1. Many Chinese companies struggling overseas have an outdated internal mindset that treats legal services as a routine procurement item, demanding lower prices and more work for less pay. This oversight underestimates professional expertise in domestic markets but drives immense risk abroad: projects fail not because of market rejection but due to misjudging the rules, and lawsuits are lost the moment a lawyer is selected rather than in the courtroom. [para. 1][para. 2]2. Going global means entering a regulatory system in Europe, the US, and the Middle East involving complex labor, tax, environmental, and data security laws. A recent case of a planned battery factory in Belgium stalled because the company saved on upfront legal fees by piecing together fragmented information from several firms, missing that Belgian wages are indexed to inflation—an oversight that fundamentally altered the investment model. Free advice often proves the most expensive because it offers illusions, not judgments. [para. 3][para. 4]3. More alarming is systemic dysfunction in large Chinese companies, especially state-owned enterprises and platform companies, where high-risk legal matters are downgraded to routine procurement. Legal departments understand the risks and required counsel capabilities but lack decision-making power; procurement departments prioritize process and the lowest bid to avoid accountability. One general counsel noted that following the procurement process to hire an unsuitable lawyer brings no blame, but insisting on the best (more expensive) lawyer leads to endless internal audits. [para. 5][para. 6][para. 7]4. These companies authorize billions for overseas investments but apply lowest-bidder logic to legal services that determine project survival. In a high-stakes cross-border dispute, the Chinese company's opponent had already locked up top British law firms; when the company sought alternatives, the final decision was dictated by the lowest quote. The general counsel admitted having only one vote in a procurement-led process—the outcome was already tilting against them simply due to how counsel was chosen. Treating a complex London arbitration as a lowest-bidder exercise ensures low priority, low resource allocation, and low win rate, leading to delays, penalties, brand damage, and massive remediation costs. [para. 8][para. 9][para. 10][para. 11][para. 12]5. In the EU, regulatory tightening like the Foreign Subsidies Regulation and anti-dumping cases shows that legal compliance is a prerequisite, not a post-crisis remedy. Vastly different outcomes (zero to 35% tariffs) in an anti-dumping case illustrate that legal strategy dictates market survival. To survive, Chinese companies must overhaul internal mechanisms: separate major cross-border legal affairs from general procurement; establish capability-centric hiring standards focusing on lead partner expertise; create safe harbors for professional judgment; front-load legal budgets for comprehensive analyses; and build preemptive legal resource pools before crises hit. Respecting lawyers is about preserving corporate survival—refusing to pay for professional competence is the most expensive mistake. [para. 13][para. 14][para. 15][para. 16][para. 17][para. 18][para. 19][para. 20][para. 21]AI generated, for reference only