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Global Trade Compliance as a Tool for Success

Compliance with global trade regulations is rapidly becoming much more than an exercise in risk management. Increasingly, it is a strategic capability that can help companies increase their competitive advantages and grow revenues. That’s especially so as governments worldwide crack down on non-compliance. Here is a glimpse of the upside of effective global trade compliance, and a way to rethink how supply chain leaders must engage with their companies’ compliance experts.

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This is an excerpt of the original article. It was written for the January-February 2015 edition of Supply Chain Management Review. The full article is available to current subscribers.

January-February 2015

As long as there have been boats and beasts of burden, intrepid business professionals, governments, and marauders have sought fame, fortune, wealth, and value by going global. Think the Phoenicians, Marco Polo, and the Vikings in days of old. Or in contemporary times, think of China, BRIC, EMEA, and other emerging markets. One could argue that outsourcing to China a few decades ago gave birth to supply chain management as we think of it today. This month we’re including an online bonus column from APQC. While this issue focuses on global management, we didn’t want to miss out on the column.
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Global sales opportunity—or supply chain snafu? Too often, the two go together when an organization embarking on global expansion discovers that its shipment is out of compliance with a trade regulation that had not been considered in advance.

When this happens, the story is almost always the same: “An overseas opportunity came up and we made a deal. But we ignored the fact that we had to cross an international border, and now our goods are hung up at Customs, we’re paying warehouse fees that we didn’t plan on, and we’ve just learned that someone has to go down and mark the goods.”

Even today, in what’s clearly a worldwide economy, that’s how many companies embark on doing business globally. They probably have the “bones” of a global supply chain firmly in place, but they may lack the trade compliance programs that can make or break their cross-border supply chain activities. At best, they get themselves into all kinds of trade compliance hassles; at worst, they see those hassles as a sign that any further expansion into foreign markets is not worth it.

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From the January-February 2015 edition of Supply Chain Management Review.

January-February 2015

As long as there have been boats and beasts of burden, intrepid business professionals, governments, and marauders have sought fame, fortune, wealth, and value by going global. Think the Phoenicians, Marco Polo, and…
Browse this issue archive.
Access your online digital edition.
Download a PDF file of the January-February 2015 issue.

Download Article PDF

Global sales opportunity—or supply chain snafu? Too often, the two go together when an organization embarking on global expansion discovers that its shipment is out of compliance with a trade regulation that had not been considered in advance.

When this happens, the story is almost always the same: “An overseas opportunity came up and we made a deal. But we ignored the fact that we had to cross an international border, and now our goods are hung up at Customs, we’re paying warehouse fees that we didn’t plan on, and we’ve just learned that someone has to go down and mark the goods.”

Even today, in what’s clearly a worldwide economy, that’s how many companies embark on doing business globally. They probably have the “bones” of a global supply chain firmly in place, but they may lack the trade compliance programs that can make or break their cross-border supply chain activities. At best, they get themselves into all kinds of trade compliance hassles; at worst, they see those hassles as a sign that any further expansion into foreign markets is not worth it.

SUBSCRIBERS: Click here to download PDF of the full article.

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About the Author

Sarah Petrie, Executive Managing Editor, Peerless Media
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I am the executive managing editor of two business-to-business magazines. I run the day-to-day activities of the magazines and their Websites. I am responsible for schedules, editing, and production of those books. I also assist in the editing and copy editing responsibilities of a third magazine and handle the editing and production of custom publishing projects. Additionally, I have past experience in university-level teaching and marketing writing.

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