A podcast featuring inspiring people about their journey to discovering and living their "WHY" or purpose in life. With your host & producer, Ling Yah, we deep dive into everything from finances to dealing with doubts and setbacks, and how to forge an unconventional career from ground zero! Expect to hear from entrepreneurs, artists, journalists, musicians, Hollywood actresses, VC founders and more. Visit www.sothisismywhy.com for more details!
Ep 149: This Is Not Going to Work! | Rodney Wong (CEO, Munchy's)
Rodney Wong is the CEO of Munchy's, one of the largest Malaysia-based snack food manufacturer with presence in over 60 countries globally.Which makes him the Willy Wonka of Malaysia!And he's had quite the varied career.From tobacco to Coca-Cola, Petronas and now the world of snacks and sweets, Rodney is testimony to the fact that we all need to take charge of our own career and personal development to get to where we want.The question is... how?While everyone's path is different, Rodney's shared his personal journey, highlighting the people who were significant in his journey, why paying forward is so important him, what it's like working with founders on their 'baby' and his vision for the future.Want to hear what one of Malaysia's top entrepreneurs has to say about building success career?Stick around and you'll find out!Highlights2:41 Rooted in family3:18 Being an archaeologist6:21 Structured way of working7:23 Connecting the dots8:45 Take charge of your own development11:41 What success looks like13:43 I have a hard rule15:05 Paying it forward16:28 Major learnings18:35 Gen Z23:31 Being in Shanghai25:11 KOLs27:07 Do you want to expand the market or improve the bottom line? 29:03 The challenge of working with founders31:58 We're going to sell...34:50 Progression & growth36:38 Personal growth42:35 Soka Gakkai44:38 How can people help you?48:53 Do you feel like you've found your why?48:54 What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind?50:47 What do you think are the most important qualities of a successful person?š Want to support STIMY for as little as $0.10/day? https://www.sothisismywhy.com/support-stimy/šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/dx_ePevgoRU&list=UULFSZlcS5ooyCjj_MkrmH_WhQšļøShow notes/transcript for this episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/149š Subscribe to the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
9/16/2024 ā¢ 53 minutes, 11 seconds
Ep 148.2: The Impossible Game + Scared of Wives Club?! - Dato Sri Idris Jala [Chairman, PEMANDU]
We're back with Part 2 with Dato' Sri Idris Jala - the former CEO of Malaysia Airlines, Managing Director of Shell Sri Lanka and Senator & Minister in the Malaysian Prime Ministerās Office, and current Chairman of PEMANDU.In Part 1 of this So This Is My Why feature, we delved into his tribal origins, how becoming top of his class was a matter of life and death, and his journey to becoming the Managing Director in Shell Sri Lanka - still his toughest gig to date. Listen here: https://youtu.be/KekuCGZJYlkIn Part 2, we go even deeper, exploring things like:šø If Dato' Sri Idris would act the same way if he had a chance to redo everything?šø How Shell moved Idris out of Sri Lanka because he was taking huge risks and they thought, āWe should take you out before you kill yourself!āšø What he learned from Michael Blackšø How he put Eddy Leong as the first CEO of Firefly because āheās a bit crazy but he has the tenacity to push itāšø Why he gave up the job he really wanted - to be the Chairman of Shell - to become the CEO of Malaysia Airlinesšø The advice he has for his sonsWant to learn more?Youāll just have to tune in.Highlights:0:00 Introduction1:30 If you had a chance, would you redo anything?6:01 Shell was a fantastic school of management6:43 Why Michael Black left such an impact on him10:52 If you really want to do the real impossible stuff, you must put everything on the line12:06 The line between the impossible goal v being foolhardy14:54 The best way to tell you what you don't want to hear?15:39 Why did you reject your dream job?!16:46 Huge leap of faith - MNC to GLC18:46 Launching a budget airline, Firefly23:36 Common values of incredible people24:43 Making it sustainable29:07 Common issues35:27 Lessons from PEMANDU operating in other countries37:23 Check into Hotel California39:14 Having a soulmate44:16 SOW Club - Scared of Wife Club48:58 Advice to sons53:46 Legacy you want to leave behind?54:03 What do you think are the most important qualities of a successful person?š Want to support STIMY for as little as $0.10/day? https://www.sothisismywhy.com/support-stimy/šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/lhIUOf7jSKsĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/148šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/profile
9/10/2024 ā¢ 59 minutes, 3 seconds
Ep 148.1: "I Wrote the Cockiest Letter!" | Dato' Sri Idris Jala (Chairman, PEMANDU)
When Dato Sri Idris Jala became the Managing Director of Shell Sri Lanka, he wasnāt expecting to hold the country on ransom.The Sri Lanka unit had already experienced 27 years of continuous losses when he took over. And on Day 1, what Idris had to handle was: bombs strapped to his depot, the kidnapping of his transport manager, a major labour strike andā¦Threatening letters sent by a professional sniper who knew where he lived, where he worked, when he left each place and the exact route he took each other.Ā Tough doesnāt even begin to cover it.But Idris turned it around.Ā And in the latest STIMY episode, he shares how, why he took on such a tough gig and what continues to drive him.There were so many gems in his 2-hour interview that itās only right to have split it into two parts.This is Part 1.Which opens up with his childhood in the Borneo Highlands - where his dad would throw him into the pigsty when he misbehaved.And also insisted that they sleep on the floor of the stinky fish market - because they were travelling with neighbouring tribes who couldnāt afford a tribe and āthey shouldnāt act different from othersā.Ā Education, for him back then, was a matter of life and death.Ā His North Star then was to be the top of his class.Ā So he asked his dad, a teacher, for advice.He was told, āVery simple, son. Find out whoās currently No. 1, be his or her best friend, and do exactly what he does but put it to the power of 10.āAnd so Idris just did. šOthers highlights:šø Surviving ghostly encounters & treacherous rapids in the Borneo Highlandsšø His spiritual awakening as part of the Bario Revivalšø The concept of āketuitā (which is kelabit for ākiasuā or being very competitive)šø Why his cocky job application letters were successful - he began his letters with the words, āDear Sir, Iām the man youāre looking forā!šø Why āthe graveyard is full of indispensable peopleā šø The impossible gameHighlights:3:15 Storytelling culture4:33 Thrown into the pigsty!7:06 Ketuit7:40 What does winning mean?8:26 My true north then & the trick to achieving it10:05 Becoming a lawyer15:48 Walking through the cemeteryĀ 17:19 The Bario spiritual revival21:50 Not quite from God? The Gestapo inquiry25:03 Post-Revival29:08 Not able to go to New Zealand31:55 The āmagicā in his cocky letters34:01 Wanting a free flight home42:28 Sense of curiosity47:02 Becoming Managing Director of Shell Sri Lanka & the game of the impossible51:49 He makes every big decision with his wife54:03 Never make the position become you55:22 Fear & holding the country at ransom?š Support STIMY for as little as $0.10/day! - https://www.sothisismywhy.com/support-stimy/Ā šļøShow notes/transcript: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/148Ā š Subscribe to weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
8/5/2024 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 57 seconds
Ep 147: Far East Hospitality CEO: "I Thought My Life is Pretty Much Over"
When Arthur Kiong, CEO of Far East Hospitality, failed his A Levels, he thought his life was pretty much over.His dad even told him, "Iām sorry, you had your shot but you missed it" and in Arthur's own words, "I was lost and I was discouraged and I was in a great deal of pain and despair."Arthur ended up selling slimming products on the streets because it was the only job he could find before applying to Mediocorp to become a stage technician.Things took a turn when he was asked to take a voice test and he ended up with a celebrity radio DJ because he could pronounce "Thursday the Thirteenthā!Ā Overnight, Arthur found himself rubbing shoulders with the who's who and celebrities of the world and you wouldāve thought that this was where Arthurās career was on a rapid trajectory upwards save that he gave it all up to work to become a greeter at Prego.Ā People were astonished.Ā Why would he take on such a 'demeaning' job?!But Arthur was adamant.And Prego signalled the first step that Arthur took into the world of hospitality, where you'll find that he's had more than his share of incredible luck, ingenuity and adventures.Including:Being 'saved' by a war and lauded as a geniusLanding his dream job (at Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong) because his dog, Silky, fell sick!Launching a successful marketing campaign straight after 9/11 (despite being in the thick of a fight between the head office & owner!)To find out more, youāll just have to listen to this STIMY Ep 147 with Arthur Kiong. šHighlights:2:49 Adrian Tan3:52 You have to be on the right escalator6:18 Being in despair6:53 Selling Japanese slimming starch7:04 Becoming a celebrity radio DJ because he could pronounce āThursday the Thirteenthā9:01 Giving it all up10:36 No future?12:17 Becoming a waiter at Prego12:55 Oh Lord, what have I done?!15:00 Sales wasnāt easy!15:26 First big breakthrough in hospitality16:33 Interesting initiatives19:39 Being saved by a war22:35 I found nothing!23:58 That scares meā¦ I like being in control!25:21 The difference between knowing and knowing26:35 Landing the dream job at The Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong because of my sick dog!28:09 It was a spooky experience30:42 Returning to Singapore31:18 The significant career break that allowed him to get into the Ritz33:42 Superman in New York36:21 When the cucumber turns green, it means the time is ripe37:43 If things go south, will the corporate body defend me?Ā 39:37 I wanted to architect my resume41:10 Why Singapore?42:11 Building a Singaporean Hotel Brand45:18 Living by Christian Values49:05 Challenges of a CEO (that most donāt see)50:23 Do you believe in God?51:32 The Second Act in your career?53:00 Biggest career advice54:23 Do you feel like youāve found your why?55:18 What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind?55:37 What are the most important qualities of a successful person?Ā Special thanks to Limpeh Studios for making this in-person interview possible!š Want to support STIMY for as little as $0.10/day? https://www.sothisismywhy.com/support-stimy/šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/147šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/lJkY_8igcxQĀ šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062*Official BiographyArthur Kiong is the Chief Executive Officer of Far East Hospitality, which is part of Far East Orchard Limited, a listed company under Far East Organization.Ā Since Arthur joined the organisation in July 2012, he has been instrumental in growing the companyās hospitality management business through joint-ventures and acquisitions. Over the last nine years, Far East Hospitality's portfolio grew from 18 properties in Singapore to 105 hotels and serviced residences in nine countries ā Austria, Australia, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, and Singapore, with more in its development pipeline.In more than 35 years of his career in the hospitality industry, Arthur has worked at prominent international hospitality brands including Banyan Tree Hotels & Resorts, The Ritz-Carlton (Singapore and New York), Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group (Hong Kong), Hyatt Hotels Corporation and Westin Hotels & Resort.Ā Arthur also plays an active role in championing change in the hospitality industry, and currently serves as First Vice President of the Singapore Hotel Association. In 2020, he was appointed as the hospitality representative in the National Jobs Council ā a task force set up to establish jobs and upskilling opportunities during the Covid-19 pandemic.Ā In Nov 2022, Arthur received the Executive of the Year ā Hospitality & Leisure award from the Singapore Business Review Management Excellence Awards for initiating transformative changes to FEHās operations and steered the groupās expansion in recent years despite the pandemic.Ā Arthur was a recipient of the Special Recognition Award from Singapore Tourism Board in 2016 for having played a key role in rallying support for driving productivity and manpower development initiatives in the hotel industry.
