The U.S. market is one of the most attractive opportunities in the world — and one of the most unforgiving. Every year, European manufacturers, consumer goods brands, and industrial companies arrive with strong products, solid balance sheets, and ambitious growth plans. Many of them struggle. Not because their products aren’t good. Because they underestimate how different doing business in America really is.
After working with European companies navigating U.S. expansion, we’ve seen the same patterns repeat. Here are the five mistakes we see most often — and what to do instead.
European companies are built on deliberate, consensus-driven decision-making. That discipline works well at home. In the U.S., it’s often a liability.
American businesses move fast. Distributor relationships form and dissolve quickly. Market windows open and close. By the time a European headquarters has approved a pricing strategy or finalized a partnership agreement, a U.S. competitor has already moved in.
The fix: Empower your U.S. leadership team to make real decisions locally — without routing everything back to European headquarters for approval. Speed is a competitive advantage here.
This is one of the most common and expensive misconceptions. The U.S. is not one market — it is 50 states, each with distinct tax codes, labor laws, regulatory requirements, and business cultures.
European companies frequently appoint a single national distributor, assume they have covered the country, and then wonder why revenue never scales. A distributor strong in the Southeast may have zero relationships in the Midwest. A compliance approach that works in Texas may create liability in California.
The fix: Start with one region. Build deep penetration there, learn the business culture, and expand from a position of strength rather than spreading thin across the entire country from day one.
European manufacturers often lead with engineering excellence, precision, and design quality. These are real advantages — but they are not always the primary purchasing criteria in the U.S.
American industrial and consumer buyers frequently prioritize ease of maintenance, parts availability, price competitiveness, and vendor responsiveness over superior specs. A product that is technically better but harder to service or more expensive to support can lose to a good-enough competitor with a better service network.
The fix: Conduct U.S.-specific customer discovery before finalizing your go-to-market approach. Do not assume what worked in Germany or France will translate directly.
Many European companies try to manage U.S. expansion from overseas, or send a home-country executive who has never operated in the American market. Both approaches tend to fail.
U.S. business culture is relationship-driven in ways that are difficult to navigate remotely. Sales cycles, hiring practices, contract negotiations, and customer service expectations all operate differently here. Without experienced local leadership on the ground, companies lose credibility quickly and miss opportunities they do not even know exist.
The fix: Hire or engage experienced U.S.-based operational and commercial leadership before you launch — not after you’re already struggling. An interim or fractional executive with relevant industry experience can bridge the gap while you build your permanent team.
Employment law, state tax nexus rules, product liability standards, import compliance, and contract enforceability all operate very differently in the U.S. than in Europe. Companies that assume similarity and skip proper legal and compliance groundwork often discover the problem after it has become expensive.
67% of international SMEs entering the U.S. cite regulatory complexity as a major hurdle. The companies that navigate it well invest in qualified local advisors — legal, financial, and operational — before problems arise.
The fix: Build your U.S. advisory team early. The cost of prevention is a fraction of the cost of correction.
The European companies that succeed in the U.S. move decisively, invest in local talent early, and build leadership that can make real decisions on the ground. That does not always mean a full-time executive hire from day one. Many successful market entries are led by interim or fractional executives who bring deep U.S. operational experience, move quickly, and help the company avoid the learning curve that kills so many expansion efforts.
If you’re planning a U.S. expansion and want to talk through your leadership needs, we’re happy to have that conversation.
We will get back to you soon.
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Last updated: November 2025
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Email: info@workindustries.us
Mail: Work Industries USA LLC
Attn: Privacy
4900 O’Hear Avenue, Suite 100
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