Vol. 5 [Texas News] Texas Market Entry Mission (TMEM) Opens Recruitment for Korean Companies
- Texas Market Entry Mission (TMEM), a seven-day program visiting four key Texas cities — Dallas, Austin, Taylor, and Houston — is now accepting applicants from Korean companies exploring U.S. expansion.
- Designed for C-suite and senior executive-level participants, with a cap of around 30 attendees; spots are filling quickly and early closure is anticipated.
What the program covers
- City-by-city briefings comparing investment climates and available incentives.
- On-site visits to major industrial zones and clusters, including the Texas Medical Center.
- Practical sessions on corporate establishment, taxation, labor, and workforce recruitment.
- Direct Q&A with state and municipal government officials.
- Interpretation support throughout, plus in-depth discussion tailored to each company's specific priorities.
- A customized agenda built around pre-trip surveys reflecting each participant's industry focus and stage of expansion planning.
- Post-trip one-on-one strategy sessions to help convert interest into an actionable roadmap.
Who it's for
- Companies weighing entry into the U.S. (Texas) market within the next one to five years.
- Those needing to make a strategic go/no-go decision on expansion.
- Companies seeking direct contact with local industrial zones or potential partners on the ground.
Why Texas, why now
- Korean corporate investment in the U.S. has been accelerating, particularly in semiconductors, electric vehicles, batteries, and biotech.
- Texas has emerged as a preferred destination among global firms, driven by its business-friendly regulatory environment, proactive incentive programs, concentrated industry clusters, and strong infrastructure and labor pool.
- On-the-ground decision-making — rather than desk research — is increasingly seen as essential before committing to market entry.
Program leadership
- Organized and led by Youngho Chung, head of K-MidSouth Nexus and former Consul General of Korea in Houston (21st term), who designed the program around direct access to local government and industry networks.
- Chung described the mission as fundamentally different from conventional information-gathering tours, framing it as a decision-enabling experience where participants can see, ask, and conclude — on-site.
(Source: Dailian)