6/16/2024 ā¢ 56 minutes, 39 seconds
Ep 146.2: Waiting to Die + We Don't Have to be that Woke?! | Woon Tai Ho (Founder of Channel News Asia & Author)
āWhen people say itās ok, I donāt need a family, I donāt need a partner, I say bullshit.āWoon Tai Ho is most known for being the founder of Channel News Asia & author of prolific books like the trilogy by George Yeo (Singaporeās former foreign minister).Ā But has the success been worth it?What are some of his biggest regrets in life?In Part 1 (which you should listen to if you havenāt), we explored all of his big career achievements and the challenges that came with it, including being summoned by China to answer for their coverage of Falun Gong.But today, we cover something very different.Deeper.More personal.Starting with Tai Hoās major pivot from broadcasting to author.Because nowadays, itās common to make career pivots. Itās hard enough when itās just jumping from one company to the next in the same industry, but Tai Ho has made that huge jump soā¦ā How did he do it?Ā ā How does he think about the āSecond Actā of his career?Ā ā How should people plan for their own Second, Third or even Fourth Act, especially when it comes to retirement?And is there such a thing as living for too long and just āwaiting to dieā?We also talk about some of his deepest regrets, his relationship with success and thoughts on relationships.His advice to people: Go marry, have kids, then go back to your career.We donāt have to be that woke. š Do you agree?Time to hear from Tai Ho again in the latest episode from STIMY!Highlights:3:14 Becoming a biographer by accident5:28 What makes George Yeo (Singaporeās ex-foreign minister) so special?7:52 Transparency & Lee Kuan Yew8:48 Is living to age 102 a blessing or a curse?11:38 āIf I donāt have my second act, I donāt know what to do with my timeā13:30 Is all of Tai Hoās success worth it?16:33 Tai Hoās biggest regret20:26 His biggest advice for people23:56 Why does Tai Ho collect bunnies?šĀ Want to support STIMY for $0.10/day? https://www.sothisismywhy.com/support-stimy/Ā šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/146šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/U0_pVl_RsGMĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
6/11/2024 ā¢ 29 minutes, 9 seconds
Ep 146.1: I didn't know I was poor! | Woon Tai Ho (Author & Founder of Channel News Asia)
Growing up, Woon Tai Ho - author & founder of Channel News Asia - didnāt know he was poor.Until he invited his friends over and was asked questions like:ā Whereās your phone?ā Whereās your sofa?None of which he had.Which made him realise that actually, he was pretty poor. š Ā But he was never ashamed of it.When his sister invited him to stay at the house she was working at as a domestic helper, that changed his world.āI couldnāt believe it, the way they stayedā¦ these people had a dimension of luxury that I didnāt know about. So I told myself, I need to work very hard.āAnd work very hard he did.Ā We know Channel News Asia as one of the preeminent TV news channels in Asia, but that wasnāt always the case. As Tai Ho shares, the earliest days of CNA was very much a āwait and seeā game.It was hardly easy too.Ā āTelevision is a very, very hungry animal. A news channel is a very, very hungry animal. Every hour, every minute, every second needs content. Otherwise it's black.āāSo how did Tai Ho build CNA from the ground up?āPosition CNA amidst other giants like CNN & the BBC?ā Gain support from the likes of former Singapore foreign minister, George Yeo?āHandle challenges like when he was summoned to China for their coverage of Falun Gong?Youāll have to listen to Part 1 of this STIMY episode to find out. šPart 2 will come out next Sunday!Highlights:3:00 Would you consider yourself successful?6:34 Family8:27 Becoming a chef?11:00 Singapore is a pretty good place!13:29 āI never thought about being the bestā14:20 āWhen I was a kid, I didnāt know I was poorā15:50 Mediacorp16:53 Founding Channel News Asia20:48 The reality of founding a news channel (that most people donāt know)23:09 How do you define āquality contentā?24:28 Establishing the boundaries for quality26:01 Looking at competitors to figure out CNAās value proposition28:33 No government support?!31:14 Pushing the Singapore governmentās perspective?34:32 Getting into trouble with the Chinese government37:56 Knowing which stories and perspective to put forward40:51 Time to move on?Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/146šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
5/20/2024 ā¢ 43 minutes, 38 seconds
Ep 145: Are You a Masochistic Book Lover? | Kenny Chan (ex-diplomat & ex-Senior Director at Kinokuniya Book Stores (Asia Pacific))
āAre you a masochist?āāDo you love books that much?āIf you want to be a bookseller, than those are the questions you need to ask yourself - according to Kenny Chan, the former Senior Director at Kinokuniya Book Stores (Asia Pacific) - he spent ~20 years of his career there prior to his retirement!But prior to bookseller, Kenny was a foreign diplomat at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Singapore, where he was posted to London as their Trade and Culture Attache.He then switched to bookselling, first at Popular Holdings Limited, then MPH Bookstores Sdn Bhd, and back again at Popular when they launched their IPO!And finally interviewed for a position at Kinokuniya.The President & Chairman of Kinokuniya flew from Japan to Singapore to conduct the interview and asked Kenny just one question:āDo you love books?āAs it turns out, Kenny gave me the exact answer he was looking for!And even after retirement, Kenny remains deep in the bookselling world.If you havenāt already guessed it, Kenny is the latest guest on STIMY!And we dive deep into all things books & the art of evangelising.āWhy does Kenny not judge people by their educational level?āWhy did he initially become a foreign diplomat?āWhat was it like opening bookstores throughout Asia Pacific, Dubai and New York?āWhat was it like working at his dream company?āWhat is the secret to buying books & why is bookselling a spiritual experience?āHow can aspiring authors can get Kennyās attention?Are you intrigued yet?The YouTube version is out now too. šHighlights:1:01 The Punisher1:50 Donāt judge people by their level of education2:59 Do your best in everything that you touch3:58 My education was a roller-coaster5:31 Didn't want to be a bookseller!7:56 Getting into foreign affairs9:51 Hunted down a book for Lee Kuan Yew & the power of connections11:35 Lee Kuan Yew was a hard task master14:54 Life isn't fair18:32 How to get rid of inventory/books for bookstores20:21 Leaving Popular for MPH21:00 Introducing comics & Sanrio (Hello Popular) to Singapore22:12 How Kenny knew it was time to bring Hello Kitty in24:07 Memorable stories26:43 What was it like working in his dream company?27:46 Becoming store manager of the MPH Stamford Bookstore28:22 You need to be a dictator32:22Ā A great success36:23 The IPO37:11 The secret behind buying books & working at Popular41:29 Moving to Kinokuniya43:03 MeetingĀ 43:30 The 1 question asked by the President & Chairman of Kinokuniya from Japan44:44 Working with someone who doesnāt understand English46:09 The spiritual aspect of book selling47:01 Opening a store in Dubai48:16 Love of books49:13 The Kinovirus & training to become a great bookseller50:45 The Speech52:05 Biggest achievements while at Kinokuniya54:44 Kinokuniya isnāt a bookstore. Itās a lifestyle choice56:15 The importance of building a brand58:51 The Twin Lemons Act59:50 Getting Kennyās attention1:00:25 Ask a bookseller, what questions should you ask yourself?š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/1uCeI8LOI5YĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/145šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
4/30/2024 ā¢ 1 hour, 4 minutes, 12 seconds
Ep 144: Going viral with 500k following as an Italian Chef | Gero DiMaria Mohammed Omar (Kucina)
Gero DiMaria knows what it means to go truly viral.He's an Italian chef & owner of Kucina - Singapore's first authentic halal food restaurant. But he's also a bona fide Italian culinary superstar with over 500k followers on social media - 256k on Instagram & 252.6k on TikTok!He took the world by storm with his recent series of viral reels on choosing the best pasta/cheeses in grocery stores, and that had a real trickle down effect on his business.So we dig into all the juicy stuff, including:ā What does it mean to actually go āviralā?ā What kind of measurable impact has social media had on his business?ā What is his advice for leveraging social media for businesses?ā What have his toughest moments been?ā And who exactly is Gero?!The goal: To understand the role of social media today, what it really means to go viral & how one can leverage on that social media reach to build your own business.Highlights:1:55 Italian childhood4:11 What do Italians eat every day?5:38 People in Asia arenāt taught to think?!10:58 Entering the food industry12:13 Work hard to earn your money13:33 Your first job sets the bar14:49 That English breakfast shiftĀ 16:52 Knowing that the F&B world was for himĀ 17:33 How to cook the perfect pasta20:04 Moving from London to Singapore21:58 First job at Pasta Fresca23:19 Whatās an authentic halal Italian restaurant?25:59 Chefs can only be chefs, they canāt run a business29:43 Going into marketing & the lost $300031:22 The turning point32:39 Content strategy35:14 Going truly viral36:18 Acting debut37:58 Why accept collaborations?40:00 Separating his personal brand from his Kucina restaurant41:24 The content creation team42:48 Advice for entrepreneurs44:06 Do you feel like youāve found your why?45:25 What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind?46:15 What do you think are the most important qualities of a successful person?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/144Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/31/2024 ā¢ 52 minutes, 40 seconds
Ep 143: Becoming Singaporeās 1st Professional Adventurer - You Never too Old to Take Risks! | Khoo Swee Chiow
Would you die for your passion?Most wouldnāt but for 58-year-old Swee Chiow, Singaporeās first professional adventurer, itās a question he must face every day.And it all began when he caught a glimpse of Mount Everest from a plane.He was working in IT (Singapore Airlines) then, but he decided from that one glimpse that he wanted to climb Mount Everest - a dream that took him a mere 10 years to achieve!The journey was hard.He knew nothing. So he read many books & even went on a 10-day mountaineering course at Mt Cook that he flunked because he wasnāt fit enough!In 1998, he joined Singaporeās first Mount Everest expedition. It was a disaster at first because:ā Their tent collapsed during a freak stormā Their first attempt at the South Pole failed as they didnāt have enough rope - the Singapore media hounded them & issued headlines declaring that the expedition had failedBut they didnāt give up.Their second attempt was a success!But an exhausting one.Ā In the midst of the media glory, Swee Chiow knew he had to take advantage of it so he immediately launched Singapore's first Antarctic expedition.Since then, he has:Climbed Everest x3 and K28,000km cycle from SG ā Beijing (China) = 2003Swam 40 km across Malacca StraitsKayaked 3,000km across PhilippinesBroke his first Guinness World Records for the longest scuba submergence (220 hours)Rollerbladed 6,000km from Hanoi SG in 94 days (and broke the Guinness World Records in 2008)Highlights:3:34 Why Why Why?!4:12 Fear of heights5:00 Computer science in Kansas6:11 Saw Mount Everest from a plane6:51 Not giving up after 10 years7:24 The mountain is magical & spiritual?!9:06 Lessons learned10:27 Altitude sickness / AMS12:04 Pulling Singaporeās first Everest expedition together13:25 You canāt fail!14:19 What should people know about Everest?16:45 Quitting his day job17:45 Antarctica19:38 Commercialising his adventure business20:32 Swee Chiowās value proposition?22:02 How he builds trust with his clients24:11 Risks & death25:11 Any trick to staying calm?25:24 Drifting to Taiwan & near certain death27:37 Never let your ego take over29:28 Dealing with the media30:55 Never doing K2 again32:19 The ghosts at Tibetās Xishapengma36:12 Adventurers hogging the limelight37:04 Collaborating with AirAsia X40:16 How Swee Chiow decides on his adventures41:43 Advice for those in their 30s45:28 Whatās next?46:26 The second act of his career?47:36 Leadership principles to be an effective guide for his team49:15 What drives you to push yourself to the extreme each time?50:23 Do you feel like youāve found your why?51:06 What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind?51:27 What are the most important qualities of a successful person?Special thanks to Limpeh Studios (Hepmil Media) for the studio!š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/143Ā Ā š STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/24/2024 ā¢ 52 minutes, 50 seconds
Ep 142: I've Done Something Many Haven't Had the Opportunity to Do | Lucas Lu (Head of Zoom Asia)
Meet Lucas Lu - Head of Zoom Asia.And also a fellow Sarawakian!Lucas has had an illustrious career going from GM of Systems Technology Group at IBM Malaysia where they closed large deals within the first 6 months, leading to Lucas winning ASEAN Rookie of the Year - his first big recognition. He ended up staying at IBM for 10 years and won 2 Global Gordon Circle Awards before moving on to become:General Manager, AstroGM (Tech Sales Malaysia), OracleSenior Director (APAC Enterprise Commercial Sales & Industry), MicrosoftPrior to his current role heading the Asian arm of Zoom.While at first glance, Lucas appears to have had a very varied career, he has also been very intentional about every career move heās made.Ā And has had no zero regrets with how it has turned out.So we dive deep into this episode into all things career development:ā How has Lucas chosen the roles that he has?Ā ā What is his secret sauce to climbing the corporate ladder?Ā ā How should one find mentors/career sponsors?Ā ā How does he plan his career & life (he has a plan for everything, including for his family members!!)?Please do listen & leave and rating & review!Highlights:1:50 My first 15 years2:27 Shell City4:22 No one leaves Shell, but I didā¦5:26 Getting the call from IBM6:05 Switching to tech6:59 Lucasā unfair advantage over other people7:50 Lots of planning & reflections11:55 What should you do when you first take on a regional role?14:06 Career sponsors14:41 Secret to landing career sponsors15:22 The first time doors opened for Lucas?16:15 Moving on after 10 years17:14 Bringing a corporate mindset to the startup world?19:09 Measuring returns for media projects19:41 Moving to Oracle21:01 Kilimanjaro22:55 Element of luck24:16 Dealing with failure25:55 No regrets?27:37 Moving to Microsoft29:14 Takeaways from being fully immersed in a countryĀ 32:00 Did hiking change how he approaches sales and work?32:25 Why Zoom?33:43 Checklist for Lucasā next career move (no compromise)34:24 How to determine if someone is the right person to work for?35:33 Most influential person in Lucasā career37:28 Managing the strawberry generation39:15 What Lucas hopes to achieve at Zoom43:58 The second act in Lucasā career46:45 What STIMY listeners can help Lucas withš Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/142Ā š STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/17/2024 ā¢ 56 minutes, 26 seconds
ICYMI: The 6 Powerful Women in the Room - Jacqueline Novogratz, Lydia Fenet, Nicole Quinn, Pink Pencil Math etc
This episode is a compilation of 6 of the most powerful women featured on the So This Is My Why podcast, discussing the milestones that led them on their journey to successEp 124: Jacqueline Novogratz Jacqueline is the founder & CEO of Acumen - a non-profit global venture capital fund that aims to use entrepreneurial approaches to address global poverty. As the OG of impact investing, she shares her experience in Rwanda and learning that the most important thing is to build something where you leave no footprint behind.And how there is no such thing as black & white. Everyone has an angel and demon within them that comes out at different times.š Listen to Jacqueline's full episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/124Ep 115: Lydia Fenet Lydia is the former Executive Director of Christie's New York and for 10 years, she thought it was a privilege to be working at Christie's. She never asked for more.Until she realised that you are just a number in the P&L, and you have to fight for what your worth. In one conversation, she managed to x3 her salary, obtain an international director designation and start a new department on strategic partnerships.š Listen to Lydia's full episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/115Ep 125: Tanya ZakowichTanya has worked at NASA, Boeing and Hyperloop and shares her journey in making big career pivots which led to the creation of Pink Pencil Math with 2 million TikTok followers, 507k Instagram Followers & 99k YouTube followers.š Listen to Tanya's full episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/125Ep 79: Nicole QuinnNicole is a General Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners. She's known as the celebrity whisperer who's worked with the likes of Lady Gaga, Tom Brady, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jessica Alba. š Listen to Nicole's full episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/79Ep 77: Lily Wu Lily is a two-time 7 figure business founder who shares how she got started on her entrepreneurial journey in Australia as a teenagerš Listen to Lily's full episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/77Ep 56: Lauren Hom Lauren is a California-born designer, illustrator & hand lettering artist with a 250k strong following on Instagram. She is known for her use of bright colour palettes & playful letterings and has worked for clients such as Starbucks, YouTube, TIME Magazine, Google and AT&T. She has also been recognised by Communications Arts, the Art Directors Club, the One Club, the Type Directors Club and the Webby AwardsShe shares how she's built her enviable artistic career including with Daily Dishonesty.š Listen to Lauren's full episode: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/56*š Like STIMY? Buy me a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhy šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/ncLfbdQ7XQAĀ š Website: https://www.sothisismywhy.com š Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605 āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/13/2024 ā¢ 43 minutes, 10 seconds
Ep 141: Inheriting a 100-year-old family business | Fong (Co-Owner, Tong Heng)
Sponsor: Descript - an AI-enabled software that makes it possible to edit weekly videos efficiently because it transcribes a 1.5 hour interview in 1 minute - and allows all editing to be done via the transcript! To find out more: https://www.descript.com/?lmref=sjT9JA * Itās not every day that you get to inherit a 100-year-old family business, but thatās exactly what Fong Wai Kheng has done.Fong is the fourth generation of his family to run Tong Heng - Singaporeās top confectionary shop most known for its trademark š diamond-shaped egg tarts.Ā Ask pretty much any Singaporean (I did), and it feels like 99% of them will have heard, eaten and love those egg tarts!So of course, I got curious.Ā And asked Fong if heād be up for a STIMY interview!After all, family businesses are tricky.There is:Ā šæ The legacy youāve inherited & must now maintainĀ šæ The relationships you need to navigate (you canāt split family/work)Ā šæ The challenge of keeping your brand relevant (a huge issue for Tong Heng at one point until they went through a massive rebranding exercise)Ā šæ All the ups and downs of keeping a business alive.A business that first came about because of Fongās great-grandfather who fled China in 1901 (end of Qing Dynasty) to work as a coolie in Singapore.His great-grandfather eventually earned enough to start his own pushcart coffee business butā¦ the local āgangsā came around for protection money.The great-grandfather had none, but promised to have the money ready next time.Ā Unfortunately, the gangsters wonāt hear of it.And proceeded to beat him up.Or at least, they tried too.Because what they didnāt know was that Fongās great-grandfather had been trained in martial arts by the soldiers in the Qing Court (+ he was also 1.87m tall!).Ā So Fongās great-grandfather beat up those gangsters instead. š¤£News spread.Ā The community gathered and gifted him with a pistol before appointing him as its protector!!Want to know what happened thereafter? šYouāll just have to listen to this STIMY episode with Fong to find out.Ā Highlights:2:54 ChildhoodĀ 5:00 Expectations in joining the family business?6:32 Have you had enough fun?10:26 100-year-old confectionary shop - the origins of Tong Heng12:22 Tong Hengās trademark egg tarts14:22 Gangs & protection money14:44 Martial arts16:50 After the war17:55 His two aunts20:24 Pulling a surprise25:06 A new shop27:38 Cracking thousands of eggs?!29:40 Massive rebranding exercise to appeal to the Gen Zs & Gen Alphas33:23 Tension in the family?34:41 Going viral35:00 Branding decisions behind Tong Hengās trademark yellow packaging36:15 Tong Hengās faithful customers - the grandmother & her grandson37:30 The future & staying in their own lane39:35 Advice for other family business owners?š Special thanks to Limpeh Studios for making this recording possible! If you want to do any studio recordings while in Singapore, be sure to check out: https://www.hepmil.com/limpehstudiosĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/141Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/kSXxRHrWWasĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/10/2024 ā¢ 45 minutes, 39 seconds
Ep 140.2: The Secret to Picking F&B Winners & Winning Michelin Stars | Loh Lik Peng (Founder & CEO, Unlisted Collection)
Hey STIMIES!Ā Welcome back to Part 2 of the So This Is My Why Podcast with Loh Lik Peng - CEO & Founder of Unlisted Collection.In Part 1, we covered Lik Pengās journey from wanting to become a doctor (just like his parents) to becoming a commercial litigator and purchasing his first hotel property: Hotel 1929.The property that kickstarted his crazy career pivot.Ā But the F&B industry is a tough place to be. You need a good dose of hard work, luck andā¦ a talent for spotting F&B talent (which Lik Peng has!).In this episode, we dive into the intricacies of his international hospitality business, tackling questions like:Ā Ā Why does he give equity to his chefs?Ā How does he identify and convince culinary talents like Rishi Naleendra to come on board?How does he work together with the chefs to ensure that they have everything they need to build a thriving business?How attaining a Michelin star flipped a switch within the chefs he works withWhat are his thoughts on brand building?When is it time to pull the plug? (His most painful failure was with One Leicester Square in London)His big passion with museums; andĀ So much moreIf you havenāt heard Lik Pengās origin story, listen to the previous STIMY Ep 140 Part 1 episode first.Ā And if you have, then stick around for Part 2!Are you ready?Letās go.Highlights:2:52 Lik Pengās hands off approach4:20 Discovering Rishi Naleendra & being a good spotter of F&B talent5:51 Did Lik Peng conduct any due diligence on his potential talents?6:56 Building the infrastructure for an F&B business8:20 āI didnāt understand what P&L was before. If I knew, I wouldāve never said yes.ā9:06 Keep an eye on the numbers!10:12 Winning a Michelin star flipped a star switchā¦11:18 When are chefs ready to strike out on their own?12:05 Brand building13:30 Overcoming moments of blind panic14:46 When do you let go?15:33 Biggest failureĀ 17:57 Passion for museums21:30 Do you still identify as a lawyer?21:43 Which pivot was the easiest and why?24:01 Finding your second & third act in your career25:14 What book are you reading now?25:14 Art of finding the right talent27:00 Any non-compete clause?27:38 Three key things that youād attribute your success to30:14 One COVID casualty31:23 LuckšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/140Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/w22CAJupO48Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/5/2024 ā¢ 36 minutes, 18 seconds
Ep 140.1: The No-Nonsense 'Lucky' Hotelier?! | Loh Lik Peng (Founder, Unlisted Collection)
Want to know how a lawyer became a successful hotelier with 40 hotels & 9 Michelin-starred restaurants in Singapore, London, Ireland, Shanghai & Sydney?!Look no further than todayās STIMY guest: Loh Lik Peng, the founder of Unlisted Collection.Lik Peng grew up expecting to be a doctor, like his parents.Ā But ended up practising as a commercial litigator for 3 years.During that time, the world was hit with the Asian Financial Crisis and a rundown property called Hotel 1929 came onto the Singapore property market.Hotel 1929 was located in Singaporeās red light district and Lik Peng saw potential in it, so he took a year off from law to develop the hotel with the full intention of going back to being a lawyer thereafter.Ā But life didnāt turn out that way.He ended up opening his first restaurant at Hotel 1929, then another hotel and restaurant, and another andā¦In fact, he bought so many properties in the area that his friend once remarked that the street should be renamed āPeng Roadā! š¤£Lik Peng has now become one of Singaporeās most established hoteliers (he struggled with imposter syndrome for a long time when people called him a hotelier!) despite starting out by taking projects āby the seat of his pantsā.Ā And his Michelin-starred restaurants include:āļø: Burnt Ends, Marguerite, Nouriāļøāļø: Cloudstreet, Da Terreāļøāļøāļø: ZenSo do you want to know how he did it?Letās go!P/S: This is Part 1 out of 2 of Lik Pengās episode (Part 2 is coming out this Weds).Highlights:Ā 2:32 Dad as the Chief Glutton3:24 Boarding school were the best years of the life4:42 Being a lousy doctor5:32 Learning important lessons from the Asian Financial Crisis7:14 Hotel 19298:24 The āPengā Road?!9:15 Worried about being in the red light district?10:41 Family thought he was insane?!11:30 Turning the corner12:43 Being hit with SARS13:55 What crisis management looks like in a hotel14:52 Expanding to London17:54 Romanticism overruled my logicā¦20:57 The secret to getting things done22:35 Managing risks24:11 When Lik Peng thought he could call himself a āhotelierā25:43 The magic behind what he does (while being pragmatic?!)26:48 What properties interest him now30:24 Any regrets investing in Old Clare, Sydney?34:41 Navigating unsexy regulations & red tape35:46 Surprising things about the Australian hospitality market?36:45 Dr Stanley Quek40:37 Family friend to business partner?Special thanks to Limpeh Studios (Hepmil Media) for the studio!šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/140Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/w22CAJupO48Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/4/2024 ā¢ 44 minutes, 53 seconds
Ep 139: Sneak Peek - Singapore Subseries!
