• Culture Shock: When a Signed Contract is Just a Suggestion
    Jan 23 2026

    In this episode, host John Jörn Stech explores how contracts reveal the deeper cultural logic behind global business. Drawing on real experiences from the United States, Germany, Russia, China, Brazil, and Egypt, it uncovers how written agreements reflect national attitudes toward trust, risk, negotiation, and long‑term partnership. Whether you work in international business, cross‑cultural management, global mobility, or multinational leadership, this conversation offers a vivid look at why contracts are never as universal as they appear.

    You’ll hear stories from automotive industry negotiations, dealer agreements, joint ventures, and high‑stakes cross‑border partnerships. These examples highlight how contract interpretation shifts dramatically across cultures: from system‑trust environments like the U.S. and Germany to relationship‑trust cultures such as China, Brazil, and Russia, and finally to hybrid bureaucratic‑relational systems like Egypt. The episode breaks down how legal frameworks, institutional reliability, and interpersonal networks shape everything from timelines to renegotiations.

    Listeners will gain insight into why American contracts emphasize legal protection, why German agreements prioritize precision, why Russian and Chinese negotiations rely heavily on relationships, and why Brazilian and Egyptian business cultures blend formal documentation with human connection. These contrasts illuminate the hidden cultural DNA behind global contracting, compliance, and business communication.

    If you’re navigating international deals, leading multicultural teams, or preparing for global expansion, this episode offers practical context for understanding how different societies view obligations, flexibility, and the written word. It’s a guide to avoiding misunderstandings, strengthening partnerships, and reading the cultural signals embedded in every clause and signature.

    By the end, you’ll see contracts not just as legal documents but as cultural artifacts that reveal how people build trust, manage uncertainty, and define professional integrity across borders. This is essential listening for anyone working in global strategy, international negotiations, or cross‑cultural leadership.

    To learn more about the Auto Ethnographer, be sure to visit the homepage at https://www.auto-ethnographer.com

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    16 min
  • EP 42: New Year, new horizons for The Auto Ethnographer
    Jan 15 2026

    Welcome to the first episode of the new year — and the beginning of a major new chapter for The Auto Ethnographer. In this episode, host John Stech shares the story behind his five international relocations, the overwhelm that nearly stopped him, and the lessons that shaped his new mission: helping you turn your dream of living overseas into a real, actionable plan.

    For years, listeners have written in with the same struggle: “I want to move abroad… but I’m completely overwhelmed.” Today, John lifts the curtain on the solution he’s been building behind the scenes, and which will be available in the coming weeks.

    In This Episode

    - John’s first international move to Cairo: the excitement, the fear, and the avalanche of logistics that nearly derailed everything

    - The universal mental roadblocks that stop people from pursuing life abroad

    - Why the channel is expanding beyond automotive culture into deeper, broader conversations about global living

    - A preview of upcoming guests, including a renowned culture trainer and author

    - The reveal of John’s biggest project yet: a comprehensive 29‑video relocation course designed to guide you from “someday” to “I’m ready”

    - A breakdown of the course modules, covering mindset, country selection, visas, finances, logistics, settling in, community‑building, and more

    - How this new direction will bring more depth, more variety, and more practical value to every episode

    Why This Episode Matters

    If you’ve ever dreamed of living overseas but felt paralyzed by the complexity (visas, money, logistics, culture shock, loneliness), this episode is your turning point. John shares the systems he built over five relocations and explains how they’ve evolved into a complete roadmap for anyone ready to make a bold change.

    What’s Coming Next

    The channel’s expanded focus begins now, with richer cultural insights, more diverse guests, and content tailored to a wider range of careers and global paths. The relocation course launches soon, just in time for those ready to turn a New Year’s resolution into a real plan.

    Join the Conversation

    Comment with the one country you’re dreaming of — let’s build a community of people ready to take action, support each other, and make global living a shared reality.

    Thanks for being part of this journey. This year, we stop saying “someday.”

