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Ask HN: How do I approach German businesses?

11 pointsby Dharmakirtiabout 6 years ago
Hallöchen HN,<p>I&#x27;m a developer working on an pilot Product that targets traditional German businesses, like bakeries, cafes and restaurants. (No it&#x27;s not a POS solution).<p>However I&#x27;m totally clueless about how to approach the businesses. I speak B1 level German, and can hold a decent conversation with the locals.<p>How do I approach this? I would really appreciate if anyone have pointers about talking to German businesses.

2 comments

BjoernKWabout 6 years ago
Find out who the owner is and approach them outside of business hours (this one doesn&#x27;t just apply to German businesses).<p>Businesses with foot traffic can become very busy during business hours. Therefore, employees won&#x27;t have the time and patience for vendors trying to sell them something, even if that something potentially is tremendously helpful to them.<p>Finding out who the owner is usually is particularly easy with German businesses: If the business has a website just have a look at the company details (the legally required &quot;Impressum&quot;). If it doesn&#x27;t - which unfortunately still is the case with some companies in those industries you mentioned - you can try looking up the company at the company register (&quot;Handelsregister&quot;, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.handelsregister.de" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.handelsregister.de</a> ). Only incorporated companies are listed there, however.<p>Many businesses of these kinds are branches of larger chains or franchise businesses. In that case, contacting procurement or ideally trying to reach the managing director &#x2F; CEO of the mother company probably is a more conducive approach.<p>In terms of business culture both conversations in general and business practices in particular can appear to be more direct and formal than one might be used to from other cultures.<p>These resources might help with familiarising yourself with some cultural aspects of communication in a business context in Germany. I just had a cursory glimpse at them but from what I&#x27;ve read the information stated there seems to be correct. Keep in mind, though, that due to the influence from other cultures, particularly from the English-speaking world, conventions and practices today tend to be much more relaxed, especially with younger people:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;businessculture.org&#x2F;western-europe&#x2F;business-culture-in-germany&#x2F;business-etiquette-in-germany&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;businessculture.org&#x2F;western-europe&#x2F;business-culture-...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;businessculture.org&#x2F;western-europe&#x2F;business-culture-in-germany&#x2F;business-communication-in-germany&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;businessculture.org&#x2F;western-europe&#x2F;business-culture-...</a>
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luckylionabout 6 years ago
If it&#x27;s not a POS, maybe you could just talk to POS-vendors and supporters. They already have the contacts and can act as multipliers.
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