Itās finally happening!The launch of STIMYās special Singapore subseries.Where youāll be hearing from a range of fascinating Singaporeans/Singapore-based tech leaders, entrepreneurs, and daredevil adventurers on how theyāve built their careers, their journey in finding their why and the legacy that they want to leave behind (if any!).We ran the whole gamut: the media broadcasting space, F&B (what it takes to build an empire of nine 1 - 3 Michelin Starred restaurants + inheriting a 100+ year confectionary brand), hospitality, tech and so much more.To whet your appetite, youāre getting snippets from some of the guests that youāll be meeting over the next few weeks.Are you excited?I know I am! š*Also a special shoutout to Karl Mak (STIMY Ep 55) & his team at Hepmil.Ā Theyāre the ones who made this subseries possible and generously allowed me to record all my interviews over a span of 4 days while in Singapore.I definitely couldnāt do it without them - thank you Hepmil!P/S: Let me know if youāre interested in doing a studio recording in Singapore! Thereās plenty of space to do so at Hepmilās Limpeh studios. š šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/139šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
2/25/2024 ā¢ 20 minutes, 1 second
Ep 138: I Don't Believe in Prince & Princess Journalists - Steve Chao [x2 Emmy-nominated investigative journalist & Al-Jazeera Senior War Reporter]
Steve Chao was just a kid from Toronto who loved reading encyclopaedias. Who later chose a career that would lead him to the middle of opium fields during harvest time surrounded by hundreds of Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.Just another āday in the lifeā of his career as a x2 Emmy-nominated and multiple award-winning investigative journalist and filmmaker whoās led programming for the likes of CNN, Al Jazeera, VICE, CTV (Canadian Television), CBC, ABC News, Tencent & Channel 4.Steve has also spent decades covering conflicts, including Americaās longest war in Afghanistan, and produced programs and feature docs like HBOās Traffickers, Netflixās Midnight Asia, and Discovery Channelsā Worldās Biggest Druglord.In STIMY Ep 138 - which was recorded in front of a live audience at KL Podfest last weekend! - we uncovered his journey as a war correspondent. Some things we talked about:Ā ā Going undercover to report on the Honduran drug cartel, human trafficking rings, selling of Nepali ancient artefacts & a Chinese spyā Being nearly crushed in Egypt during the Arab Springā Uncovering the UNCHR āmafiaā & notorious wildlife traffickers in Malaysia (his feet was stuck in a fire ant hill for 5 minutes!!)ā The sacrifices heās made & friends heās lostā Why Steve doesnāt believe in Prince & Princess journalistsā Why journalism is dying & the impact of cancel cultureā How he wants to raise the next generation of journalists and the vision behind his new production house, Signal FlareItās an exciting episode so get ready for a wild 1 hour ride with Steve Chao!Highlight:2:10 Surrounded by Taliban fights in an Afghan opium field during harvesting season4:19 Suicide Alley8:49 Just a kid from Toronto10:33 His first big break uncovering a drug cartel from Honduras12:40 Gaining a global perspective14:56 Going undercover as a refugee trafficked by the Snakeheads in Vancouver15:55 You have to learn on the job18:03 The unsung heroes or āfixersā like JoJo21:25 Broken trust23:24 PTSD25:13 How does Steve ensure he isnāt crippled by what heās seen?26:44 Mentors like Ted Huang29:42 Has Steve ever regretted any sacrifices made to cover a story?32:29 Do these stories have an actual impact? The Chinese spy35:08 Malaysian reporting on the UNHCR Mafia & Anson Wong - the notorious wildlife poacher from Penang39:56 Identifying the stories he wants to work on42:11 The next step to crafting the story43:34 The keyword in reporter is āporterā44:26 The state of journalism today47:27 Cancel culture & its impact on Steveās work50:11 What makes a great investigative journalist?51:48 Have you done enough?54:26 What does Steve need help with?55:35 Do you feel like youāve found your why?56:15 What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind?57:11 What are the most important qualities of a successful person?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/138Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/KnoMe-pTbJcĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
2/18/2024 ā¢ 59 minutes, 15 seconds
Ep 137: Don't Wait. Life Has Already Begun! | Simon Alexander Ong (Bestselling Author, Coach, Keynote Speaker & Business Strategist)
Simon Alexander Ong grew up often feeling like he didnāt fit in. Which is weird when you look at his CV: He graduated from LSE before going to work at Lehman Brothers (until it fell into administration) then a hedge fund as a junior trader. Along the way, he attended a 2-day coaching seminar that transformed the way he saw coaching and kickstarted his journey into becoming a bestselling author, international keynote speaker and business strategist.Ā His work has seen him invited onto Sky News and BBC to be interviewed, while he has been featured in the likes of Forbes and Harvard Business Review. He has also spoken at some of the planet's most successful organisations such as Barclays, Salesforces, Adobe, EY and Microsoft. And his debut book Energize, published by Penguin in 2022 became an instant bestseller, receiving endorsements from the likes of New York Times bestselling authors Simon Sinek, Marie Forleo and Marshall Goldsmith. In 2023, Energize was also awarded Book of the Year within the Wellness & Wellbeing category at The Business Book Awards!Ā Butā¦ how did it all begin? ā Why does Simon believe that the best leaders are great coaches? ā How did he get big names like Simon Sinek and Marie Forleo to endorse his debut book? ā How has he built his coaching business?ā What gave him the confidence to take The Leap?Ā ā Whatās been the real game changer for his business?ā And why does he advise people to not wait because life has already begun?To find out, youāll just have to listen to Simonās episode on the So This Is My Why podcast. šAnd to all those celebrating - Happy Chinese New Year!Highlights:4:47 Not fitting in6:40 What am I going to do with my life?!8:18 Impact of mum passing away9:46 The toxic environment at Lehman Brothers11:36 Not stick to the same path?12:38 The exploration journey16:47 2 days to 2 years?!18:07 Landing clients19:41 Where Simon found the courage & confidence to take the leap25:09 The game changer26:46 How to decide on the right mastermind to join28:34 The importance of building a personal brand29:52 Defining good content31:36 Saying yes to every interview?!33:35 It was stupid to introduce myself as a coach!38:28 Storytelling frameworks43:04 Being open but not to open - how do you find the line?!44:38 Google says that the best leaders are great coaches?!48:40 The first session51:11 How to decide on the right coach52:17 Energy is everything53:39 Multiplying energy55:32 What is something that Simon wishes made it into the final edition of his book but didnāt?!57:14 The last time Simon faced coachĀ 58:46 The measured way to handle chaos1:00:26 The strategy behind launching his bestselling book, Energize1:03:03 How he convinced Simon Sinek & Marie Forleo to give him raving endorsements1:04:36 Has a Penguin published book opened doors for Simon?1:04:55 Do epic stuff that will make your Netflix documentary compulsive viewingšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/137Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
2/10/2024 ā¢ 1 hour, 11 minutes, 17 seconds
Ep 136: I don't want to hang out with famous influencers becauseā¦ [Prestine Davekhaw, Founder of MalaysianPAYGAP & Disappearing Jobs]
Prestine Davekhaw knows how much you earn.Thanks to a viral IG platform she launched called MalaysianPAYGAP, where she has Malaysians anonymously submit [payslip verified] details about their job, including:Their salary + benefits (if any)How they landed that jobThe realities of doing their jobAdvice for those wanting to do the sameSo you can see why people are obsessed with MPG. šBut what about the person behind MPG?Well, Prestine grew up in a drug-infested home with her grandmother, who was her best friend. She was told that her father was a dangerous man and that it was good that he wasnāt in her life.When she moved to the US for studies, she found herself homeless for a period.She ended up doing all kinds of insane jobs to make ends meet, including grilling 100 chicken wings in the Chicago South Side where she was at risk of being shot at at any moment!She also spent her last $900 on a camera out of desperation - she only had 2.5 weeks to make rent!But as it turns out, it was the start of good things in her life.Clients came knocking & she was doing well but... something wasnāt quite right.In 2020, she had her first taste of going viral when she published an article sharing why she was unfollowing famous influencers on Instagram - many of her clients then were famous influencers and they were, as you can imagine, not happy.Prestine shares her life journey with remarkable candidness. Not just the highs but also the lows like how she bombed her Bvlgari campaign because she was āa cocky photographerā. And how MPG came to be.Want to learn more?Highlights:3:13 Grandmother as her best friend8:42 Life is a work of art - Wilde12:24 I can only learn by asking questions14:36 Being homeless19:44 Spending $900 to buy a camera off Amazon21:57 9 hours of sense22:38 Photography came out of desperation24:15 Going back25:49 Quitting without a plan26:40 Landing international clients - including in Shanghai!27:19 Going viral in 2020 through an article, āWhy I Unfollow Famous Influencers on Instagramā29:24 The Bvlgari campaign32:48 The genesis behind MPG35:10 The launch37:16 Surprising submissions41:31 Information is power42:25 Becoming jobless46:11 Community building lessons49:21 Helpful advice52:45 MPG Summit 202454:28 Disappearing Jobs56:54 The controversy with the Side Hustlers IG page59:56 Hustling to meet the CEO of AirAsia1:01:33 Advice to others wanting to start side hustlesP/S: Donāt forget to subscribe to the STIMY newsletter!Ā I share the behind-the-scenes of running STIMY, personal branding, storytelling marketing and news on a personal branding course that Iām building so that others can also their own brands on their own terms.šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/136Ā š Subscribe to STIMY Newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
1/14/2024 ā¢ 1 hour, 6 minutes, 56 seconds
Ep 135: Final day of 2023?!
It's the final day of 2023!So I'm doing a solo episode where I answer questions that you've sent in.I hope you enjoy this episode and find it helpful.Also, if you've been following STIMY and would like to support what's happening here, please do leave a rating and review.It truly makes a difference in spreading the word about this podcast!šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
12/31/2023 ā¢ 24 minutes, 45 seconds
Ep 134: Build Your Why - STIMY Updates, Highlights & A Special Offer?!
Welcome to STIMY Ep 134!Today, you have the pleasure of hanging out with me. šWhat we'll cover today:What I've been up to in October (8 STIMY in-person interviews in Singapore), November (first conference panel & personal branding client wins) and December (6 STIMY interviews)I'm also in the midst of prepping for a new course!Tentatively titled "Build Your Why".It's based off my learnings from working with my existing 1:1 personal branding clients, where I noticed that people often struggle with:People often think they're boring (when they're not)They're too shy to share their storyThey can't remember the interesting things that have happened to them (and don't know how to ask themselves the right questions to extract those stories from memory)They don't know how to angle those interesting stories once they have them, so that they align with their goals - e.g. gain new clients, new job opportunities or offers to sit on non-profit boards.The course aims to help professionals build their unofficial collection of stories aka autobiography, so that you can pick and choose the stories to tell in whatever situation you're in.Apart from the course, I also highlight some of my favourite moments in recent STIMY episodes!STIMY Ep 122: Peter Yong aka Mr Money - on launching a YouTube personal finance business, hiring and potentially publishing his revenue numbers on YouTube?!STIMY Ep 129: Fabien Riggall, founder of Secret Cinema - on how he went from running a Ā£5 underground skate park event to epic Disney collaborations to bring Star Wars to lifeSTIMY Ep 131: Charlie Todd, founder of Improv Everywhere - on what it takes to run a prank collective & the principle of asking for forgiveness rather than permissionSTIMY 132: Terence Lee, Editor-in-Chief of Tech in Asia (just sold for $30 million) - on his takeaways from going through 2 layoffsSTIMY 133: Adlin Yusman (Managing Director, Endeavor Malaysia) - on rapid scaling & raising USD 500k in 2 days, the walk of shame and being open about sharing his failures, and why his investors don't regret a day of giving him money to work on his startup.To subscribe to the STIMY Newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062P/S: I'll be doing a mini beta launch of the Build Your Why Course and the special offer will be available only to newsletter subscribers. So keep your eyes peeled!