    Let’s get started.

    Homepage: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com

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    15 min
  • EP 41: 2025 recap with our guests' best quotes
    Dec 21 2025

    Living as an #expat outside of your home culture is the ultimate challenge. In this 2025 year-end special, I’ve distilled the most powerful insights from 41 episodes of The Auto Ethnographer into one essential guide.

    Join me as I revisit the most impactful moments from every featured guest this year—professionals who have navigated the complexities of the automotive industry and beyond in foreign lands. Whether you are facing early culture shock , looking to improve your cross cultural management skills, or simply curious about the reality of working abroad, these stories prove that the lessons learned are universally applicable.

    From the excitement of the "honeymoon phase" to the hard realities of cultural adaptation, this video compiles the real human stories behind the job titles.

    In this video, we cover:

    • Real-world advice: Practical tips for surviving the transition to a new country.

    • Professional growth: How to handle cross-cultural communication in the workplace.

    • The Human Side: Honest reflections from unique guests on what it truly means to live as an expat, work with expats, and to be a global citizen.

    Resources & Links:

    • Subscribe for more expat stories: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtrD6CPH0KXdKrIRBnTHpuQ

    Connect with The Auto Ethnographer: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com

    FB page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61567929329364

    IG page: https://www.instagram.com/auto.ethnographer/

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer

    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtrD6CPH0KXdKrIRBnTHpuQ

    #ExpatLife #CulturalAdaptation #WorkingAbroad #CrossCulturalManagement #2025Recap #AutomotiveIndustry #CultureShock

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    30 min
  • Toscan Bennett: A Third‑Culture Kid enters a Four‑Wheeled World
    Dec 10 2025

    What happens when a single career stretches across continents, cultures, and some of the most storied automotive brands on earth? In this episode of Auto Ethnographer, we dive into the remarkable global journey of Toscan Bennett, a man whose life has been shaped by movement, adaptation, and an uncanny ability to bridge worlds that rarely understand one another.

    Host John Stech welcomes Toscan for a wide‑ranging conversation that begins with his unusual upbringing as a third‑culture kid born in Vietnam, raised across Asia and Latin America, and eventually thrust into a career that would take him deep inside the automotive industry’s most complex cultural intersections. Toscan’s story is not just about cars, it’s about identity, belonging, and the unique fluency that comes from never fully fitting into one place.

    Across the episode, Toscan walks us through his extraordinary professional arc, spanning 11 automotive brands and multiple continents. In this conversation alone, he reflects on his time with Alfa Romeo, Ferrari, Chrysler, Mitsubishi, Volkswagen, Volvo, Ceer, and VinFast—each one offering a different lens into how global companies think, operate, and sometimes collide. From Italian passion to Japanese humility, from German precision to Vietnamese speed, Toscan reveals how culture shapes products, decisions, and the very rhythm of corporate life.

    Listeners will hear vivid stories of American engineers experiencing European roads for the first time, the chaos and brilliance of cross‑cultural product development teams, and the surprising realities of working inside Swedish consensus culture. Toscan also shares candid insights into the limits of centralized thinking—especially when headquarters assumes the world looks just like home—and the moments when only firsthand experience can break through corporate assumptions.

    As promised during the episode, John and Toscan also acknowledge the three brands they didn’t get to—Lotus Motorcars, Opel, and Vauxhall—a reminder of just how expansive Toscan’s career has been. Even with an hour of conversation, there simply wasn’t enough time to cover all eleven.

    Whether you’re fascinated by global business, automotive history, or the human side of cross‑cultural leadership, this episode offers a rare inside look at what it truly means to build a career across borders. Toscan Bennett’s journey is a lesson in adaptability, curiosity, and the power of seeing the world through more than one lens.

