Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category

9 reasons why Singaporeans should live and work in China.

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Few events have transpired to me writing this entry - a good friend’s visit in GZ, a recent business trip back to Singapore, watching Revolutionary Road, recent spate of farewell parties, and the consumption of green tea with Johnnie Walker. And besides, friends who I’ve met in recent times would’ve already heard much of my life/career preach.

So I thought I’d detail it for a wider audience here:

9 reasons why Singaporeans should live and work in China.
 

1. You become richer, relatively.
This is true for the large part of China, because things are cheap. Here in Guangzhou, I live in a studio apartment for RMB 1900 rent. It’s double stories, fully furnished, has management and security, and very conveniently located. If you party, you can get Chivas for around RMB 600. That’s 2-3 times cheaper than Singapore or Hong Kong. My point being, in Singapore you would need to have worked a few more years, climbed higher in the corporate world to attain a salary that can support a similar lifestyle. In China, you get to skip ahead.

My studio apartment in GZ

My studio apartment in GZ


 

2. Professional vantage
Being effectively bilingual puts us at strategic vantage point between international business, and China, for international businesses targeting China, as well as Chinese businesses looking to expand. Additionally, in China, the Singapore Brand comes across premium and trustworthy, probably because of all our clean and green, corruption free effective government diplomacy over the years, not forgetting recent contributions from the likes of Stefanie, Joi, JJ, and Du. But take heed: our bilingual competitive advantage is only temporal. I play football regularly with an expat community, there are some Russians and Turks who communicate with each other in the language second best to their native tongue - fluent mandarin.
 

3. Social vantage
Vantage point extends into the social as well. Well actually socialising is part of conducting business, isn’t it? In another social aspect, for local girls who fancy foreigners, Singaporeans might just be the right mix of the foreign touch (exposure, lifestyle, languages, expat salary etc.), with Chinese/Asian roots which renders us more bring-home-to-see-mum-able.

Easier and more effective social positioning was also one of the reasons I was able to put together the Guangzhou Freeze.

Guangzhou Freeze 2008

Guangzhou Freeze 2008

 

4. Singapore is 24km by 48km big.
It takes just around 1 hour to commute from our Eastern-most Changi Airport MRT station to the Western-most Jurong Joo Koon MRT Station. The world is a little bigger. Venturing abroad might just make our mind a little broader.

Some Singaporeans, they graduate from NUS/NTU and get a bank or engineering job, get a standard promotion within 5 years, and then again in 3, and you get married and start a family, you buy a house and send your kids to a good primary school… your whole life is mapped out. Stability may be a double entendre. I don’t buy too many new clothes or furniture here in Guangzhou because I’m taking and managing risks and am completely relocation-ready when one opportunity expires and another one calls.

I just think Singaporeans need to get out! You might make it big, or you might do so much, lose all your money, and return home.

But it’s not so much the destination, but the experience of having gone the distance. (and I don’t mean as a tourist).

 

5. China is 4-8 hours away.
Depending on which city you wish to land on, it’s just a 4-8 hours flight away. Home is not too far away in case you are the type who would miss home and chicken rice a lot.
 

6. If you look yellow, you blend in.
Ok, this, and some of the other points above, only apply to Singaporeans of Chinese ethnicity. Many a times, it is advantageous not to be too explicit in revealing your foreigner identity, because in China, goods and services are sometimes charged at face-value, like in a taxi, or restaurant. Talking in English/Singlish, or taking photos with the food with the happy peace sign would be a sure-giveaway.
 

7. Opportunities galore in China
There are plenty or opporunities around if one knows how to grab opportunities. A Chinese friend asked me, how did I gain my (reasonable) connections and network here despite starting from scratch just 6 months ago? To which I answered, it is a combination of luck, and making the right impression at the right time. I know of another Singaporean lady, who has been in China for almost 10 years. If you ask her what she does, she’d answer “杀人放火,绑架强奸,走私毒品等等我不做,其他的什么多有做。” (killing, arson, kidnap, rape, drugs smuggling etc - I don’t do these but I do just about everything else.

Streetbusking in Guangzhou

Streetbusking in Guangzhou


 

8. Nicer change of weather.
Here there are SEASONS. You wear different clothes. You get to experience the change of mood and comfort, together with the change of temperature. Sure, there are really hot months, but there are really cool months too where you can go out in nice coats and jackets, go play football and not perspire much..get what I’m saying?

 
9. Freedom in a foreign land
People say the air here is really bad. But to me, all I smell is freedom. Freedom to make big money at your own pace and ways, Freedom to live out your lifestyle. It’s in the air.