11/26/2023 ā¢ 53 minutes, 55 seconds
Ep 133: If Itās Easy, It Must Be A Scam + Hunting for 100 Cockroaches?! | Adlin Yusman (Managing Director, Endeavor Malaysia)
Adlin Yusman, Managing Director of Endeavor Malaysia, will work for anyone heās hired.A huge contrast to when he began his entrepreneurial journey with the mentality of, āI pay you a salary, you work for me and you do as I say.āWhich, as you can imagine, created quite a lot of issues.That said, Adlin has had an eventful life. One thatās sprinkled with a generous serving of failures and spooky occurrences (e.g. receiving a 3am call from a female ghost?!).Heās founded several startups that failed, but managed to stay friends with his former employees and investors, who donāt regret a single day of giving money to him.And has held past positions as: Director (Travel) ofĀ GrouponPrincipal atĀ Digi TelecommunicationsSAVP atĀ AstroCOO atĀ MaxMoney.comĀ CEO atĀ Payfo.So how did Adlin go from featuring a Maybach in the first edition of his luxury automobile publicationĀ to:ā”ļø Making major hiring mistakes (e.g. hiring a wimp)Ā ā”ļø Hunting for 100 cockroachesā”ļø Raising USD 500k in 2 daysĀ ā”ļø Working at Endeavor Malaysia, where he helps the likes of Bryan Loo of Loob Holdings in the startup ecosystem?!Youāll have to listen to the latest STIMY episode to find out!Highlights:2:04 A 3am call from a female ghost?!4:59 What āreal successā has Adlin even gotten to be featured in the media?! š¤£6:41 Studying economics8:14 A fork in the road11:48 Launching his first luxury automobile publication14:45 How Adlin sold himself21:01 Being a good leader means learning to follow22:51 The saddest moment of his life25:21 Terrible hiring decision - by hiring a wimp27:09 Why his startup collapsed27:49 Working at Groupon & 8am meetings31:07 Launching another startup33:46 If itās easy, it must be a scam?!40:05 Hitting RM15k revenue & 1,800 requests in 2 weeks40:45 Finding 100 cockroaches44:45 Big mistake48:03 Deciding when to quit49:20 Failure isnāt a big thing, butā¦52:53 Do you still struggle with sharing your failures?53:43 Why Adlinās investors donāt regret a single day of giving money to him56:53 The best way to handle mass resignations and retrenchments57:55 Endeavorās Local Selection Panels (LSPs)1:00:18 What founders always fail at1:02:09 You need a Big Vision1:06:39 Helping Bryan Loo of Loob Holding (Tealive etc.)1:09:05 You miss 100% of the shots you donāt take1:10:35 Advice for building your community1:14:02 Who would Adlin work for?1:15:42 Questions to ask to determine if someone has a shitty attitude!Fun Fact: Adlin has said that this interview contains quite a few stories that heās never shared elsewhere before! šP/S: Does anyone know where I can find Adlinās blog?! Please send help. š«šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/133šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/MX3BTIhi1XgĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
11/19/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 26 minutes, 38 seconds
Ep 132: The Inside Scoop on Asia's $30 Million Media Empire | Terence Lee, Editor-In-Chief at Tech in Asia
Who's got the juiciest gossip on startups these days?Well.The journalists, of course!And today, we have Terence Lee - Editor-in-Chief at Tech in Asia - to share the inside scoop on their organisation (TIA just sold for $30 Million to Singapore Press Holdings!).Fun Fact: Terence Lee really didn't want his position. He's an introvert & does not consider himself a natural leader.āSo what changed?āHow has he adapted to his leadership role & navigated through 2 brutal layoffs at Tech in Asia?āHow does journalism work for them, e.g. determining the stories to cover, the verification process required and also balancing objective reporting with friendships with the people in the space?So are you ready?Let's go!Highlights:2:38 Writing as a career?!5:14 Working at many different media publications6:58 Joining Tech in Asia in 2013 as its Managing Director8:26 Being pushed out of his comfort zone11:11 Relationship between Editor/Journalist v Startup Founders12:14 What people tend to not understand about what they're doing15:03 Perceived biases?16:11 The due diligence process18:05 Defamation law21:26 Monetisation tactics21:42 Going through TIA's first layoff25:19 Internal transparency in (almost) everything?!29:18 2nd round of layoffs & the best way to conduct retrenchment33:05 How did TIA rebuild the shattered morale of its staff & pivot to its subscription model?35:45 Big events in Indonesia37:25 The future39:02 Journalists are mini media empires?40:36 Peter Cowan - If you were to launch your own non-media startup, what would it be?šShow notes:Ā www.sothisismywhy.com/132š Special discount for STIMY listeners to TIA: techin.asia/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter on the art of storytelling + building your personal brand (+snippets of STIMY behind-the-scenes): https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
11/13/2023 ā¢ 45 minutes, 15 seconds
Ep 131. Becoming The Greatest Professional Prankster - Charlie Todd [Founder, Improv Everywhere]
Meet Charlie Todd - a professional prankster & also the founder of Improv Everywhere (a New York City-based prank collective with a twist!).Rather than pranks that embarrass people, Improv Everywhere organises large-scale pranks that create chaos & lots of joy in public.The kind of thing thatād make you go, āYouāll never believe what just happened!āE.g.Ā āØ A bunch of strangers ride the subway - without pants!Ā Ā āØ 200 people freezing in place for 5 minutes in NYCās Grand Central Terminal - with 37 million views on YouTube!Ā āØ A man going to work in his socially distanced office - located in the middle of the East River in NYC!Ā āØ Thousands of people putting on headphones and following the narratorās every word: Walking backwards, freezing, slow dancing, wrapping themselves in toilet paper etc.Ā Ā āØ Turning the NYC subway into a spa, complete with complimentary water, sauna station, hot stone massage & a steam room misting station...You get the picture š¤£The key to these āpranksā is that there is no official ending to the performance.Ā Once done, the performers just disappear.And leave everyone else behind, baffled!To date, these pranks have hit a collective view of 487+ million times on YouTube.So the obvious questions are:ā How did Charlie turn pranks into a career?ā How does he pull these crazy stunts off?ā What does it take to go viral?ā What's next?Highlights:3:20 Family of pranksters5:26 Interest in theatre7:09 Building a new life in New York City8:59 Pretending to be a celebrity!19:20 Straddling the legal/illegal grey area for their pranks21:48 Pretending to be U2 the band & the police dropping by!29:03 Organising the MP3 Experiment for thousands of people34:03 Measuring impact37:54 The person behind the social media algorithms?!40:43 Identity crisis45:39 Tours + Monetising Pranks48:18 When Charlie realised he was ready to quit to go full-time in on Improv Everywhere51:11 Disney+'s Pixar in Real Life - being its executive producer & director55:50 Socially distanced office on the river57:27 The future?59:19 Going viral over a fake meme?!šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/131šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/hv7v_qIio78Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
10/30/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 10 minutes, 30 seconds
Ep 130: Breaking into Hollywood - coz Asians Take Sh*t Very Well?! | Alvin Wee (Grammy, CAS & Golden Horse Award-Winning Music Mixer, Encanto)
Meet Alvin Wee: Grammy, CAS & Golden Horse Award winning music mixer from Kuching (now based in LA)!You might've heard some of his work:šø Disney's Encanto - it won the Grammy!šø "Loyal, Brave & True" - sung by Christina Aguilera in Mulanšø Top Gun: Maverick - with Hans Zimmeršø Kung Fu Panda 3šø Kingsman Seriesšø "Arena Cahaya" - sung by @zee.avišø Video games like Final Fantasy XIII, Kingdom Hearts 2.5, Resident Evil XII, PUBG Mobile x Arcane Collaboration & Kena: Bridge of SpiritsAs you might have guessed it, all these achievements didn't come overnight.It took a lot of effort, grit and good luck to get to where Alvin now is.And we're diving deep into all of them.Including:ā What kept him going as he studied music & waited for hours at the RTM studio for gigs to come?ā Was Berklee instrumental to his career?ā How did he "break" into Hollywood & get to collaborate with the likes of Han Zimmer, Harry Gregson-Williams, Pharrell, Jay Chou & Yuna?ā What was it like performing (+ winning Best Original Song!) at the 53rd Annual Golden Horse Film Awards 2016?ā His advice for other Asians who want to "make it" in Hollywood?Highlights:3:03 Wanting to be called Donald Duck?!6:19 Learning 7 instruments in high school11:41 The vision18:37 Was Berkeley instrumental to Alvin's career?20:53 IMDB22:06 Networking the right way27:10 Being nice in a cutthroat industry?!29:42 Harry Gregson-Williams wrote a letter supporting his US visa application!33:26 Landing his first gig - Final Fantasy 1335:43 Finding the next projects37:27 Working with Harry Gregson-Williams & Hans Zimmer43:19 What's the Hans Zimmer Camp?45:28 Disney's Encanto47:10 Do awards actually impact your career?48:22 Not being pigeon-holed49:56 It's a marathon, not a sprint51:06 Hollywood Writers' Strike53:05 Jared Lee: Is Hollywood really that glamorous?!šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/130šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
10/15/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 54 seconds
Ep 129: Bringing Moulin Rouge & Abandoned Warehouses to Life?! | Fabien Riggall (Founder, Secret Cinema)
What does it take to bring a movie to life & have the general public participant as actual characters in said movie?!You need only ask Fabien Riggall - creative director and founder of Future Shots and Secret Cinema.Fabien has always loved films and began his career working as a runner before becoming an assistant producer of short films. In 2003, he set up Future Shorts: A series of mini pop-up film festivals that took off in 2003.That eventually evolved into the creation of a skate park under London Bridge, where around 400 strangers showed up to become part of the skating community & be part of the murder mystery story!Secret Cinema is premised on the idea that films can be turned into large-scale real life, cultural experiences in abandoned spaces.The location and details of each World are never reveled and the film title is often kept secret (the reason for this was that it was entirely by accident!). Secret Cinema grew into such a phenomenon that it eventually sold to TodayTix in 2022 for Ā£89 million!And some of its most famous works include: The Great Gatsby, Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back, Blade Runner and Moulin Rouge.If you're curious in learning what it takes to build a whole movement & transform the way people see and use abandoned spaces while bring film to life on an epic scale, then this is certainly the episode for you!Highlights:4:31 Morocco6:41 Becoming a farmer and an actor?!7:43 I don't want permission!11:23 Running festivals12:13 Soul-destroying work15:45 Leveraging the internet16:57 Selling out a murder mystery event at a secret skate park under London Bridge19:47 Finding the right people23:45 Pushing the boundaries30:14 Building trust via newsletters?!32:59 A limit to provocation36:54 Maintaining your voice39:28 Biggest battles waged & won43:32 Stepping away from Secret Cinema?!47:01 Achieving everything that Fabien wanted?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/129 Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
9/30/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 10 minutes, 39 seconds
Ep 128: The Bamboo SWAT Team | Ewe Jin Low (Founder, TENTEN & Better Bamboo Buildings)
Imagine spending 30 years working as an architect.Then deciding to uproot your entire life from the UK to move to Bali to work in a new field of architecture - bamboo!Because that's exactly what Ewe Jin Low.When he made the big move to Bali, he worked as Lead architect at IBUKU covering buildings like the Green School and in 2018, began his own bamboo journey by founding his own bamboo architecture firm TENTEN and Better Bamboo Buildings in 2020 - a platform that shares information and insights on bamboo design.Ewe Jinās bamboo journey to date has included designing andĀ building more than 80 bamboo buildings in many different regions.Ā In 2022 he published a bamboo architecture book titled āBambooĀ Ark 1ā. He continues the journey to give talks, run courses andĀ workshops and to create more buildings and installations inĀ bamboo.Ā So if you're like to learn more about this relatively new form of architecture, this is the episode for you!Highlights:2:23 Bamboo groves4:24 Architectural practice7:15 The only Asian guy in the room8:41 Battles fought10:32 Prejudice against colour of skin12:01 Moving to Bali15:02 How bamboo has transformed his life & attitude16:31 Letting go of everything18:45 Assimilating into the real Bali culture22:20 Learning about bamboo as a material33:48 Common questions36:30 Maintenance43:36 Bamboo pioneers46:09 Green School Bali52:05 The SWAT Team of Bamboo Workers56:50 Is it actually green architecture?1:00:49 Is bamboo cheaper?1:05:00 Construction bamboo forests?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/128šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
9/25/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 15 minutes, 22 seconds
Hey STIMIES! Here's a special September check-in
Whoops. We've been gone for the past few weeks.It's been hectic here at STIMY - securing new guests in Singapore while prepping for 2 exciting guests that we'll be recording in person this week.So rather than a new episode, I'm experimenting with this new, short solo episode where you'll get updates from me on what it's like running STIMY the podcast & STIMY the personal branding company, as well as takeaways from some conversations that take place off air.In today's mini episode, I provide 4 main learnings from my recent Singapore trip (+ 40 appointments altogether!). They include:Hard workLuckImportance of ReinventionAlways stay CuriousDon't view your relationships as replaceable.Two upcoming STIMY guests that we'll be recording with:Prestine Davekhaw: Founder of MalaysianPAYGAP & Disappearing JobsDominic Puthucheary: Founding member of Singapore's PAP turned lawyer who grew up as a family friend of Lee Kuan Yew's family before later being detained, shuffled between multiple prisons in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur and ultimately banished from Singapore by... Lee Kuan Yew himself.If you'd like to submit your question for either Prestine or Dominic, or just want to drop a note to let me know what you think of this episode & whether you'd like me to continue doing them (+ topics to cover), just email me at sothisismywhy (at) gmail (dot) com.Have a great week!P/S: Dominic was the subject of my first viral LinkedIn post, which you can read here: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/lingyah_reflection-activity-6972349532596576256-pD-N
9/10/2023 ā¢ 7 minutes, 43 seconds
Ep 127: Pain Makes Us Grow | Alejandro Navia (Co-Founder & President, nft now)
Alejandro Navia is the co-founder and President of nft now, the premier source of NFT content and analysis. As an advisor, coach, and early supporter of web3 and the creator economy, Alejandro has helped numerous founders and creators scale their communities and raise over $92MM in funding.Prior to NFT Now, he held leadership positions at startups and enterprises in AI, aerospace, and media, including Verizon, where I led Strategy and Acquisitions, and Elite Daily, which I helped lead to a $50MM acquisition.This is a story where Alejandro transparently shares some of his lowest moments, e.g.:being suicidal at age 16;being kicked out of Harvard; andscoring a $4.5 million deal only to lose $125k two days later due to a huge mistake!šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/127Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
8/19/2023 ā¢ 50 minutes, 19 seconds
Ep 126: Rejecting $200k for the Pathless Path?! | Paul Millerd (Solopreneur, Author & Podcaster)
How do you:Ā š³ Reject a $200k/year paycheck?š³ Blow your life up in a systematic way?š³ And build a pathless path for yourself?Paul Millerd - former McKinsey consultant (aka the Lean Guy) turned solopreneur, author and podcaster - would know, because he did just that.Ā And along the way, wrote a book called the Pathless Path, which has since sold over 20k!At the time of our recording, I was just about to embark on my own Great Leap from the world of corporate law so as you can imagine, I slipped in a couple of personal questions of my own on what to expect!So if you are interested in learning what alternative career paths and lives exist, then this is the episode for you. šHighlights:2:43 The American Dream4:55 Paul Says It Well9:15 You Just Donāt Have Ambition!11:22 The success ethic14:59 Being McKinseyās Lean Guy16:06 Quitting McKinsey18:46 Constantly searching20:00 How do you quit & walk away from $54k?23:21 Ready to be your own boss?24:54 Reconnecting with himself26:41 An exercise to remove regret28:18 How to evaluate opportunities36:31 The Pathless Path41:27 Why 2022 was the best year43:55 Curiosity Conversations45:53 Blowing up your life in a systematic way46:50 Saying YES to a full-time role?47:25 Knowing when to say YES / NOĀ 48:17 Someone whoās redesigned their life in a great wayšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/126šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/FHcKezbyv78Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
8/5/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 47 seconds
Ep 125: From Building NASA Launch Pads to 1.9 Million TikTok Followers?! | Tanya Zakowich (Founder, Pink Pencil Math)
