Summarizing our
MBA of International Trade Management Program
| Total
Cost |
The total cost of
any course are US$ 490.00 in one only payment, or US$ 590.00 in
four payments of US$ 147.50. |
|
Scholarship
|
Our Board
will examine all requests for a partial fully justified
scholarship. We do not issue total scholarship. Any
partial scholarship must be paid in full. |
| Begin |
Any course will
begin five working days after your payment. |
| Duration |
Four and half
months (in Fast Track) or One year. We recommend the Fast Track model. |
| Languages |
All courses are in
English, plus the same lessons in one of the following
translations: Arabic, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese, Croatian,
Czech, Danish, Dutch, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Greek,
Hebrew, Hindi, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian,
Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian,
Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Espanol, Swedish, Ukrainian,
Vietnamese.
|
| Diploma |
After
the final exam, you will receive (through a Priority
Airmail Registered letter) a Diploma and a Transcript, both with
an official Public Notary signature and seal.
|
| Exam |
You
have two options for the final exam, at your choice: Or a
multiple choice test through the Web, or to write a 10-pages
white paper about the studied subject.
|
Brief Notes on International Trade Management - export regulations Dr. S. Koner, MBA Professor
Remember, most lėtters of credit are freely negotiable, meaning that the beneficiary could present documents to any bank. By endorsing the LC, any bank that might receive documents will know that an assignment has been made.
The bank will require the original letter of credit be presented along with the written request for the assignment. The bank needs the original LC so it can endorse the backside of the LC indicating that an assignment has been made to the named party and the value of the assignment.
California has overseas trade offices in five countries and its State Department of Food and Agriculture and California Energy Commission [to name just two agencies] sponsor trade shows and offer financial assistance to prospective exporters.
For consumer products the pack might have various functions: protective, informative, merchandising and conforming to legal requirements and buying habits [e.g. Americans tend to buy less frequently than Europeans, so the largest size is more popular in the United States].
Industry trade associations are also useful, as are private consulting firms [such as Terence Barber's BHP Associates] and the business departments located within major universities.
The commitment and expertise of the distributor are paramount to us, stresses Cenogenics owner Michael Katz. Once we've found the right person, the country is no longer difficult. We have a guide through the maze.
Delivery is the placement of the vehicle in a position for unloading.
Studies reveal that enterprises willing to invest, to innovate and design their products for a specific export market are most likely to succeed.
As the shipment approached Chicago, Lowes customs agent, Fritz enterprises, directed Hanjin to release the shipment to a motor carrier so that it could be taken to a U.S. Customs facility for an intensive customs examination. After the inspection had been completed, the container sat for over a week in Channels unprotected yard, and was eventually stolen.
In a survey of 328 of the U.S.'s fastest growing enterprises, globally focused enterprises anticipated 1992 growth rates of 26.4 percent compared to 22.5 percent for firms that aren't involved in selling internationally.
In the final analysis the extent of adaptation will be driven by the corporate culture, Customer and market orientation, the market potential for the product scheduled to be exported and the importance of international marketing for corporate growth and survival.
What flies off the shelves in Chicago may not necessarily be a great seller in Munich. Cultural differences and varying product standards can present serious barriers if you aren't willing to adapt your commodity to your new target market.
Documentation is important not only for the amount of additives, but also the source of the product; secondary or indirect additives are also regulated in most countries.
It would make perfect sense to develop [unless such products are already available] and export dehydrated vegetables in some country markets.
Language, legal and cultural differences may require you to consider the need for product changes. Such changes may include product design, branding, labeling, packaging and service arrangements.
Dr. S Koner is a MBA Professor of the education organization http://correspondence-itm.mba-low-cost.com, with almost 60 years of experience in the areas of information technology and business management. |