world that @incomm met. It's NOT a nice place. Fraud, waste, corruption are rampant - as the US sponsored global financial crisis eminently demonstrated. Those guys even paid themselves some seriously obscene bonuses after the US taxpayers bailed them out of the self-inflicted manure pile they about to drown in.
I wish @incomm the best in his future endeavors...the best way to do that is to offer advice based on world-class experience as opposed to useless feel-good rhetoric. Friends tell the truth - we don't attempt to lie and tell them everything's gonna be alright, because it's not if they don't change their fundamental modus operandi. If they're willing to listen - we point them in the right direction, so they don't repeat the mistake and hopefully avoid even more complicated and devious fraud schemes. Just telling someone to "be more careful in the future" is useless, moronic, imbecilic and deeply offensive advice. Better to just shut-up. If you REALLY sincerely care and respect the relationship (or in this case, the poster), you need to proffer something tangible, versus spectator back-seat driver type comments.
You may spend a few minutes to a few hours thinking about how to avoid frauds or for example, avoid being burglarized. A professional thief spends 7/24 planning and scheming on how to separate you from your money and valuables - both directly and indirectly. In a way - they're truly professional - but in a socially deviant manner. What could they accomplish if they set that scheming conniving mind to legitimate business?
Business is war - you have no friends and no family - but the goal is a mutual win-win relationship. Professional thieves prey on that.
If I wanted to be a person who says nice things - I would've started my career as a professional gigolo much earlier in life...and probably died of starvation in poverty, as it's not my nature. At executive level - we endeavor to negotiate directly or using the bizarre inuendo and hinting language of Asian execs (incredibly tiresome to analyze everything they say, body language, etc). I don't have time to waste being facetious, snide, or sarcastic. If you want to do business, let's talk business. If you want to show me how elegant and smart you are - go to a ktv and impress some hostess who might be impressed by such behavior.
Buyer AND Sellers Beware.