    You can learn more about The Auto Ethnographer at https://www.auto-ethnographer.com

    You can also follow on social media:

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    54 min
  • EP 39: What attracts Thai consumers to automotive brands
    Dec 3 2025

    Do Thai citizens love cars? And what attracts them to different brands? Those are the questions that John Jörn Stech, host of The Auto Ethnographer, set out to answer at a large motorshow in Bangkok, Thailand.

    This week the 42nd Thailand International Motor Expo is bringing car fans and curious consumers from around the country to the IMPACT Challenger show hall. A wide range of brands hail from Europe, Japan, South Korea, the United States, and increasingly, from China.

    John speaks with representatives from eight different brands – European, Japanese, American, and Chinese – to understand what attracts their customers to their brands. These are Volvo, Toyota, Audi, BMW, Chery, Ford, Great Wall Motors, and Zeekr. Listeners may be surprised what the brands think the consumers find attractive.

    John speaks with Auteneo founder, Krzysztof Tokarz, about his company’s foray into social listening. This involves using AI-driven tools that “listen” to thousands of social media conversations about the automotive industry and specific brands. Using this social listening technology, automakers can learn what consumers are saying about their products and address the concerns, either tactically or with strategic product changes. To learn more about Autoneo’s capabilities, visit their website at https://www.auteneo.comand be sure to follow them on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/company/auteneo.

    John also speaks about the increasing number of Chinese competitors in the market, with special focus on Changan’s luxury Avatr brand, whose show stand is directly adjacent to Mercedes-Benz. Is this a threat to the vaunted German luxury brand?

    Auto shows are exciting, full of energy, and able to answer questions for inquisitive consumers. There is no doubt that Thailand’s show is in its prime and set to grow each year with new brands entering the market.

    To learn more about The Auto Ethnographer, visit our website at https://www.auto-ethnographer.com.

    You can also follow on social media:

    FB page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61567929329364

    IG page: https://www.instagram.com/auto.ethnographer/

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer

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    24 min
  • EP 38: Cooking up ideas in Fuzhou: Alexandra's story at Mercedes-Benz
    Nov 26 2025

    Alexandra Strassburger joins John Stech, host of The Auto Ethnographer podcast, with a story that transcends borders, industries, and expectations. Her 11 years living and working in China as a German citizen shaped not only her worldview but also her leadership style, family life, and strategic contributions to one of the world’s most iconic automotive brands. In this episode, Alexandra shares how deep cultural immersion—from language learning to Chinese cooking clubs—became the foundation for both personal growth and professional innovation.

    Currently Head of IT for Global Sales and Marketing at Mercedes-Benz Cars, Alexandra leads diverse teams across Stuttgart and beyond in shaping the future of digitized, standardized automotive sales. Her career at Mercedes-Benz spans over two decades, with pivotal roles in sales, marketing, R&D, and strategy. But it’s her intercultural fluency—honed through years of on-the-ground experience in China—that sets her apart as a global leader.

    On the personal side, Alexandra recounts how her early exposure to Chinese culture began at age five, when her father hosted Chinese business partners at their family home. Later, she and her husband made the bold decision to raise their children in a fully local Chinese environment, complete with traditional medicine, Mandarin-speaking caregivers, and dumpling-filled Chinese New Year celebrations. “If you ask me where my home is,” she says, “it’s in Chaoyang, Beilu in Beijing.”

    Professionally, Alexandra’s time in China was transformative. She helped establish product management in Beijing, built the China Insights division, and led teams through the complexities of a rapidly evolving market. Her leadership journey began with a steep learning curve - “I was very German and very controlling,” she admits - but evolved into a hybrid approach that blended German thoroughness with Chinese pragmatism. “That was the magic key,” she reflects.

    The episode also explores how Alexandra’s return to Germany revealed a more international and diverse workplace than the one she had left. She brought back a new mindset - one that values closeness with team members and embraces cultural overlap. “All the fears I brought from Germany were completely useless,” she says. “I could just avoid them and learned a lot. I grew a lot there.”