It takes guts to quit your job.But what if it was NASA? BOEING? Or Elon Muskās Hyperloop One?!Because thatās exactly what Tanya Zakowich did.Tanya grew up with a fascination for space & like most kids, she wanted to be an astronaut.But unlike many, that fascination held even when she grew up, which is why she ended up studying mechanical engineering at Columbia.An internship in India helped her land a job at NASA, but she soon left for BOEING! Only to realise that at BOEING, she was just a cog in the wheel. She wasnāt being challenged.Hence her third role at Elon Muskās Hyperloop One, where she lived the ultimate startup life.That is, until she realised that what she truly loved & cared about was her family and home in Singapore.So she gave it all up to return home.Now if you listen to this STIMY interview, youāll soon realise that Tanya is quite the go-getter!During the pandemic, she strategically launched a new TikTok channel where she teaches maths in a fun and interesting way. Within 6 months, she hit 1 million followers!Ā Then quit for 2 months because of the toll it took on her mental health.She now stands at 1.9 million followers. š¤ÆThat said, Tanya doesnāt have everything figured out.Ā Sheās constantly experimenting, learning to give up on things that donāt work to try something else again. And if thereās one takeaway I hope youāll receive from this episode, itās this: Failures make us stronger. Donāt let it hold you back.Now are you ready to listen to Tanyaās episode?Letās go. šHighlights:2:13 Interest in space5:37 Engineering at Columbia University7:22 How an internship in India helped Tanya get into NASA9:42 NASAās interview process12:57 Quitting NASA14:32 Quitting is easy?!15:41 Deal breakers18;11 Elon Muskās Hyperloop One21:54 Singaporeās startup scene22:35 US v Singapore startups26:50 Dating app29:10 Getting into TikTok29:52 Personal branding34:03 TikTok trends36:21 Secret to going viral36:42 Hooks38:21 Drafting scripts40:30 Tanyaās unique selling point46:54 Not moving to the US for content creation?49:27 Goal of 1 million followers54:04 Going on a break56:29 Change in frequency57:11 Putting her name out in publicšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/125Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/wclFmzVbMmwĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
7/31/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 6 minutes, 11 seconds
Ep 124: Born For Crisis | Jacqueline Novogratz (Founder & CEO, Acumen)
Jacqueline Novogratz is the founder & CEO of Acumen - a non-profit global venture capital fund that aims to use entrepreneurial approaches to address global poverty.Ā She was also born for crisis.As the OG of impact investing, her impressive list of accolades include:One of the Worldās 100 Greatest Living Business Minds 2017 by ForbesForbes 400 Lifetime Achievement Award for Social Entrepreneurship, 2016The Resolution Project Champions Circle Award, 2016Bloomberg Markets 50 Most Influential in Global Finance, 2014Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year 2008She also sits on the board of:Ā Aspen Institute board of trusteesPakistan Business Council Centre of Excellence in Responsible Business (CERB)]Advisory Councils of the Harvard Business School Social Enterprise Initiative, the Oxford SaĆÆd Global Leadership Council and UNICEF.At its core, Jacqueline is a woman who has always know that she wanted to do good in this world.Ā When she graduated from the University of Virginia, she described herself as someone who was "excited, idealistic & had dreams in your head of changing the world and didnāt have a clue how to startā.That start ended up being at Chase Manhattan Bank - despite telling the interviewer that she had no interest in banking & was only there because her parents told her to!She did so well, the then COO, Tony Triciano, wanted to fast track her career and have her be his right hand person.She said NO. She wanted to change the world.And left for Africa.Ā There, she suffered failure after failure after failure.She learned that while she had gone to try & save the African continent, Africa neither wanted nor needed saving.But those lessons were invaluable and led her down the path of founding Acumen.When she left her job at Chase, her father said that she was giving up the career of a lifetime & her mother was sure that she would never marry.Even Jacqueline thought so too.Because her sense of purpose was so strong, she was afraid that any partner she had would hold her back.That is, until Chris came into the picture.But you'll just have to listen to this episode to learn more. šHighlights:2:57 The Novogratz clan (like the Kennedys?!)4:22 Orphanage8:36 A Little Boy9:46 Saying NO to Tony Triciano, the then COO of Chase Manhattan Bank?!11:24 Leaving the job of a lifetime12:33 Africa doesn't need saving!13:40 Being Born for Crisis15:16 The secret sauce to establishing Duterimbere - Rwanda's first Microfinance bank16:21 Being maniacal18:30 Agnes & the Rwandan genocide20:48 Building on the 4th floor with no safety net underneath with Dan Toole?!22:34 When the tides started to change24:59 Mike, the Forrest Gump of Bitcoin26:56 Acumen in Southeast Asia32:11 Won't social entrepreneurs succeed without Acumen?34:55 Jacqueline's personal KPIs37:29 Listening with her whole body42:19 Marriage45:20 Advice for finding the right partner!šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/124Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/Fzi9iVKCo_4Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
7/25/2023 ā¢ 51 minutes, 21 seconds
Ep 123: Regret What You Tried, Not What You Gave Up On | Dr. Giovanna Graziosi Casimiro (Ex-Metaverse Producer, Decentraland Foundation)
Dr. Giovanna Graziosi Casimiro has had a unique career. She is the current Head of Production at Phygicode and former Metaverse Producer at Decentraland Foundation and Head of Metaverse Fashion Week. She has more than a decade of experience in digital design and the XR industry and also serves as a mentor at MIT during their Hacking Arts 2016-2018, and as a Senior Professor at SENAC University Centre, a renowned public federal University in Brazil.For Giovanna, she believes that life is a short experience. She wants to have a portfolio of experiences that really enriches her soul and mind and would rather regret what she's tried, then over what she's given up on.It's ok to fail. Just don't give up.Bearing in mind this principle, this episode digs into Gigi has led her life and the career choices she's made to date.Maybe it'll inspire you to take the unconventional step too? šHighlights: 2:02 Being an actress?3:47 Japanese culture in Latin America4:31 Bossing her dad at age 46:06 Doing a PhD in architecture and urbanism7:23 Survivor option10:38 Residencies & digital nomad life17:26 A portfolio of experiences25:00 Randi Zuckerberg25:30 Web328:33 Working in a VR studio in Finland32:35 Working at Decentraland Foundation35:56 Effective work flow37:53 Voting power favours the rich?44:43 Hosting fashion week in the metaverse48:17 Convincing major brands to come on board e.g. Dolce & Gabbana and Estee Lauder55:25 What success looks likešShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/123Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
7/15/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 18 seconds
Tribute: The King of Singapore | Adrian Tan (President, Singapore Law Society)
Yesterday, we lost the King of Singapore.I never had the privilege of meeting him, but a year ago, I sent a cheeky email to Adrian Tan asking if heād share his life story on the So This Is My Why podcast.In a true spirit of generosity, he said yes.And we spoke for over 2 hours! š¤ÆPodcast hosts shouldnāt have favourites butā¦ Adrian was one of my favourites. It is true.Today, Adrianās episode has been rereleased as a tribute to him. It is the almost šÆ unedited version (minus the umm & ahhs), so youāll hear some of the parts that didnāt make the cut the first time around in 1 full episode.I hope this interview did justice in showcasing the kind of person that he was.If you donāt know Adrianās backstory, here are some highlights (found in the episode too):š„ Adrian grew up in a HDB flat that had zero concept of privacy. His neighbours crowded outside his flat every day to watch their TV & would get mad if it wasnāt available! š¤£š„ He was the subject of maternal gaslighting š¤£ which helped him become very, very good at Englishš„ His English was so good, he was refused a scholarship to do law and told to do English instead!Ā š„Adrian ended up writing multiple bestsellers - The Teenage Textbook & The Teenage Workbook (theyāve been turned into a play, TV series & movie!)š„ Ironically, Adrian was very embarrassed by the success of his novels. Because he was a tough, hardened litigator but his clients just wanted to talk about his silly teenage romance novels?! š«š„Despite being a lawyer, he found it impossible to stand up for himself in real life.š„ But he realised that he needed to start speaking up. On LinkedIn.Ā Because it was time to strip away the āmysticā around the legal profession & that begins with lawyers becoming legal influencers.š„ Finally, his vow as the President of the Singapore Law Society to āfight cancer, fight my cases in court & fight for lawyers as their President, until the clock runs outā.I hope you enjoy this re-released, unedited episode with the King of Singapore.šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/101šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/QOEeOIiQvykšĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
7/9/2023 ā¢ 2 hours, 13 minutes, 19 seconds
Help! I Wanna Quit My Job ASAP! | Peter Yong aka Mr Money TV (153k YouTube subscribers)
Welcome to a special Questions from the Audience episode with Peter Yong aka Mr Money TV - one of the top personal finance YouTubers in the region.In this episode, we feature questions that came from you! Which include Peter's own co-founders & staff.If you haven't done so already, do check out Episode 122 Parts 1 & 2 to learn more about Peter's journey from being a replacement child to abandoning his lucrative career (+ selling his BMW!) to go in to his YouTube business and all things entrepreneurship.Highlights:1:21 What should my net worth be if I want to retire ASAP?2:47 What was it like giving up everything to start your own business?3:51 Advice for young entrepreneurs in a similar position5:10 Ever received any extreme threats?6:18 Peter's many tattoos9:10 How do you see yourself in 5 years?10:13 Will MrMoney become an MNC?10:24 Coughing?!šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/122Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/saQkikbcwaYĀ šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
7/5/2023 ā¢ 11 minutes, 20 seconds
Ep 122 Part 2: I Am NOT Your Father! | Peter Yong aka Mr Money TV, the 7-figure YouTube Businessman
What does it take to build a 7-figure YouTube business on personal finance?Peter Yong aka Mr Money TV spills the tea on STIMY Episode 122 Part 2.That includes telling us:Why he tells all his staff, "I am not your father!"Why he hires 5, works 10 & pays 8;How he creates a moat around himself;How he's built his personal brand;Why his staff actively tell him to NOT hire more staff!Why his entire team knows the financials behind Mr Money TV;Working for free & getting equity?!His dream of building a Hershey town.And that's just some of juicier takes. šHighlights:3:05 Being taken advantage of5:22 Having partners work for free until 2 - 4am?!10:33 Prototyping the life you want12:37 Matt the Ultimate Gen Z15:59 Hire 5, work 10, pay 817:52 I am not your father!18:32 Hiring process21:57 Becoming a business22:56 Getting the staff involved in the hiring process23:56 How does Mr Money make money?!26:32 Evaluating priorities31:55 Creating a moat40:22 The Personal41:01 Mr Money TV almost shut down?!42:28 Becoming more cynical44:56 Can a boss ever be friends with his employees?47:43 You're going to shut down. Do you tell your employees?51:05 Hershey's World (P/S: Thanks, CK!!)53:48 The legacy for Peter's 2 sonsšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/122Ā šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/saQkikbcwaYĀ šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
7/1/2023 ā¢ 57 minutes, 49 seconds
Ep 122 Part 1: The Replacement Son Who Refuses to Drive a Porsche?! | Peter Yong (aka Mr MoneyTV the Personal Finance YouTuber)
Hey STIMIES!Itās time to meet the Replacement Son who refuses to drive a Porsche: Peter Yong aka Mr Money TV.One of Malaysiaās most beloved personal finance YouTubers with 153k subscribers!Itās one thing to start another YouTube channel; quite another to turn it into a thriving 7-figure business in Southeast Asia, but Peter has done just that. And today, we dive deep & personal, touching on things like how:š„ Peter was born to be a replacement son, which severely affected his confidence & self-esteemš„ His father was a gangster!! Who taught Peter to clean his gun when he was just 5 years old?!š„ He thought money was evil. Until he realised it wasnātš„ He was thriving in his RM 250,000/year insurance job then gave it all up & sold his BMW, to go all-in with his YouTube channel.Ā Just when his son was born.Peter has so many gems to share that I had to cut this interview into 2 parts!This is Part 1.I hope you enjoy it!Highlights:3:43 Running away from death5:48 Money isnāt important6:25 The replacement son10:15 Cleaning a gun at age 5?!12:27 Surviving bullies?!16:44 What do I do with my life?18:21 Money isnāt evil?24:59 Planning to x6 his income in 6 years27:57 Being in control of money30:45 Admitted to the hospital31:39 Sales is the most humiliating job in the world33:02 Making RM 250,000/year36:09 The secret to convincing37:11 Starting his own agency42:18 What can make money?46:16 Odd jobs47:31 Drowning52:03 The vision55:42 Going full-time57:36 The Porsche life?!1:00:33 The girl & the trainšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/122šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/saQkikbcwaYĀ š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
6/25/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 8 minutes, 19 seconds
Ep 121: I'm OK, Man! | Dr Ong Kian Ming (Former Deputy Minister of Malaysia's Ministry of Investment, Trade & Industry)
āWhat is it like becoming a Deputy Minister in a government thatās never been in power before?āWhat was the relationship really like between Malaysiaās then Prime Minister & Deputy Prime Minister, Mahathir & Anuar?āHow does one pick a constituency and why even politics in the first place when you can make good money as a BCG consultant?If you havenāt already guessed it, todayās STIMY guest is Dr Ong Kian Ming aka imokman.He went from being a BCG consultant to a lecturer and policy analyst at UCSI University and director of the Malaysian Electoral Roll Analysis Project (MERAP). He then entered politics and eventually became the Deputy Minister, Ministry of International Trade and Industry of Malaysia in July 2018!If you donāt know anything about Malaysian politics, hereās a heads up: Kian Ming (legitimately) thought he would always be in the opposition. The then incumbent government had been in power since Independence Day for the past 60+ years!So as you can imagine, todayās conversation focuses on politics. A lot.Ā Touching on things like why Kian Ming chose to enter politics, what it was like becoming a Deputy Minister, what went so wrong (e.g. the Sheraton Move!), why heās setting up a PPE course and so much more.Highlights:2:07 imokman3:32 Wanting to be rich4:22 Being an ASEAN scholar6:44 Seeking a āhigher purposeā in BCG?!9:14 Make your boss look good (not your client!)10:29 Public policy15:06 How his PhD in political science helped his career19:24 Meeting Tony Pua & blogging20:50 Sacrifices we donāt know?22:32 āThe Talkā with the wife24:18 Only 2 terms?!26:21 Preparing for his first election29:51 Deciding who to help32:40 Managing expectations from his constituents33:32 Giving safe financial support34:49 Iāll be in opposition forever?!37:06 The manifesto38:29 Managing the euphoria40:34 Building trust41:47 The legacy he inherited at MITI from Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz44:56 Industry 4.047:23 That $70 billion investment from China49:24 The realities of running trade investment missions50:50 How does China see Malaysia?53:36 The Sheraton Move - what really happened?55:49 What couldāve been done differently?57:05 The relationship between Mahathir & Anuar58:56 No reelection1:00:17 How do we know if constituents are actually doing the work?1:01:11 Wishing heād worked better with his minister1:03:31 Whoās a lifelong politician?1:04:43 When is it time to leave?1:05:26 Building Malaysiaās first PPE Course (and future Malaysian Prime Ministers?!)šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/121š® Interested in building your personal brand on LinkedIn? Just shoot me an email at [email protected] & weāll get started!š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
6/18/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 13 minutes, 38 seconds
Ep 120: The Power of Price of Psychotic Obsession + Self-Sabotage | Apolo Ohno (Most Decorated US Winter Olympian with 8 Olympic Medals & 21 World Championships)
Apolo OhnoĀ has won 8 Olympic medals & 21 World Championship medals, which makes him the most decorated US Winter Olympian inĀ history!He was the state champion swimmer at age 13 & national speed skating champion at age 14, but it was short track speed skating that really caught his eye.Because to him, they were like Superman!After 6 months of training, Apolo won the 1997 US Championships. He was a shoo-in for the 1998 Winter Olympics but then...Ā Apolo grew complacent.Ā He self-sabotaged & threw away his training, finishing last in the Olympics trials.His father was so upset, he sent Apolo to an isolated cabin at Copalis Beach and said: "You'll stay here for as long as it takes for you to figure out what you want to do with your life!"That was traumatic.Apolo decided he would give this sport a real shot & that's when everything changed.Ā But there was a price to pay for such "psychotic obsession".He was ruthless to everyone, including himself.In this STIMY Episode, we talked about how he finds FLOW, sports psychology, self-sabotage, the importance of recovery, and being obsessive without being "mindlessly handcuffed to it".So if you want to your life to the fullest the way an Olympic champion does, then this is the episode for you!Highlights:3:27 Survival7:23 Why did this happen?10:35 Blowing up toilets?!12:25 Joining the Superman sports15:33 Sleeping with his skates16:48 Sacrifice22:01 Not being handcuffed to failure24:39 Self-sabotage30:57 The darker side to obsession39:31 Finding the FLOW state42:50 The power of introspection45:25 The controversial Salt Lake City Olympics win49:20 Turin Olympics50:46 Why Apolo turned away from Hollywood52:30 A lion is most dangerous when it knows it's near its end56:11 Psychotic obsession outside of sports57:31 Not returning to sports + Michael Phelps58:51 The Great Divorce1:02:37 What do you say yes to?1:05:07 Building his personal board of directors1:08:31 Who are you? Who are you? Who are you?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/120šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
6/11/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 20 minutes, 52 seconds
Ep 119: Building a Global Media Empire | Justin Byam Shaw (Chairman, ESI Media - Evening Standard & the Independent; Founder, Felix Project)
