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April 30, 2010 by Guest Author 6 Comments

A Guest Post by Erno Hannink

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What I admire in the American culture is the quest for success. Most Americans I meet want to be number one and have an entrepreneurial spirit. Everyone can make it and be a success is standard in the US culture. It already starts with the competitions at school.

Let me show you some differences with the European cultures and what an entrepreneur might learn from this difference.

In Europe becoming No 1 is not everyone’s agenda. It is nice to have financial success but not necessary. Our rating for tests in school in the Netherlands, where I live, is mostly from 1-10 and 10 is the best and 1 is really bad. Most of the Europeans feel that 6 is good enough, no need to go for that 10. It’s similar for most countries in Europe. You can see that same attitude in the workplace at organizations and companies. We try to satisfy the customer, there is not really a need to surpass their expectations on delivery.

Entrepreneurship is in American DNA and that grows the nation. Europeans work less and therefore we can spend more time with our families and friends, cook and have dinner at home. This is the basis for less stress and healthier lives.

Where there is great success there is also great failure. The difference in rich and poor is huge. In our culture, you can become rich but the poor have a safety net. The government plays a large role in this. If a company needs to fire employees, the fired employees get money — first from the company and later from the government. This all needs to be paid with taxes. This makes the gap between rich and poor somewhat smaller. The poor do not have it easy, but will survive, have a roof over their head and are able to eat food, and use the health system.

In most of the European schools, English is part of our education. More and more Europeans use American social networks like Facebook and YouTube. This means that more and more people read and speak English. However, language is in the detail. Detail is where we can make mistakes and have misunderstandings.

There is also a difference in the home base. In the US there are 50 states and many cultures, but mostly people speak the same language: English. In Europe there are 44 countries that all have their own culture but more importantly, most have their own language. This makes the home base for a companies service or product already a lot smaller. Selling your products in several European countries is easier said than done. It involves language, cultural and national regulations.

I have worked for and with companies from the US and all over Europe. It is great to learn and enjoy all these cultural differences. If you want to expand you business outside the US it relatively easy these days. You can get in contact with local people via the social networks and get to know potential partners.

Once you start working with people from outside your culture it is great to see what you can learn from them. Take care not to force your way of working on to the other culture.

Have you been to Europe? Next time you come to Europe look at the differences and see what you might take home to use in your way of working. I would love to connect with you, I want to learn from you and maybe you can learn from me.

_____
Erno Hannink is a Social Media Specialist for Independent Professionals and Social Media Business Coach. Through the use of social media and a focus on online publishing of valuable information, Erno helps independent professionals attract and retain more clients. He is the author of the book ‘Attracting Clients รขย€ย“ How Independent Professionals and solopreneurs can get new clients using the internet” (free download) and also blogs on enthousiasmeren.nl (Dutch). You can find Erno on Twitter as @ErnoHannink

Thanks, Erno. I’ve enjoyed knowing and learning from and with you. ๐Ÿ™‚

–ME “Liz” Strauss
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Filed Under: Community, Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Erno Hannink, LinkedIn, relationships

Comments

  1. Amrit Hallan says

    April 30, 2010 at 9:26 AM

    Hello Erno.

    Nice string of thoughts. Provided there’s a safety net of some sort (even if we have to slowly pay for it) I think a relaxed life is preferable to always worrying about reaching the top spot. I recently read an article on one of the Apple founders who sold his shares for around 800 pounds I think and if he hadn’t he would have been a billionaire by now. But he said he has no regret because he has spent a much more fulfilling life. The basic idea is, we should define what success is for us, not the others.

    Reply
  2. Andy says

    April 30, 2010 at 10:40 AM

    I’d have to disagree about the claim that “most” Europeans strive for mediocrity.

    Have you observed schools throughout Europe (in which case you should publish a study) or just The Netherlands (in which case you’re using a very small non-representative sample).

    Europe – a country of 44 countries, about as many languages, and one single attitude towards success?

    Ok.

    Reply
  3. Karin H says

    May 1, 2010 at 5:02 AM

    Entrepreneurship is in American DNA and that grows the nation. Europeans work less and therefore we can spend more time with our families and friends, cook and have dinner at home. This is the basis for less stress and healthier lives.

    As fellow Dutch person (living and working in the UK) I think you are forgetting the “Dutch high spirit in trademenship!”, that’s definitely ingrained in our DNA ๐Ÿ˜‰

    And as for working less, never been to the UK?
    On the other hand, as we discovered, making many hours – UK employees work the most hours in Europe – does not equal getting the most done, that’s why our business has embraced quick response to any enquiry, so we definitely stand out from our competitors ๐Ÿ˜‰

    Karin H (Keep It Simple Sweetheart, specially in business)

    Reply
    • ME Liz Strauss says

      May 3, 2010 at 7:52 PM

      Hi Karin!
      I’m thrilled to have your insights into this question. You sure have rounded things out with a perspective I’ve not thought about for a while. I need to start traveling more again. I learn something every time you come by here. Thank you!

      Reply
  4. Erno Hannink says

    May 2, 2010 at 10:14 PM

    Hi Amrit, thank you. I agree on this “The basic idea is, we should define what success is for us, not the others.”

    Andy, the thought do not come from a study but more from observations during travel, talking with people in different countries (and no not all 44).

    Hallo Karin, is the UK more similar to the US than to Europe?

    Reply
  5. Karin H says

    May 4, 2010 at 6:09 AM

    Hi Erno. They think they are in some ways, but IMHO they’re not ๐Ÿ˜‰

    In some occasions/situations we really wonder in what century the UK is (20th, or even 18th)?

    Hi Liz, you know the coffee (Dutch, nice, strong and hot) will always be ready for you.

    Karin H

    Reply

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