Showing posts with label Thing.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thing.. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2017

China Employment Compliance and Audits: THE New Big Thing

China employment law complianceChina is serious about improving the situation for its workers. I repeat, China is serious about improving the situation for its workers.

I feel the need to repeat this because many foreign companies doing business in China believe decreasing economic growth will lead the government to favor foreign employers. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Foreign employers do not protest; Chinese employees do, and the Chinese government values stability above nearly all else.

Our China lawyers are seeing this play out in the following ways:

  • China”s government, courts and administrative bodies are getting tougher on foreign companies that do not comply with China’s labor and employment laws. Like pretty much everything else related China’s employment laws, the extent to which this is happening varies by location. See China Employment Law: Local and Not So Simple.
  • China employers that violate China’s labor protection laws will be named “and shamed.” Employers are also getting graded on their compliance with China’s labor and employment laws. I explain what this means below.

Beginning earlier this year, China enacted Measures for Announcing Major Violations of Labor Security and the Measures for Credit Rating Evaluation of Enterprise Labor Security Compliance. These measures evidence the government’s seriousness regarding employment law compliance and they give the government new powers to ensure compliance. According to the Supreme People’s Court, new labor disputes accepted by the Chinese court system totaled 483,311 in 2015, up a whopping 25 percent from the previous year. And I have no doubt that these numbers have been rising in a straight line upward ever since. China employees are getting smarter and more proactive about enforcing their legal rights against their employers, especially as against foreign employers.

The new measures include publicizing “serious” employer violations in newspapers and magazines and on TV. These public announcements will include the employer’s name, address, and registration code, along with the full name of the legal representative or key person in charge and the exact violation and fines or other sanctions imposed. Just imagine what this will do for your company’s reputation and your ability to hire new employees. Will individuals who have been named and shamed want to leave China? Will they have to do so?

In addition to naming and shaming, employers will receive A, B or C grades based on their compliance in various areas, including the following:

Employer grades will eventually be shared with various Chinese government agencies, including (it is widely believed), taxing authorities. In other words, if your company scores a C on its labor compliance, it may find itself at risk in all sorts of seemingly unrelated areas (beyond just fines for labor law non-compliance), such as income tax or environmental compliance. We expect China’s biggest cities with large numbers of foreign employers will get out in front of employer inspections and enforcement first and early.

Your job (pun intended) as a China employer is to get out in front on compliance as well. The best way to do this is to have an independent audit conducted on your employer-employee situation. As recently as a year ago, our China lawyers were rarely asked about “employer audits,” but hardly a month goes by these days without such a discussion. Foreign employers in China are seeing what is going on around them and they are reading the news. They recognize that the Chinese government now realizes there is lots of money to be made by fining foreign companies for failing to comply with China’s employment laws, while improving employee/citizen satisfaction at the same time. Our best employer audit clients are those who have already been fined, sanctioned or sued for employer violations. Our second best employer audit clients are those who know of someone in their own industry who has already been fined,

China Employment Compliance and Audits: THE New Big Thing

Monday, January 16, 2017

MeerKat Is The Next Big Thing. But For How Long?

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Live video streaming is nothing new. Many have tried it—and it’s always sort of taken off, but never really went «mainstream». MeerKat might just change all of that. But how will we know? For starters, it’s got a really good shot at stealing the show at SXSW next week—a venue that’s been known to uncover the next big shiny object in social. It was after all, SXSW that put Twitter on the map, then subsequently Foursquare and more recently though with less impact, Vine. 

But what exactly is MeerKat?

Part Snapchat, part Twitter, and part video streaming app—MeerKat lets you effortlessly stream video from your mobile phone using your Twitter connections as a starting point. It’s incredibly easy to get up and running—once you download the app, you are streaming within seconds. You can stream on demand or you can schedule a stream in advance. You can subscribe to other streams, like them or comment as they stream—the comments show up as tweets which creates an odd but interesting synergy with Twitter. When you are done with a live stream, you can save it as a video on your phone which then gives you the opportunity to edit and post at a later time.  

The problem with live video streaming has always been that people’s lives are not always that interesting—so you have to question who would tune into a live stream of you teaching a dog a new trick? But, that could be said for all of social media—it’s everyday people doing everyday things. 

Unless you’re a YouTube, Vine, Instagram Celebrity or perhaps in the near future—a «MeerKat star». And this is what could very well happen to MeerKat. On Vine a whole new breed of performers built new audiences who mastered the six second medium. Then they took that over to Snapchat and build audiences there. MeerKat could follow the same pattern and it’s turning into big business as Twitter recently acquired Niche, a platform that specializes in connecting brands with influencers in emerging channels (everything but YouTube). 

Which brings us to Twitter. Why hasn’t Twitter launched their own version of live streaming, native to the Twitter platform or as a sister app such as Vine? That could be coming next. Or they could offer to gobble up MeerKat. In the meantime as thousands of tech influencers descend upon SXSW next week—you can expect to see a barrage of MeerKat live video streams in your social feeds. First the tech influencers, then come the brands, and then comes the talent who build large audiences on the platform. This is the pattern you might just see unfold in the next few months.

Brands—get your teams experimenting with MeerKat now, and keep an eye out for the influencers you want to start working with. Even if Twitter comes up with their own solution—you’ll be better prepared. 

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MeerKat Is The Next Big Thing. But For How Long?