Entrepreneurs must be ruthless, obsessive and willing to cut corners.Something that Justin Byam Shaw, Chairman of ESI Media, would know.He co-owns (alongside Evgeny Lebedev) the Evening Standard & the Independent, and also co-founded the Felix Project - one of the biggest food redistribution charities in the UK!If you've ever been in London, you'll notice the Evening Standard lying around Tube stations. It's a 100% free quality newspaper and I'd always wondered - what does it take to run it? How do you manage to keep a newspaper free on such a scale?Well today, Justin shares it all.He takes us through his decision to:š„ Study classics at Oxford University - even when everyone told him it was good for nothing!š„ Pivot from advertising - when he realised he was terrible at itš„ Drop out of British Telecom within 1 week of finding a market gap to launch his own startup - at a time when it wasn't the "cool thing" to be a founderš„ Buy both the Evening Standard & the Independent (alongside the Lebedevs)And also his thoughts on:š¤ How George Osborne faired as Editor of the Evening Standardš¤ How to turn around failing media companiesš¤ Launching the The i newspaper (within 7 months of acquiring the Independent!)š¤ The rise of superstar journalists turned media personalitiesš¤ The media publication he'd be most interested in taking over & what he'd do differently!Highlights:4.44 Studying "good for nothing" Classics at Oxford?!7:18 Being bad at advertising9:27 Moving to British Telecom when it'd just privatised11:34 The talent show that kickstarted Justin's entrepreneurial journey12:38 Remortgaging his apartment?!15:32 Expanding to 12+ countries19:39 The tipping point20:54 Life after acquisition22:34 Arrogance26:59 Being ruthless29:00 Buying the Evening Standard33:41 Launching The i in 7 months?!36:38 Not going digital with the Evening Standard38:58 Internal resistance40:27 Appointing George Osborne as editor45:14 What do media owners expect from their editors?49:23 Journalists become media superstar personalities51:59 Buzzfeed53:05 If Justin could buy any newspaper publication, it'd be...55:14 The Felix ProjectšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/119šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
5/21/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 7 minutes, 8 seconds
Ep 118: The Uncharismatic Leader We All NEED | Chen-Chow Yeoh (Co-Founder, Fave & KFit)
Not everyone has to be a Steve Jobs.The charismatic, big picture, visionary leader that everyone gravitates towards.We also have (and need) those who execute.Who double down on the nitty gritty and ensure that things actually get done. And wellWhich brings me to today's STIMY guest: Chen Chow Yeoh.Speak to anyone in the Southeast Asian startup scene and they'll likely have heard of Chen Chow and have a tremendous amount of respect for him.He's an OG in the space:Co-Founder of Fave - one of the fastest growing fintech platform in Southeast AsiaCo-Founder of KFit.com - which revolutionised how people approached fitness in Asia PacificRegional Operations Director in APAC & COO (Malaysia) for GrouponBut he never had a plan. š Chen Chow:ā Was one of the top 8 people who scored the worst in his English exams at Cornell University;ā Didn't get a promotion at Accenture (and cried about it ā¹ļø)ā Landed his role at Jobstreet by chanceā Was rendered obsolete in Groupon when he joined - he was hired for a sales role but by the time he finished serving notice at his previous company, that role was obsolete!But:š„ At Accenture, he did eventually get that promotion. By buckling down & putting in the work.š„ He did odd jobs at Groupon & within 3 weeks of joining, was promoted to COO!š„ He worked with Joel Neoh to turn Groupon Taiwan from a $1 million loss making monster to $8k in profits in 8 months!š„ He has never formally applied for any jobs - people always go to himBut he is not like his charismatic, visionary counterpart.He just does the work.Great work, in fact.And this, is his story.So are you ready?Let's go šHighlights:2:04 Catching the 5am bus2:56 Going to Cornell University6:59 Failing to get a job promotion8:13 A coincidental offer from Jobstreet12:16 Joel Neoh13:47 Why take the leap to Groupon15:38 Never formally applied for a job!17:36 From random jobs to COO?!21:57 Inferiority or imposter syndrome?24:54 Don't ask for more?!27:29 How to turn a $1 million loss making business into $8k profit in 8 months in Taiwan35:29 Co-Founding KFit39:35 Raising $1 million from friends & family?!41:11 Landing Pieter Kemps from Sequoia as an investor!50:47 Turning KFit into Fave54:05 Laying off 50% of staff but still being good friends with them59:30 How to bring 2 company cultures together during an acquisition1:01:36 China1:11:55 What are Chen Chow's strongest features?1:12:33 Will Chen Chow stay even though Joel has left?1:14:04 A competitor Chen Chow really admiresšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/118š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062Ā
4/25/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 26 minutes, 31 seconds
Ep 117: From an Intervention by the Pope to Overhauling the US Financial System, SVB, Signature Bank & Trumplestilkin | Barney Frank (former US Congressman, Chairman of the US Financial Services Committee)
Former US Congressman Barney Frank has been described by the New York Times as "one of the people most responsible for overhauling financial regulation after the 2008 economic crisis".Little surprise, given that this acerbic politician was:š„ Member of the US House of Representatives (1981 - 2013)š„ Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee (2007 - 2011); andš„ Lead co-sponsor of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act - which introduced the greatest Wall Street reform in history.He hit the headlines again given the Silicon Valley Bank meltdown & ironically, his role as director at the now defunct Signature Bank.ā But how did Barney end up in the top echelons of politics?ā Why did the Pope have to intervene with his appointment to the US House of Representatives?ā How did staying silent about being gay impact him, and why did he decide to out himself in a Boston Globe article?ā How does he get along with his peers?Specifically, in his own words, "You learn how to ingratiate yourself with them and how you can help them and make them value your friendship. And that becomes particularly important when you move up."āAnd what does he think of Trump (p/s Trumplestilskin) & the upcoming US Presidential Elections?This episode is full of gems that we can apply to our own lives (even outside of politics).So do give it a listen, and let us know what you think!Highlights:7:39 Obsession with politics14:27 Anne Frank15:50 Politics in the blood?19:58 Campaigning in a Republican state23:07 Enjoying the things he's very good at24:20 1980 campaign was the toughest race26:31 Intervention from the Pope?!29:24 Congress is like "high school as a freshman"30:53 Do the job well, but not TOO well31:51 How do you become/stay popular?35:34 How do you know what's happening on the ground?38:20 The Boston Globe article40:43 Being willing to sacrifice his political career41:52 Why did Barney keep winning by wide margins?44:34 Having empathy due to being closeted for so long45:33 The average American isn't homophobic?!47:44 Dodd-Frank Act53:28 Could the Dodd-Frank Act have done more to prevent the SVB meltdown?56:01 Challenges in raising the insurance limit on bank deposits58:01 Disagreeing with Senator Elizabeth Warren that the Dodd-Frank Act is to blame59:46 Crypto1:00:57 Where's the banking crisis headed?1:02:36 The 2024 US Presidential Elections, Trumplestilkin as the most self-destructive politician he's seen in awhile1:05:13 How governments can encourage crypto innovation1:06:19 A mistake to be the director of Signature Bank?1:10:56 Was it a mistake to partially repeal the Dodd-Frank Act?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/117šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
4/16/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 17 minutes, 51 seconds
Ep 116: The EPIC Life in Building Homes in 3 days?! | John-Son Oei (Founder & Chief Epic Officer, EPIC Collective)
John-Son Oeiās EPIC social enterprise was born out of guilt.This former Rain oppa lookalike (time to check out his photos! š) knew the importance of giving back. Wanted to give back.Ā But never did.Ā And it wasnāt as though he hadnāt dabbled many things in his life prior to graduation:Ā Heād worked retail with Polo Ralph Lauren, did video production, was a fitness instructor & a Marshall at Camp 5 (rock climbing) and even modeled (yes, you really want to see his photo now, donāt you? š).Ā Yet despite all that, John-Son wanted to become a jet ski operator. A bona-fide ābeach bumā, as his mother declared!Until a toilet came along.Because you see, heād been told that while it was great to want to give back, he couldnāt stay idealistic for too long.Ā āThe moment you go into the real world, itās a dog eat dog world.āAnd that troubled John-Son:Ā āItās not that I couldnāt be a dog. To eat other dogs. But I said, is that really what life is about?ā*The opportunity to explore this ideal came when he visited an orang asli community & discovered their need for a functionable toilet.Ā He set up a Facebook group, and 64 strangers came.Not his friends or the ones who said they were into charities, but complete & utter strangers.And that sent John-Son down a rabbit hole.He realised that we all need a purpose beyond ourselves.Ā It wasnāt as though he, and many others, didnāt care about giving back - but that we all felt alone. And honestly, āWhat impact can one person have?āAs it turns out?An EPIC amount.*But this wonāt be a STIMY interview if we didnāt talk about the ādarker sidesā.The difficulties in running EPIC as a social enterprise, figuring out their business model, convincing companies that they werenāt a ācon jobā, the pandemic and also, how John-Son would even question his own purpose.Ā This, despite the numerous international awards and recognition showered upon him, e.g. being accepted into the Ashoka Fellowship; Forbes 30 under 30 2016; The Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award for Dedication 2017; SME Malaysian Social Entrepreneur of the Year 2017; Tatler MalaysiaāForce for Good Award; The Edge Inspiring Young Leaders Award; the Iclif Leadership Energy Award 2015; and Microsoftās Global YouthSpark Star award. He was also Malaysiaās official flag bearer for Queen Elizabethās Diamond Jubilee and 2012 Commonwealth Day.So if you want to know the realities of giving back to the community, why itās important to have a purpose beyond ourselves and how you can do so too?Then this is the episode for you.Highlights:3:03 Having a gentle giant for a father3:52 Does God exist?10:58 I had two As & failed everything else š³15:58 Aspiring to be a beach bum20:30 Giving back to the community22:47 Becoming Rain the KPop Superstar23:46 Building a toilet25:17 From toilet to a house for Pak Cihong?!32:42 The realities of running a social enterprise37:33 This is a con job!43:33 Why is this team building?46:40 Why 2012 was a really difficult year51:38 The personal significance behind winning the Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award for Dedication 201753:21 Is there something more?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/116š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
4/9/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 14 seconds
Ep 115: The Most Powerful Woman in the Room | Lydia Fenet (former Christie's Managing Director & Global Head of Strategic Partnerships and Most Powerful Woman in the Room
Lydia Fenet is the most powerful woman in the room.She has sold over $1 billion dollars for nonprofits globally alongside Elton John, Jason Bourne (aka Matt Bourne), Bruce Springsteen & every other big-name superstar you can think of.In 2018, she became Christie's Global Managing Director of Strategic Partnerships and has also:Been named one of New Yorkās most influential women by Gotham magazine;Appeared in Vogue, Harperās Bazaar, Vanity Fair and Town & Country;Published 2 books (her first book was optioned by Netflix in Feb 2022!); andRuns the Claim Your Confidence podcast featuring Glenn Close, Candace Nelson, Stephanie Horton, and Courtney Dauwalter.All while leading multiple benefit auctions for the biggest names in the industry. Including Elton John's 2023 AIDS Foundation Oscar Party!Lydia is now living the life she has always wanted.But it wasn't.When young, she wanted to be a lawyer just like her father. Unlike she came across a Vanity Fair article & discovered the exclusive world of Christie's.She convinced the Matriarch of Christie's to let her join Christie's internship program.But for the first 10 years, was told (and believed!) to not talk about money. And that "she was lucky to work there".If you want to learn how Lydia later managed to triple her salary + gain a global title + lead a new department at Christie's, you'll have to listen to the episode!Highlights:2:47 Why Lydia is a "life in motion"3:32 Network or die5:30 Learning about Christie's7:13 Not Sotheby's?8:01 Convincing the Matriarch of Christie's, Mary Libby, to let her join the internship program12:51 How Lauren Short influenced her14:33 How Lydia became Christie's benefit auctioneer16:27 Why Lydia did 500 mediocre auctions but never wanted to quit18:20 The breakthrough22:31 Leading the auction at Elton John's 2023 AIDS Foundation Oscar Party25:58 Where Lydia gets her energy from30:01 When Lehman Brothers collapsed but Lydia managed to save her colleague34:49 Ask for what you're worth, because you're just a number on a P&L41:44 How being a published author has opened doorsšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/115Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
4/2/2023 ā¢ 50 minutes, 52 seconds
Ep 114: Confessions of a former opium addict & secret society member | Alvin Chiong (ex-convict, Triad Trail tour guide & chef)
Alvin Chiong's father was an opium addict.And as for Alvin:Age 7: Alvin's mother abandoned the familyAge 9: Started sniffing glue & joined the secret society to avoid being bulliedAge 14: Left school to follow his leader Age 18: Became hooked on heroin & couldn't hold down a job.Things came to a head in Thailand, where Alvin realised he needed to change his life around. But opium addiction, while a choice, is not so easy to kick.And it took many, many halfway houses & attempts before Alvin came clean, turned his life around (after prison!!) and became the person he is today: giving back to society, helping his former brothers find their feet & holding down jobs as a chef as tour guide at Triad Trails.Alvin's story, like Notle Chew's story in STIMY Episode 102, is an unusual STIMY story, but one that I really want to have shared.Because there is a lesson to be learned from everyone's life journey. And the biggest takeaway is this: It's all about mindset & attitude. If we insist on blaming the world & everyone else in it for our troubles, no matter how 'justified', then you will continue to be held back. Now Alvin tells his story best, so are you ready?Let's go!Highlights:2:53 Dysfunctional family4:54 Joining the secret society10:34 Fighting12:57 Thailand14:56 The "price" for leaving the secret society gang19:04 Being friends with brothers20:35 Being in prison23:51 Safeguards to avoid temptation26:17 Going back to prison to help30:24 God31:56 Common misconceptions about drug addicts32:49 The secret to change35:13 Knowing when a convict is telling you the truth38:55 Are Singaporean laws too harsh?41:41 Common struggles for members of the secret society 43:02 Spiritual journey & finding God46:43 What Alvin is grateful for this yearšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/114Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
3/26/2023 ā¢ 51 minutes
Ep 113: How Do You Build a 200,000+ community in 3 years?! | Bryan Pham (Co-Founder, Asian Hustle Network, AHNF, AHN Ventures, Hate Is A Virus)
Everyone wants to start a community while Bryan Pham (with his co-founder, Maggie Chui) has grown a global community from 0 to 200,000+ in 3 years! š±Ā #casualBest of all?It started as a āscrew youā moment. š In all seriousness, Bryan is the founder of Asian Hustle Network (āAHNā), AHNF & AHN Ventures.Ā And has had quite the unconventional journey:š®Bryanās parents fled the Vietnam War & taught him that investments and business were tabooš®He worked as a software engineer & realised that companies didnāt have his back; youād be fired even if youād been working there for 20 years!š®He tried an Amazon selling side hustle - and lost $22kAlthough:š„His roommate got him into property investment - and he made $200k+ from his first sale!š„He built a real estate investment community of 2,000 in 2 years in the Bay Area.But for 4 years, Bryan had been thinking about his why. And found himself wanting to build something for the Asian community.A trip to the Meiji Shrine gave his idea the spark, a rejection gave it the light (youāll have to listen to find out what! š), and within 3 days of AHN being born, the Asian Hustle Network had 1,000 members.š In 11 months: 60k membersšIn 1.5 years: 100k+ membersšIn 2 years: 120k+ membersTalk about fulfilling a need! š±But things werenāt easy:Ā ā¹ļøBryan was receiving hate messages (and wanted to quit after 8 months)Ā ā¹ļø AHN wasnāt profitable for years.Things have since turned aroundš„AHN is incorporated in the USA, Singapore & Australia;š„Has its own venture fund;š„Also runs a non-profit fund; andš„Has expanded into Southeast Asia!To learn the details of this transformation, how AHN grew from a Facebook group to a massive global super connector platform & Bryanās lesson from launching the Hate Is A Movement, just listen to the latest episode 113 on the So This Is My Why podcast!And do let us know what you think. šHighlights:2:17 Growing up with $254:02 Investments & business were taboo at home!5:31 Why computer science?6:45 Companies arenāt loyal š9:43 Starting his side hustle & losing $22,000 š«12:01 Getting into real estate investment18:04 When youāre less reliant on your job, you start seeing whatās wrong with it20:17 I donāt need to be an employee!22:47 Depressed over finding the meaning of life27:03 The Asian community is divided31:04 Asian Hustle Networkās mission32:35 Being inspired by the Meiji Shrine34:33 Going viral (thanks, Subtle Asian Traits!)39:14 How do you make everyone feel like they belong?41:11 Wanting to quit after 8 months41:43 Hate Is A Virus movement45:44 Running successful events48:51 The trick to networking50:09 Constantly innovating51:18 Becoming profitable53:04 Sponsorships55:00 Moving to Southeast Asia57:57 Difference to EST Media58:46 The Vietnamese Way1:03:11 Bing Chen of Gold HousešShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/113Ā Ā š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062š„³STIMY episodes are now open to sponsorship! Just email [email protected] to find out more.
