About + contact

Johan Nylander is an award-winning author and freelancing China and Asia correspondent. He’s published by CNN, Forbes and Sweden’s leading business daily Dagens Industri.
Nylander is the CEO of One Hour Asia Media Ltd (former Swedish Wire Ltd).
He's the author of "The Epic Split - Why 'Made in China is going out of style", and “Shenzhen Superstars – How China’s smartest city is challenging Silicon Valley”. He's co-writer of "Shenzhen: China's Southern Powerhouse", a coffee table-sized book published by Odyssey Books & Maps. He's also the author of an acclaimed management book called Simplify (Förenkla! Liber publishing.)
For almost two decades he’s covered news from a wide range of countries.
Today, he spends most of my time traveling China and neighboring countries, conducting interviews with presidents and peasants, entrepreneurs and migrant workers, triad members and government officials; all those who shape tomorrow’s Asia.
During the 2008 financial crisis he was stationed as foreign correspondent in London. He’s got an MBA from the University of Gothenburg in his native Sweden.
He lives with his family in Hong Kong.
He's a member of the Swedish Union of Journalists and the Foreign Correspondents' Club in Hong Kong.
Contact:
johanhongkong [@] gmail [.] com
+852 9303 5166
skype: jonylander
Nylander is the CEO of One Hour Asia Media Ltd (former Swedish Wire Ltd).
He's the author of "The Epic Split - Why 'Made in China is going out of style", and “Shenzhen Superstars – How China’s smartest city is challenging Silicon Valley”. He's co-writer of "Shenzhen: China's Southern Powerhouse", a coffee table-sized book published by Odyssey Books & Maps. He's also the author of an acclaimed management book called Simplify (Förenkla! Liber publishing.)
For almost two decades he’s covered news from a wide range of countries.
Today, he spends most of my time traveling China and neighboring countries, conducting interviews with presidents and peasants, entrepreneurs and migrant workers, triad members and government officials; all those who shape tomorrow’s Asia.
During the 2008 financial crisis he was stationed as foreign correspondent in London. He’s got an MBA from the University of Gothenburg in his native Sweden.
He lives with his family in Hong Kong.
He's a member of the Swedish Union of Journalists and the Foreign Correspondents' Club in Hong Kong.
Contact:
johanhongkong [@] gmail [.] com
+852 9303 5166
skype: jonylander