This blog is part of a series adapted from The Global Standard, Cynthia’s forthcoming book on building internationally competitive businesses. In the lead-up to the hardcopy release, we’re unpacking some of the most persistent myths that hold companies back from global growth.
International Business Myths: Success Abroad Relies Solely on Connections
One of the most persistent misconceptions about international expansion is the belief that success hinges on having the right connections: a distributor who can open doors, an investor with influence, or a government contact who can make things happen. It is an appealing idea because it promises a shortcut. If only you knew the right people, your company could go global overnight.
But international business does not work that way. Relationships matter, of course; they can accelerate progress, open opportunities and provide early insights. Yet without the structure to support them, they collapse under their own weight. Connections can open doors, but only strategy, data and disciplined execution can keep those doors open.
In my experience, companies that cling to the “connections-first” mindset rarely achieve true international success. They invest in introductions instead of intelligence and rely on goodwill instead of groundwork. When the first few deals falter because pricing is misaligned, the product is not fit for market, or logistics cannot deliver at scale, they often conclude that the timing was wrong — when in fact the problem was structural.
The truth is that connections are only one gear in a much larger engine. In The Blueprint for International Success I describe the full set of moving parts required to make a business truly global: a crystal-clear strategic vision; market selection based on data, not guesswork; a deep understanding of the ideal international client and what drives them; confidence about which channels to sell through and how to optimise them; marketing that resonates with overseas customers and delivers measurable returns; a sales system designed for cross-border business; the right team; systems that can scale internationally; and tools that allow people to work productively, harmoniously and profitably across time zones and cultures.
To that list, I would add active accountability — external advisers or partners who hold you to account for progress against your strategy and guide and encourage you on the journey. Without these elements in place, no number of connections will carry a company far.
The firms that thrive internationally understand that relationships are multipliers, not substitutes. When supported by clarity, capability and consistent delivery, connections amplify impact. When they stand alone, they lead nowhere.
Looking Ahead
The myth of the “right connections” assumes that influence and access are unevenly distributed — that the global stage belongs only to those already inside the network. The next myth takes that assumption even further, suggesting that global trade itself is a game designed for men.
That idea, too, deserves to be challenged — and it’s where the next chapter of The Global Standard begins.