Company: Lingo24.com
Contact: Christian Arno, Founder and Managing Director
Location: London, UK
Industry: Translation Services
Annual revenue: $6,300,000
Number of employees: 105

Quick Read:

Lingo24 is a UK-based business that used to derive around 70% of its sales from the domestic market. In 2006, it sought to expand operations internationally, both to increase sales and to diversify its revenue sources as a means of protecting itself from fluctuations in the currency markets.

Through the strategic positioning of offices across four continents, and by translating and localizing its website for other markets, Lingo24 has been able to make significant inroads into the international arena. It now derives more than 50% of its revenue from abroad.

Challenge

Lingo24 is a UK-based round-the-clock translations service, which Christian Arno started from a spare room in his parents' house just after graduating from Oxford University in 2001.

Within two years of the company's launch, Arno had set up operations in New Zealand and China, the backbone of the company's 24-hour competitive advantage. And by 2005, Lingo24 had four global hubs, 20 employees, websites in three languages, and revenue of £1.2 million (GBP).

Entering 2006, however, the company was still deriving close to 70% of its sales from the domestic market, and it wanted to find a way to increase international sales in multiple time zones in order to decrease its reliance on revenue in the form of pound sterling.

Campaign

Lingo24's expansion strategy involved the following:

1. Identifying the most appropriate locations for two new hubs

The company wanted to establish two hubs—one servicing Europe, and the other the Americas. First, however, it needed to identify cost-effective locations where it could also find sales and marketing personnel with the right mix of skills (language and technology).

The company researched salary levels, property costs, taxation, and employment law in several European cities and found that Timisoara, Romania met its criteria:

  • The city is closer to more European capitals (seven in all) than it is to its own capital.
  • Most citizens are bilingual, and many speak three or four languages.
  • Overhead such as property costs and salaries are comparatively low.
  • It has a good university that produces strong results in business, technology, and languages, so there would be no problem recruiting appropriate staff to handle sales throughout Europe.

Similar research for the Americas identified Panama City, Panama as the obvious choice:

  • Because of its key geographic location, Panama is an established international business center; the IMF predicted it would have the fastest-growing economy in Latin America this year.
  • In particular, its economy is based on a well-developed service industry, and it is selected by larger US companies that wish to establish international call centers. Accordingly, Lingo24 could tap into an existing business culture and skill base.
  • English and many other languages are widely spoken in Panama.
  • It uses US currency.
  • Overheads in comparison to the US and Canada are relatively low.

2. Localizing its web presence for new markets

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Case Study: How a Small Company Went Global (Without Breaking the Bank)

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kimberly Smith is a freelance writer. Reach her via dtkgsmith@gmail.com.

LinkedIn: Kim Smith