Case Binter 1
Case Binter 1
Case Binter 1
DMG-Shanghai
In 1993, New Yorker Dan Mintz moved to China as a freelance film director with no contacts, no
advertising experience, and no Mandarin skills. By 2006, the company he subsequently founded
in China, DMG, had emerged as one of China's fastest-growing advertising agencies with a client
list that includes Budweiser, Unilever, Sony,Nabisco, Audi, Volkswagen, China Mobile, and
dozens of other Chinese brands. Mintz attributes his success in part to what the Chinese call guanxi.
Guanxi literally means relationships, although in business settings it can be better understood as
connections. Guanxi has its roots in the Confucian philosophy of valuing social hierarchy and
reciprocal obligations. Confucian ideology has a 2,000-year-old history in China. Confucianism
stresses the importance of relationships,both within the family and between master and servant.
Confucian ideology teaches that people are not created equal. In Confucian thought, loyalty and
obligations to superiors (or to family) is regarded as a sacred duty, but at the same time, this loyalty
has its price. Social superiors are obligated to reward the loyalty of theirsocial inferiors by
bestowing "blessings" upon them; thus, the obligations are reciprocal.
Today, Chinese will often cultivate a guanxiwang, or "relationship network;' for help. Reciprocal
obligations are the glue that holds such networks together. If those obligations are not met-if favors
done are not paid back or reciprocated-the reputation of the transgressor is tarnished, and he or she
will be less able to draw on his or her guanxiwang for help in the future. Thus, the implicit threat
of social sanctions is often sufficient to ensure that favors are repaid, obligations are met, and
relationships are honored. In a society that lacks a strong rule-based legal tradition, and thus legal
ways of redressing wrongs such as violations of business agreements, guanxi is an important
mechanism for building long-term business relationships and getting business done in China.
There is atacit acknowledgment that if you have the right guanxi, legal rules can be broken, or at
least bent.
Mintz, who is now fluent in Mandarin, cultivated his guanxiwang by going into business with two
youngChinese who had connections, Bing Wu and Peter Xiao. Bing Wu, who works on the
production side of the business, was a former national gymnastics champion, which translates into
prestige and access to business and government officials. Peter Xiao comes from a military family
with major political connections. Together, these three have been able to open doors that long-
established Western advertising agencies have not. They have done it in large part by leveraging
the contacts of Wu and Xiao, and by backing up their connections with what the Chinese call Shi
Ii, the ability to do good work.
A case in point was DMG's campaign for Volkswagen, which helped the German company to
become ubiquitous in China. The ads used traditional Chinese characters, which had been banned
by Chairman Mao during the cultural revolution in favor of simplified versions. To get permission
to use the characters in film and print ads-a first in modern China-the trio had to draw on high-
level government contacts in Beijing. They won over officials by arguing that the old characters
should be thought of not as "characters" but as art. Later, they shot TV spots for the ad on
Shanghai's famous Bund, a congested boulevard that runs along the waterfront of the old city.
Drawing again on government contacts, they were able to shut down the Bund to make the shoot.
Steven Spielberg had been able to close down only a portion of the street when he filmed Empire
of the Sun there in 1986. DMG has also filmed inside Beijing's Forbidden City, even though it is
against the law to do so. Using his contacts, Mintz persuaded the government to lift the law for 24
hours. As Mintz has noted, "We don't stop when we come across regulations. There are restrictions
everywhere you go. You have to know how get around them and get things done:·4a
Questiom:
1. Why do you that soo Important to cultitative guanxi and guanxiwang in China ?
2. What does the experience of DMG tell us about the way things work in China? What would
likely happen to a business that obeyed all the rules and regulations, rather than trying to
find a way around them as Dan Mintz apparently does?
3. What are the ethical issues that might arise when drawing upon guanxiwangto get things
done in China? What does this suggest about the limits of using guanxiwangfor a Western
business committed to high ethical standards?
ANSWER
3. The ethical issues that might arise are that, in return, you may be asked to do something
that is very illegal in your own country or contrary to your personal beliefs to get things
done in China through guanxiwang. For western businesses with high ethical standards this
means they can only use guanxiwang for very little help, because if they ask for big help
and illegal reciprocal publishing and everything goes out, western businesses lose their
good reputation and with it their customers.