Five Lessons From My Last Consulting Project
7/6/2026 · cross-cultural consulting, China-Europe business, Chinese clients, client experience, trust building, meaning translation, service delivery, lessons learned, Netherlands, consulting insights
The port printed on my clients' tickets wasn't the port where the ship was docked.
Nobody had told the ground team. I found out hours before a group of Chinese clients was due to board a river cruise in the Netherlands.
The change had been made weeks earlier. The notification existed. It had simply stopped somewhere in the chain — head office, agency, ground level — before reaching the one person standing on the quay.
By 17:30, everyone was on board. No delays. No complaints. From the client's side, nothing had happened at all.
That was the point.
I've just written up five lessons from a month of ground-level work with Chinese client groups — arrivals, handovers, and that boarding day. The short version:
Information rarely fails at the source. It fails in the chain.
The genuine product is certainty, not logistics.
The exhaustion is cognitive, not physical.
And the one I keep coming back to:
trust is built in operational moments, not in proposals.
A Chinese client who watches you solve a problem calmly at 15:45 on a quay will believe your strategic advice in a way no credentials page can achieve.
Frameworks describe. Fieldwork convinces.
Full post on the blog — link in the comments.
If your organisation sits between Chinese and European ways of working and something keeps quietly going wrong in the handover, that gap has a structure. It can be found and named. Comment CLARITY or send me a DM and I'll show you where to look.