Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Miss Minnesota USA Promoted U.S. Business and Instilled Good Will in Laos


By Paul Mayer
Paul Mayer serves as Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Vientiane, Laos.

American diplomats meet interesting people every day. It's one of the things that make our careers so exciting. I've met presidents, Olympic gold medalists, and civic activists. In Montreal, Stevie Wonder told me I was cool. And, in Vientiane, I met a beauty pageant winner who helped American public diplomacy efforts in Laos.

This past January, as part of an economic diplomacy initiative, our embassy organized a campaign designed to deepen U.S.-Lao business ties and promote the newly-established Lao chapter of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham). The economy of Laos has emerged as an attractive investment opportunity for American businesses. A number of U.S. companies have already entered the Lao market, but unfortunately operate under structural and cultural disadvantages compared with companies from the region.

We, however, have an unexpected advocate for U.S. business in Laos: Nitaya Panemalaythong, Miss Minnesota USA 2012. Nitaya is Lao-American, and her beauty pageant win was widely celebrated by Lao people around the world. When we asked Nitaya to come to Laos, we knew she would help draw attention to American businesses. Her enthusiasm and charm never flagged through a jam-packed schedule of business meetings and public appearances. Our economic diplomacy campaign culminated in a trade fair and fashion show organized by AmCham. With trade booths for more than 15 U.S. companies, the event attracted almost 150 guests, including leading business members and senior Lao government officials.

Beyond her liaison work with the business community, Nitaya was a wonderful representative of the United States. She spoke -- in Lao and English -- at Embassy American Corners and she participated in numerous youth outreach events. She was indefatigable.

Nitaya took a journey on the embassy-supported "Book Boat" --a mobile library that delivers books to children in otherwise inaccessible parts of rural Luang Prabang Province. In Ban Sing Village, we watched as Nitaya spent the morning reading to nearly 100 children. The smiles all around were amazing. Her visits in Vientiane and Luang Prabang helped raise awareness of U.S. government-backed efforts to promote literacy, to halt the spread of HIV/AIDS, to clean up deadly unexploded ordnance, and to support the empowerment of women and girls. She also visited the Cooperative Orthotic and Prosthetic Enterprise (COPE), a USAID-funded organization which provides assistance to victims of unexploded ordnance, as well as a vocational training center for victims of human trafficking.

Unsurprisingly, Nitaya's visit was met enthusiastically by the people of Laos. The embassy posted updates and a series of video diaries on our Facebook page, and some postings reached a quarter of all Facebook users in the country. The most-liked Facebook post in the embassy's history was one featuring a picture of Nitaya and Miss Laos 2012 at the AmCham fashion show. These online postings captured some of the best moments of the visit, and weeks later, we still feel the good will.


Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Entrepreneurship to change the world.


Remarks at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit

Thomas Nides,Deputy Secretary for Management and Resources 

Dubai, United Arab Emirates
December 12, 2012- "Entrepreneurship is about the human drive to do something new and different. It keeps our societies vital and resilient. Anyone with a good idea and the willingness to work hard can improve the way we live - and make some money to boot.
Moreover, the biggest challenges facing our world today can only be solved with widespread innovation. Combating climate change. Finding sustainable clean energy solutions. Solving global health crises. These are worldwide foreign policy priorities that need more than new resources. They need new ideas and creative problem-solvers adding their shoulder to the wheel.
All around the world, stability and economic opportunity go hand-in-hand. The recent democratic transitions in this region reaffirm the importance of broad-based economic advancement for all of a country’s citizens. And nothing creates new opportunities like entrepreneurship. Here in the Middle East, unemployment numbers are already too high, particularly among young people. And it will take 50 to 100 million new jobs over the next 8 years just to keep it from rising any higher. This is a problem in Europe, Asia, Africa and every region of the world. We can’t hold the line on youth unemployment, much less improve it, without a laser-sharp focus on entrepreneurship.
The good news is that the world’s leaders understand that entrepreneurship is vital. That’s why President Obama has a global engagement agenda centered on entrepreneurship. That’s why Secretary Clinton is putting economic statecraft at the top of our diplomatic agenda. It’s why the leaders of the UAE have organized this important event. And that’s why I’m here.
The bad news is, we haven’t totally unlocked the system to enable entrepreneurs to unleash their talents and help us build a more stable and more prosperous future. That’s why all of you are here. It’s why you spent yesterday making connections, talking about the barriers you face, and discussing practical solutions we can put forward to amplify the impact of entrepreneurship around the world.
And it’s why this is the third time we’ve held this conference – and why we’ll continue to do so. First in Washington, then last year in Istanbul, and now here in this hub of commerce connecting Europe to the Middle East to Southeast Asia. Each time, we bring together people from the business world, from finance, from government, from civil society to build partnerships and strengthen ties. This summit links up American economic leadership with the innovation and entrepreneurial energy that is brimming over in this region of the world.
Because let’s face it: entrepreneurship is hard. It takes incredible determination, long hours, and a lot of trial and error to come up with a game changing innovation. Entrepreneurs need all of us working together to make it easier for them to succeed.