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PEOPLE >
UP&DOWN
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
PEOPLE UP

Photo: Ivan Malý |
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Petr Šmída
The former general manager of GE Capital Bank CR was named the
new director of quality of GE Consumer Finance in the company's
US headquarters (Stamford). He is not only the first Czech,
but also the first European, in the top management of GE Consumer
Finance. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Dominik Hašek
Four hockey players from the Detroit Red Wings, led by Dominik
Hašek, brought the Stanley cup to the ČR. Proceeds from the
celebration (millions of Czech crowns) will be donated to Czech
TV's People in Need foundation, to be used for flood victims. |
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Photo: Archiv |
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Jan Mühlfeit
Jan Mühlfeit was recently appointed vice-president of Microsoft
for Europe, Middle East and Africa. Mühlfeit started his career
in 1993 as a marketing manager in the Czech branch, and now
enjoys a position never before reached by an east European manager. |
PEOPLE DOWN

Photo: ČTK |
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Jan Gottvald
The entrepreneur and former vice-chairman of the Czech-Moravian
Soccer Union is facing up to 12 years in prison for having committed
four serious criminal offences, allegedly causing damage of
more than CZK 400 million. The former "Number Two"
of Czech soccer is being prosecuted at large on CZK 20 million
bail. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Alexej Babiš
The head of Agrofert announced that he does not want to buy
Unipetrol under current conditions, but the government is not
willing to bargain further. If Agrofert does not pay the agreed
CZK 11.7 billion by the end of this year, the contract will
be voided. |
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Photo: Týden |
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Jiří Balvín
The general director of Czech TV, whose position is still in
doubt, is facing yet another criticism. While his employees
cut their vacation time short to ensure emergency broadcasting
during the floods, Balvín chose not to interrupt his holidays
in Croatia. |
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| Photo: Petr Poliak |
Jiří Antoš: Succeeding in spite
of fate
THE MID-SIZED eastern Bohemian furniture maker TR Antoš, which repairs
old furniture and produces replicas from solid wood, has become
one of the most successful Czech exhibitors abroad in the last five
years. Its products, and the work of its wood carvers, have been
repeatedly broadcast on German television, and since 1997, the company
has continually occupied an even bigger and more prestigious area
on the trade fair floor - specifically, at the largest furniture
trade fair in Cologne.
In the beginning, there was an ingenuous idea. Jiří Antoš (42),
a cabinet maker with many years experience, former employee of Umělecká
řemesla Praha (Arts and Crafts Prague) and current owner of TR Antoš,
staked everything on the interest of foreign traders in Czech rural
furniture from the beginning of the 20th century, and began to repair
and sell it. But his initial success was forcibly interrupted by
a car accident that made him incapable of working for almost two
years. "In one second my life changed. The change of regime
happened while I was in a rehabilitation institute in Kladruby.
It was very hard on me, seeing everything outside the capital developing
while I was confined to a bed," he recalls.
It was probably due to his determination not to give up that he
was able to overcome his unfavorable fate, and at the present time,
this employer of 150 people can boast that 99.5% of the company's
production is exported to, for example, 300 department stores in
Germany and 60 in Austria, as well as to France and the US. His
standard of living grew sharply - he exchanged the destroyed family
Trabant for a Volvo with leather interior and his salary multiplied
many times beyond the CZK 2,000 a month he was making at Umělecká
řemesla. One thing is now clear to him: "After the workaholic
period, when the firm meant everything to me, I settled down. Now
I see the value in other things," he says.
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| Photo: Pavel Veselý |
Martin Tlapa: Words are but the
shadow of the fact
VITAL ECONOMIST Martin Tlapa (38), general director since 2000 of
CzechTrade, the Czech agency for support of trade activities, has
been providing a breath of fresh air in the bureaucratic state apparatus
for several years already. After four years as secretary for trade
issues at the Czech Embassy in Canada, he decided to focus his efforts
on establishing an agency for supporting exports from the Czech
Republic, a common thing in advanced democracies. "In the beginning,
we faced the distrust of companies towards state agencies. But overcoming
obstacles, formulating a vision, motivating a team and, last but
not least, the joy of success are exactly what I prize in my work,"
says the director with great enthusiasm. He cannot stand negative
thinking and captivates people with his elan. In the past year,
he and his employees have realized 605 long-term orders for domestic
exporters to destinations abroad, and they have helped over 2,000
foreign entities find Czech business partners.
However, according to CzechTrade findings, the Czech Republic still
has an unfavorable image abroad as a former eastern-bloc country
with low-quality marketing and a poor knowledge of languages. "Our
goal is to change this image and to help firms achieve beneficial
contracts, since it is not important to merely produce something,
it is most important to sell it," says Tlapa, asserting a well-known
maxim. His beginnings in the international environment were not
easy, he says, and he learned lessons from sticky moments that sometimes
came about due to the cultural differences of various nations. "You
must continuously improve yourself and not try to find excuses for
something not getting done. As Democritos said, 'Words are but the
shadow of the act'", quotes this literature enthusiast.
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