3/19/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 7 minutes, 24 seconds
SPECIAL: Questions from the Audience with Eric Sim (former Managing Director of UBS Investment Bank)
We've heard from Eric Sim all week.InĀ Part 1, we learned about his journey from working at his father's prawn noodle hawker stall to becoming the Managing Director at UBS Investment Bank.InĀ Part 2, Eric explains why he left it all behind, the importance of building a portfolio career, why LinkedIn & his secret to building a 2.9 million following on LinkedIn!In today's special episode, we asked Eric questions that came from YOU, the STIMY listeners!YOUR Questions to Eric:1:10 Framework to evaluate opportunities [Lily Wu]4:10 What is Eric Sim's life purpose? [Sam Huen]5:12 What does the creator economy look like in 3 years & what's 1 action that people can take to best position themselves for it? [Lester Chng]8:36 Lessons learned after writing his book, Small Actions Leading Your Career to Big Success [Craig Davis]šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/112-questionsĀ šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
3/17/2023 ā¢ 11 minutes, 40 seconds
Ep 112 Part 2: How to Gain 2.9 MILLION LinkedIn Followers & Build a Second Career | Eric Sim (former Managing Director, UBS Investment Bank)
Eric had the world at his feet.He had gone from selling prawn noodles at his father's hawker stall in Singapore to becoming the Managing Director of UBS Investment Bank.So why did he throw it all away? š±What comes after all that?For Eric, a lot more.He was constantly learning skills & combining them in unique ways. From learning to sail to video editing and becoming LinkedIn's top influencer in both Singapore and China thanks to his 2.9 MILLION followers.In this Part 2, we dive into Eric's life after banking.How we can & should all be building a portfolio career. Why LinkedIn. His book writing journey & the crazy way he sells his books in China.If you feel stuck in your career, or don't know how to stand out from your peers, then this is the roadmap to adopt. šHighlights:2:39 Why stop being the Managing Director?3:53 Pursuing a portfolio career5:57 The start of Ericās LinkedIn journey in Hong Kong7:45 Content pillars9:13 How do you gain 2.9 million LinkedIn followers?!10:01 Why LinkedIn?13:59 Whereās the line?16:13 Building community22:16 Small Actions25:20 Should I write a book?26:44 Self-publication & Kinokuniyaās Kenny Chan28:42 Marketing30:29 Whatās the China market like?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/112-2š Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
3/15/2023 ā¢ 43 minutes, 10 seconds
Ep 112.1: Confessions of a hawker's son turned MD of UBS (with 2.9 million LinkedIn followers!) | Eric Sim (former Managing Director, UBS)
How does a shy boy with no social skills, who failed his mathematics & went to school smelling of prawns every day... become the Managing Director of UBS?Just ask Eric Sim.The truth is:ā Eric didn't just fail his maths.He also failed his English Literature & History papers and had to work at his father's prawn noodle shop before going to school.ā He bombed his first job in FX Sales role at DBS Bank.ā He failed all his job interviews in London (which he attended wearing a chicken suit!).But Eric's story doesn't end there.He:ā Figured out how to leverage on his unique background, i.e. as the son of a hawker & bartender, to build a unique personal brand & score his first job;ā Found an amazing boss, Prasanna Thombre, who believed in him & gave him all the international opportunities he needed; andā Built relationships that meant that his future jobs were all referred to him.Eric learned very quickly that you need to do more than just your job to thrive.And we talked about the cultural nuances of working in different Asian cities (including Ulaanbaatar!), what it meant to be the Managing Director, why he would go to the same restaurant x4 a week!! & how he networks to build the relationships he needs.Highlights:2.52: Forced to drink oat milk & selling prawn noodles5:27 Carving potatoes was a lie!6:43 Developing an inferiority complex (+ learning everything!)9:16 Sending an unsolicited application to DBS Bank12:35 Restarting his career at Lancaster University14:36 Wearing a chicken suit for interviews at London's financial banks16:15 The Asian Financial Crisis & Prasanna Thombre20:53 Moving to Citi23:41 Working in Shanghai & witnessing the liberalisation of China's financial sector24:52 Chinese business culture25:55 Cigarettes28:09 The importance of being friends with all the chefs30:31 Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia31:38 Why Eric keeps getting referrals for jobs32:33 Why Citi was Eric's dream job35:09 Did the wealthy look down at Eric?37:11 Why being a hawker's son helped Eric as a banker40:14 Meeting Hawker Chan42:53 Becoming Managing Director at UBS (investment banking)44:30 Was Eric a successful MD?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/112Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you build a portfolio career to prepare yourself for the future of work: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062P/S: Part 2 of Eric's episode comes out this WEDNESDAY! And we talked about why Eric left his high-flying role as Managing Director, how he built a 2.9 million LinkedIn follower count, the importance of personal branding & building a second career, and his journey as a published author in Asia and specifically, China.
3/13/2023 ā¢ 46 minutes, 9 seconds
Ep 111: Building the hottest Southeast Asian Tech Startup Newsletter | Amanda Cua (Founder, Backscoop)
Amanda Cua is the founder of Backscoop: the hottest newsletter covering all things in the Southeast Asian startup industry.Sheās only 20 years old but:Backscoop has already crossed 10,000 subscribers;Has attracted funding from Buko Ventures;Been featured on CNN; andHas moderated a Wild Digital firechat with Jaeson Ma of 88Rising & OP3N.All this - with no college degree.Who said COVID-19 pandemic projects canāt go far? šBut if you listen to this STIMY episode, youāll soon realise that Backscoop is so much more than a mere side project.Ā Amanda envisions it to be a regional media company for the people in Southeast Asian tech.So if youāre interested in what drives Amanda, what it takes to run a newsletter that publishes x5/week (it now has a podcast!) & also whatās happening in the Southeast Asian startup space, then this is the episode for you.Highlights:7:00 Deciding to not go to university10:11 Maximising her gap year15:53 Cold outreach tactics17:38 Launching her own startup, Backscoop20:36 Why Southeast Asia (and not APAC)?26:59 Researching other newsletters29:58 The different iterations of Backscoop31:24 Dropping Soft Serve32:44 Most effective growth strategy34:34 Getting over stagnant growth35:56 Building a regional media company37:26 Trends in the Southeast Asian tech scene39:36 Accepting investment from Buko Ventures43:39 Launching a new product, One More Scoop44:55 Whatās the value proposition?47:02 Serendipity49:37 Personal branding53:42 Competitor that Amanda admires & whyšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/111š¦Subscribe to Backscoop: https://sparklp.co/p/9c1a338c2cĀ šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you can find success & build a portfolio career on your own terms: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
3/5/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 9 seconds
Ep 110 Part 2: Where the hell is everybody?! | Ian Lee (Co-Founder, Syndicate; former Head of Crypto & Blockchain, Citi)
Welcome to Part 2 of Ian Lee's episode.In Part 2, we talked all about how we should measure our lives. How Ian Lee pivoted from art to design then investment banking and consulting. How cancer changed his life. Why we shouldnāt make 10 year long-term plans and instead, pursue the things that interest us most in 12-18 month increments & so much more!This episode, deals with all things web3.From going into banking to being tasked with finding out about bitcoin, how he ended up being the Head of Crypto & Blockchain, all things decentralised social networks and what he's now trying to achieve at Syndicate.Highlights:2:26 Being ridiculed by bankers4:56 Learning about Bitcoin11:37 Attending Bitcoin conferences as a "suspicious" person13:38 Forking the Bitcoin network with Citi coin17:43 Leaving Citi18:45 Being crushed by... Ethereum?!24:40 Joining IDEO27:15 Meeting his co-founder, Will32:33 Creating the YouTube of web3 investment40:15 Collectives42:32 Working towards Balaji's vision of a network stake?44:08 Singapore rice dishes47:44 Does everyone have just 1 calling?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/110šĀ Weekly Newsletter that deconstructs how you can find success & purpose on your own terms: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062P/S: Did you know that STIMY is on YouTube?! Please do subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/c/SoThisIsMyWhy
3/1/2023 ā¢ 54 minutes, 14 seconds
Ep 110.1: How do you measure your life? | Ian Lee (Co-Founder, Syndicate & Former Head of Crypto & Blockchain, Citi)
Ian Lee is the co-founder of Syndicate: a decentralised investing protocol & social network by the likes of A16Z, IDEO, Kleiner Perkins, Uniswap, Coinbase, Opensea, circle & Ledger. He is also the former founding member of IDEO Colab and Head of crypto & blockchain at Citi.But before all that, he was an artist.Ā Then a designer. Before pivoting into marketing & advertising, investment banking and finally, consulting.Where he ended up being diagnosed with cancer.Ā His world shrunk into 3 month timeframes, because he just didnāt know if he would live beyond each three month period.Ā Ianās worldview changed. He was and remains afraid to try new things.Ā In Part 1 of Episode 110, our discussion centres around the fundamental question of: How do we measure our life?Opening with a viral Tweet that Ian wrote, inspired by a Harvard Professor called Clayton Christensen where he learned that:Ā The best strategy in life is an emergent one. Donāt plan life in 5-10 year spans. Instead go all-in on what you have the most conviction, passion & excitement for in 12-18 month increments. Youāll learn more, grow faster & outperform others not as into it as you.Youāll learn how and why in this episode, and so very much more in this episode with Ian Lee.Highlights:2:41 Donāt plan your life in 5 to 10 year spans3:49 Going to art school instead of science?!6:07 Being diagnosed with cancer7:43 Living in 2 to 3 month increments9:26 Exploring rabbit holes19:10 Life isnāt a linear progression20:36 Letting go of his need for obsessive planning22:15 Is there a place for long term vision and planning?24:38 Would Ian really do anything differently?27:59 Knowing when to quit30:44 How to plan for a pivot35:39 Juggling art and business in his CV42:45 Mentors48:53 Fostering relationships with mentorsP/S: Part 1 of the interview with Ian Lee comes out this Wednesday! Where we talk all about Ianās deep dive into the world of investment banking & web3.šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/110šĀ Weekly Newsletter that deconstructs how you can find success & purpose on your own terms: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062
2/25/2023 ā¢ 52 minutes, 9 seconds
Ep 109: From a Ā£1.75 billion purchase of Lehman Brothers to Tony Blair & Web3 | Chrissy Hill (General Counsel, Parity Technologies)
If you want to hear from someone who:Ā āHelped purchase Lehman Brothers (US) for Ā£1.75 billion;āBuilt out the equity practice in Europe for Barclays Capital;āWorked for Tony Blair, the former Prime Minister of the UK; andāNow works as the General Counsel in a web3 company that builds core blockchain infrastructure?Then STIMYās latest episode with Chrissy Hill, General Counsel at Parity Technologies, is not one you want to miss!Ā Chrissy shares her journey from South Carolina into the web3 space, and some of the milestones in her career, including:2:33 Being the baby of the family5:23 A legacy of lawyers7:26 Working at Linklatersā London office8:49 Becoming the Director of Compliance at Barclays Capital13:38 Purchasing Lehman Brothers (US) for Ā£1.75 billion15:24 Working for Tony Blair at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change18:22 Working at a mission-driven organisation21:21 Entering the web3 space23:16 The concept of privacy27:02 Working at Parity Technologies31:34 What does a web3 lawyer do?34:59 Regulations coming inSo if you want to know what itās like to be a top notch lawyer in the web3 space, this episode is for you!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/109š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062Ā Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
2/12/2023 ā¢ 42 minutes, 46 seconds
Ep 108: How To Build a 4.4 million YouTube following in Asia | Gerald Sebastian (co-founder, Kok Bisa)
Itās cool to be a YouTuber these days.But how do you go pro?Whatās your life like?And how much do you earn?!To answer this over the Chinese New Year (hope everyone is feasting well!), weāve got Gerald Sebastian - co-founder of Kok Bisa, which with 4.4 million subscribers makes them one of the biggest YouTubers in Asia!In this episode, we learn how Gerald ended up being a full-time YouTuber, how theyāve built Kok Bisa, the kind of content that goes viral, their monetisation strategy & so much more.Ā So if you wanna be a YouTuber, or just want to understand what it takes to produce the videos we binge on (donāt lie, I know you use YouTube š), then this is the STIMY episode for you!Highlights:2:30 Being a superhero5:00 Asking questions nonstop7:54 Finding his YouTube co-founder, Ketut Yoga Yudistira9:54 Creating a different kind of content11:19 What it takes to produce YouTube content12:25 Going from 14 to 25,000 subscribers with 1 video!13:35 Making videos to answer questions from the Kok Bisa audience18:18 The reiteration process19:21 The secret to going viral on YouTube21:00 Humour21:42 Indonesian meatballs24:24 The importance of YouTube Shorts25:25 How do you grab attention?29:20 Becoming a full-time YouTuber31:48 Deciding on the equity split32:42 Questions to ask a potential co-founder33:51 Navigating burnout & mental health issues34:55 The different monetary streams theyāve created36:23 How do you get sponsorship?43:20 Whatās next?48:16 When do you use the ātalking headā?Descript: https://www.descript.com/?lmref=sjT9JAšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/108Ā šĀ Weekly Newsletter that deconstructs how you can find success & purpose on your own terms: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062āš» Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
1/22/2023 ā¢ 54 minutes, 34 seconds
Ep 107: The Story Behind the Story - How a CNN Reporter Built Her Career | Michelle Toh (Writer & Reporter, CNN)
ICYMI: Boys Like Clubs, Girls Like Secrets - Dr Robin Dunbar