    Whether you’re curious about cross-cultural leadership, global mobility, or the human side of automotive strategy, this conversation offers rich insights and heartfelt reflections. As Alexandra puts it, “We didn’t just live in China—we became part of it.”

    To learn more about The Auto Ethnographer, visit the homepage at https://www.auto-ethnographer.com .

    Also follow on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and LinkedIn.

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    49 min
  • EP 37: Is Europe too focused on the past as China charges to the future?
    Nov 19 2025

    In this episode of The Auto Ethnographer podcast, host John Stech welcomes back Chinese culture trend forecaster and brand strategist Grace Mou for a deeply personal and thought-provoking conversation. Fresh from her first-ever trip to Europe - visiting France and Italy - Grace shares her candid impressions of Western culture, technology, and branding through the eyes of a Chinese professional immersed in global consumer trends.

    What she discovered surprised her. “I never expected that Europe is living in the past while China is living in the future,” Grace reflects. From the absence of mobile payment systems to the analog pace of daily life, she found herself transported not forward, but backward in time. Yet rather than dismissing the slower rhythm, she came to admire it. “Europeans don’t live on their smartphones. They can have more time to enjoy their life.”

    The conversation dives into the rituals of Italian coffee culture, the emotional resonance of European branding, and the contrast between Shanghai’s innovation-driven consumerism and Europe’s reverence for tradition. “In China, we obsess over usefulness. But in Europe, beauty and heritage come first,” Grace explains. Her insights challenge assumptions about progress and offer a nuanced view of what it means to live and nurture brands well.

    As a branding strategist, Grace found herself rethinking the very foundations of value. “Sometimes, the useless is the most powerful,” she says, pointing to the rise of emotional economy brands like PopMart in China. Her reflections suggest a cultural shift on the horizon, one where aesthetics, storytelling, and emotional connection may begin to rival functionality in Chinese consumer expectations.

    Grace also touches on sustainability, noting Europe’s embrace of the circular economy through vintage shops and secondhand fashion. “In China, people jump to the newest things. But in Europe, they appreciate what has already lived,” she observes. This reverence for the past, she argues, could offer valuable lessons for China’s fast-moving consumer culture.

    To accompany this episode, Grace has published two Substack essays: one exploring Milan’s coffee culture compared to Shanghai’s, and another on discovering authentic French cuisine outside Paris. Tune in for a rich, cross-cultural dialogue that will leave you rethinking technology, branding, and the art of living. You can find those here on Grace’s Substack page: https://substack.com/@trendculturebrand. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss her weekly insightful articles on brand and culture trends.

    You can learn more about The Auto Ethnographer on the homepage at https://www.auto-ethnographer.com

    You can also follow on

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    #chinaculture #chinarising #eastmeetswest #milano #paris #coffeeculture #focaccia #progress

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    36 min
  • EP 36: Cultural black eye in Georgia - when ICE raided Hyundai
    Nov 13 2025

    In this episode of The Auto Ethnographer, host John Stech explores the cultural and diplomatic shockwaves following a U.S. immigration raid at a Korean-run EV battery plant in Georgia. Nearly 500 Korean nationals - engineers, technicians, and students - were detained despite holding valid visas. The raid triggered not only legal action but also a deep rupture in trust between South Korea and the United States.

    John examines the human toll, the Korean cultural concept of chemyeon (face), and how public humiliation abroad reverberates through Korean society. He connects the incident to South Korea’s escape from an authoritarian past and highlights how the raid was framed as a moral and diplomatic crisis. With Korean firms reevaluating U.S. investments and a class-action lawsuit now underway, this episode asks: What happens when dignity is violated in a global business partnership?

    This is not just a story about immigration enforcement—it’s about cultural diplomacy, strategic clarity, and the fragile nature of trust between allies. Tune in for a sobering look at how global mobility intersects culture and politics, and why symbolic repair may be the only path forward.

    Subscribe, rate, and share The Auto Ethnographer wherever you listen.

    Visit https://auto-ethnographer.com for more insights and updates.

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    19 min