 

Getting 3 quotations is not a business innovation that will help your company thru the crisis!

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

In this challengingly slow economic climate, I’d like to offer some of my own insight, alternative to the traditional cost cutting or increased procedural measures (like getting a mandatory 3 quotations from suppliers/vendors) that companies have been known to adopt.
 
1. Innovate! Explore partnerships and revenue/profit share business models
We (especially expats from wealthier countries/cities) didn’t come all the way here to do business by charging our higher-than-china hometown rates.

We came here for the tremendous market size and potential.

Especially so in this climate, business owners have even more stringent development budgets. So instead of charging a consulting service to a company who selling stuff in the chinese market, explore partnerships and reap shared rewards in bulk.

I’m sinking my teeth into this myself. Currently I’m doing this with a number of medium/big companies. It keeps me really dedicated and engaged and ever-hopeful of realising my ambitions.

 
2. Innovate! New channels of publicity and distribution
Century ago, the telephone and telegraph changed the way we communicate. Then came along TV and little websites.

In 2009, we have Facebook. and Ningsites and the like.

Social Media and Internet marketing are very wide-reaching and effective forms of communication and engagement. It’s not just about putting up ads on social networking sites. It’s about engaging people, creating conversation, generating BUZZ!

See these 2 very well written resources:
- Social media stands out at Tattoo Show
- Social Media ROI

And this is not exclusive to snobby consultants.
Web 2.0 Social Media is for eeeeevvvveryoonneee.

(albeit at a price..)

There’s a workshop coming up next week in Guangzhou, China. Speakers include an top Alibaba/Xiaonei executives and very influential PR and social media experts. Here’s more details. 
 

Dali, Yunnan weekend trip

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

I just returned from a weekend trip in Dali, Yunnan, China with 2 buddies. It was a quickie weekend trip and Dali was just about big enough for that. We spent the time exploring the old town, visiting pagodas, trying out Yunnanese food, and hiking.

Trip highlight: trekking down from 1300 metres.
We took the chairlift up the mountain, to height of around 1300 metres, and then trekked 10.5km across to the other chairlift station. We noticed something as we approached our destination - the chairlifts were not moving. Turns out there’s an attendant there and he just said “we’re not operational today”.

Oh well, so we trekked down the hill. Half way down, we met an old man - the old man of the hill, and followed his lead down and managed to return before dark. Unexpected but fun little adventure.

Here’s some photos: (more at my Flickr)

Dali Yunnan

Dali Yunnan

Dali Yunnan

Dali Yunnan

Dali Yunnan

Dali Yunnan

Dali Yunnan

My GMail crash tweets

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

I had more retweets and conversation today than usual because of the Gmail crash.

So It went like this: (Timezone: GMT+8)

junde twitter@junde: gmail’s down. i can’t do any work. off to the pub
about 630pm

enedhilwen twitter@enedhilwen: Excellent idea: RT @junde gmail’s down. i can’t do any work. off to the pub
about 632pm

junde twitter@junde: damn. gmail’s back up. should have shut up about it
about 640pm

shutupmeg twitter@shutupmeg: (@junde) damn. gmail’s back up. should have shut up about it
about 643pm

buddhima twitter@buddhima: @junde it’s still down over here!
about 643pm

junde twitter@junde: @buddhima aka DJ Kurukul Hamster. i’m sorry you can’t do work and have to go to the pub
about 645pm

buddhima twitter@buddhima: according to Gmail’s SLA, it can go down for 9h/year! 8h 45m 56s to be exact. shit. @junde that is not my name :P lol
about 646pm

junde twitter@junde: what goes up and down and up and down and has several free gb?
about 650pm

junde twitter@junde: i think this is an experiment to see how many times #gmail can appear on twitter
about 700pm

junde twitter@junde: gmail just wants attention. let’s tweet #hotmail instead
about 701pm

lotay twitter@lotay: @junde Lol! “Gmail just wants attention. Let’s tweet #hotmail instead.”
about 711pm

backstaab twitter@backstaab: @vincentglad j’en avais vu une bonne : RT @junde gmail just wants attention. let’s tweet #hotmail instead
about 756pm

junde twitter@junde: @backstaab merci beaucoup pour tweetencore
about 025am

backstaab twitter@backstaab: @junde You’re welcome, your joke was one of the funniest told today on the gmail crash
about 028am

2009 is a bad year for dogs

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

according to a friend, with reference from a Chinese zodiac horoscope found in a Chinese restaurant in Chennai, India,

2009 is a bad year for those born in the year of the dog. (1994, 1982, 1970, 1958 and so on).

it also says, to ward off bad luck, it’s advisable to have a baby.