ICYMI (in case you missed it) features some of my favourite moments from earlier STIMY episodes.Back in Episode 85, Dr Robin Dunbar (Emeritus Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford) shares how the way boys & girls handle relationships are completely different.The relationships that boys have is a lot more casual and club-based. If we belong to the same club, then we're friends.Whereas for girls? Well, girls need to be interacting with each other. Sharing secrets. And if they don't, then the relationship weakens.What do you think? š¤Listen to the full episode here: šļøApple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000566279914šļøSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4VuxAs76IE0wJgItPzoZHe?si=m1NsNAl6QgCk4n4sY3TTowĀ šļøWatch episodes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSZlcS5ooyCjj_MkrmH_WhQĀ Other Links:šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/85 Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ Please leave a review & rating here! - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
1/10/2023 ā¢ 3 minutes, 17 seconds
Ep 106: WTF? This is the best secret to unhappiness | Xav Desmet, Head of Digital Natives, Startups & Unicorns for Asia @ Zoom
Xavier Desmet is the Head of Digital Natives, Startups and Unicorns for Asia at Zoom.And in this episode, we talk about all:Tiger Mums (or for the French, āJewish Mumsā);Xavās āWTFā moment when he realised that management consultancy wasnāt what he wanted to do with his life;His journey in the startup world and why he decided to leave Paris;Whether your life ends when you have kids;How words can change your brain;How Xavās initial months at Microsoft were āabsolute hellā and how that changed;Ā The cultural differences working in the startup world in France, Australia and Southeast Asia; andĀ So much more.Want the details?Youāll have to listen to Xav Desmetās episode. šHighlights:2:50 We are all grown up children5:35 Having a āJewish Mumā7:07 The French education system is violent & elitist12:08 How entrepreneurs are viewed in France13:47 Why leave management consultancy to run a startup?15:38 Breakthrough moments18:34 Finding like minded partners21:56 The average lifespan of a startup isā¦?28:57 Going on a 11 month sabbatical34:51 How you can find the values in your life37:25 The first 6 months at Microsoft were āabsolute hellā40:18 Four reasons Microsoft became great43:26 Shutting down his startup43:36 Youāre a failure49:33 Moving to a startup called Zoom52:31 Delivering happiness54:12 The difference in startup culture in France, Australia & Southeast Asia58:16 Startups that Xav wants to help with59:48 MentorsšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/106Ā šĀ Weekly STIMY Newsletter that deconstructs how you can find success on your own terms: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062Sponsored by Descript: https://www.descript.com/?lmref=sjT9JAOfficial BioAfter graduating as a Computer Science Engineer in France and completing a Postgraduate Master of Technology Management at UNSW, Xav quickly realised that his passion wasnāt in coding in C but in people, technology and entrepreneurship.He started his career as Management Consultant in the UK but in 2005, his entrepreneurial nature led him to co-found and develop, Mome Sweet Mome, the master Franchise of Les Petits Bilingues, the first and leading network of immersive English learning centres for children from a very young age. He sold his shares in 2011 and today, Les Petits Bilingues are still the leader in France with more than 10,000 children enrolled each year.Ā The same year he decided it was time to discover new horizons and moved with his wife and two new born children from Paris to Sydney, becoming also Australian in the process.Down under, he joined Microsoft in Enterprise Strategic roles while also experimenting with ventures on the side (Perenne Investments and Solana) and becoming a sport addict through triathlons and long distance trail running.He relocated to Singapore with his family in December 2020 during the pandemic and recently joined Zoom where he now leads the Digital Natives sales activities for Asia.In his free time, you will find Xav influencing his family and friends to adopt a healthier and more sustainable lifestyle such as adopting a plant based diet."
1/8/2023 ā¢ 1 hour, 6 minutes, 22 seconds
Ep 105: Sneak Peek into the STIMY 2023 Lineup!
Welcome to the first STIMY episode of 2023!For the 105th episode, we're doing a little sneak peek into some of the upcoming episodes and as always, they're varied, but interesting.With tons of insights to apply into our own lives.We've got:Xav Desmet: Head of Digital Natives, Startups & Unicorn for Asia at ZoomFabien Riggall: Founder & Chief Creative Officer of Secret Cinema (he took movies like Star Wars & Moulin Rouge, brought them to live & allowed the public to experience it like they were one of the characters!)Gerald Sebastian: One of the biggest Indonesian YouTubers with over 4.23 million subscribersMichelle Toh: Writer/Report at CNNIan Lee: co-founder of Syndicate & the former Head of Crypto at CitibankAlvin Chiong: Former secret society member & heroin addictEnara Nazarova: VP of Metaverse at HypeDr Giovanna Graziosi Casimiro: Head of Metaverse Fashion Week at DecentralandAnd so much more.I hope this gets you excited for what we have in store for 2023!And if you've been enjoying So This Is My Why, please do leave a review. It really helps the podcast reach more people. ššShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/105šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/acd5bd1062Ā Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
1/1/2023 ā¢ 17 minutes, 31 seconds
Goodbye! š±
Welcome to Ep 104 of the So This Is My Why Podcast and this is... Goodbye! š±At least to 2022.This will be the last episode of 2022 because it's time for a break :)That said, I didn't want to sign off without sharing a little something about what STIMY has achieved, and also highlight some special moments from STIMY episodes this year. Featured STIMY guests include:Ep 103: Nicole Levinson - Former VP of Marketing North America, LVMHEp 102: Notle - the ex-convict who once ran Singapore's first and largest social escort businessesEp 101: Adrian Tan - the King of SingaporeEp 99: Davy Liu - the first Chinese Disney animator, who worked on classics like the Lion King, Aladdin, Beauty & the Beast, Star Wars & the AtlantisEp 95: Marja Konttinen - Marketing Director at DecentralandEp 96: Aaron Tang - Country Manager of LunoEp 93: Geoffrey See - founder of Poko & Choson Exchange, the largest social enterprise in North KoreaEp 92: General Tan Sri Borhan - retired 4 star General & former Chief of Defence ForcesEp 87: Phil Libin - co-founder of Evernote & mmhmmHighlights:0:00 Goodbye?!3:18 Biggest advice to all young working professionals: Don't be a substitute4:30 Biggest lesson from prison6:29 Prison culture is a death sentence8:18 Dumber than Forrest Gump10:14 The biggest lesson Disney taught Davy wasn't how to draw cartoons, but to...11:21 The secret sauce behind LVMH's success13:23 What must all founders do all the time?!14:37 Build your career like an adventure16:08 The House of YES17:32 Hustling for your first writing gig18:30 How do you become a Huffington Post writer?19:27 The challenges of building a social enterprise in North Korea21:16 Feeling left behind (despite the public accolades)23:13 Building Evernote felt like cheating?!24:39 Anyone can love durians25:40 Be cruel in order to be kind26:41 The leadership style of a 4 star GeneralSee you back on 1 January 2023!Where I'll be sharing a sneak peek into upcoming episodes on STIMY. Weāve got YouTubers, Olympians, celebrity founders, a CNN correspondent, the CEO of one of the biggest confectioneries in town, a giant in the real estate development world, prominent politicians and so much more. šIt's gonna be great!P/S: If you'd like to support what STIMY is doing, would you consider being a Patreon supporter? You can find the link here: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/104šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
12/19/2022 ā¢ 27 minutes, 53 seconds
Ep 103: The House of Yes | Nicole Levinson (Chief Marketing Officer, audo; Senior VP, Playboy Club New York)
Nicole Levinson is the House of Yes.And unafraid of forging her own path, which includes being:Ā š„ Chief Marketing Officer, audoš„ Senior Vice President of Brand Marketing and Partnerships for Playboy Club, New Yorkš„ Vice President of Marketing, North America for LVMHBut who is Nicole Levinson?Nicole is the child of Holocaust grandparent survivors.She began her career in Christie's, then Sotheby's, before pivoting into the world of PR with Elizabeth Harrison of H&S, who told her, āTake your panty hose off!ā š¤£They were hustlers.Ā And Elizabeth was the House of Yes.Because as Nicole learned: Most people in the room donāt know either. So youāve just gotta figure it out!But Nicoleās journey didnāt end there.Ā She later became the VP of Marketing North America, LVMH, where she oversaw marketing & merchandising for MAKE UP FOREVER.Ā And also the Senior VP Brand Marketing & Partnerships, Playboy Club New York during the #metoo movement. Which definitely raised some eyebrows.Along the way, sheās also worked in the hospitality, fashion, spirits, arts and automotive industries.And that variety is something Nicole considers to be her strength.So.š¤ What drives Nicole?š¤ What is LVMHās secret sauce?š¤ How can founders remain āauthenticā?š¤ And what impact did Playboyās collaboration with Jeremy Scott & his MET Gala appearance have on the brand?We deal with all that and more in STIMYās episode 103.Highlights:2:48 The child of Holocaust grandparent survivors & the link to Steven Spielberg7:49 Betty Boop to Christieās11:43 Death, divorce or debt13:40 Why is Christieās better than Sothebyās? š15:52 The profile of the top 1% clientele19:28 Feeling lost & changing industries20:31 Meeting Elizabeth Harrison & ātake your panty hose off!ā23:47 Celebrity wrangling26:09 Moving to LVMH29:00 LVMHās secret sauce31:41 How do you ensure the founder story is front & centre?33:06 What does āauthenticityā look like?35:28 The secret to staying humble36:30 What drives Nicole41:05 How Nicole ended up at Playboy New York during the #metoo movement49:18 Finding editors to champion the brand51:01 Fashion Week with Jeremy Scott of Moschino52:02 The impact of the MET Gala on Playboy57:05 What is audo?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/103š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā āØ Sponsored by Descript: https://www.descript.com/?lmref=sjT9JA
12/11/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 10 minutes, 13 seconds
Ep 102: Confessions of an Ex-Convict, Secret Society Member & Social Escort Business Owner | Notle Chew
Notle Chew grew up a Crazy Rich Asian.Ā Who later ended up joining the Secret Society & running one of Singaporeās first social escort businesses (and a successful one at that!) for almost 7 years before he ended up in prison.Which, as you can tell, is not a story youād normally find on STIMY. But also a story Iāve really wanted to have told.Because I believe that we can learn so much from people from all different parts of society.And Notleās life story is a cautionary tale, while also giving us a glimpse into a part of society that isnāt often heard of.Ā There is a price to be paid for our actions and in Notleās case, a hefty one.Some things we talked about:What it means be a member of the secret society;Ā The concept of trust and brotherhood, the initiation process is like and how he ended up leaving the secret society;The 8 oāclock rule;Why he started a social escort business, and grew it to be one of the top businesses around;How he ended up being caught;What it was like being in prison;How he shook off his depression and suicidal thoughts; andWhy he believes 80% of ex-convicts can't be helped.As we cover a lot of heavy topics, please consider this a trigger warning.Highlights:3:19 The name āNotleā4:01 Life of a Crazy Rich Asian6:49 Recruited to join the secret society in school11:56 The 8 oāclock sharp rule19:15 Paying the price to leave the secret society22:08 Initiation process for secret society members24:56 The secret society mindset26:10 How trust operates in a secret society27:01 What does ājusticeā mean?27:30 Brotherhood30:50 Starting a social escort business33:44 Advertising for female workers39:25 Staying competitive41:08 The business model44:40 Business expansion46:48 Being caught by the police47:47 Life in prison49:18 Finding God49:18 Not regretting prison54:36 Healing broken relationships59:57 Triad Trails & the girl1:04:54 Best way for society to support ex-convicts1:05:47 80% of ex-convicts will never change1:07:40 Identifying the 20% that can be helpedšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/102Ā šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you the most interesting person in the room: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
12/4/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 18 minutes, 57 seconds
SPECIAL: Questions from the Audience - Adrian Tan (the King of Singapore)
Ep 101.2: The Return of the King of Singapore [Part 2] | Adrian Tan (President of Singapore's Law Society, LinkedIn Influener & Partner at TSMP Law Corporation)
Adrian Tan, the King of Singapore & ultimate Linkedin Influencer, is back with Part 2 (check out Part 1 in the previous episode)!Here, Adrian shares how his career developed as a lawyer, why he hated his time as a General Counsel, thinks that lawyers should be legal influencers, how his LinkedIn posts go so viral and more.Highlights:1:58 Embarrassed by his bestselling books5:59 The non-confrontational litigator?10:01 Working with Davinder Singh, one of Singaporeās top litigators12:50 How to be a good legal associate14:16 The art of persuasion15:28 Secret to good writing17:25 Becoming the General Counsel of Crimson Logic20:18 It was awful21:26 Being involved in the Singapore Law Society24:05 Lawyers need to be legal influencers26:55 Writing bland posts toā¦?32:10 Advice for young lawyers writing online33:20 The secret to viral posts34:48 Fighting cancer, cases & for lawyers37:41 The 3 friends we haveP/S: A special āQuestions from the Audienceā with Adrian Tan will be released this Wednesday!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/101šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/i1eK1LO6WoUĀ š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you the most interesting person in the room: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā BioAdrian Tan is a litigator specialising in technology, intellectual property, collective sales and shareholder disputes. He is the President of the Law Society of Singapore.Adrian was the former general counsel of CrimsonLogic and holds a degree in computer science and psychology which gives him the foundation to address technology-related disputes. His degree in computer science and psychology gives him the foundation to address technology-related disputes. He has represented clients in a wide range of technology and intellectual property disputes, ranging from data centre construction, social media defamation, copyright infringement and passing-off in relation to consumer electronics, and patent infringement of vaccines.
11/27/2022 ā¢ 41 minutes, 56 seconds
Ep 101.1: The King of Singapore [Part 1] | Adrian Tan (President of Singapore's Law Society & Partner, TSMP Law Corporation)
The King of Singapore has spokenā¦ to me! š®His accolades are every Asian parentās wet dream:šš» President of Singaporeās Law Society;šš» Partner at TSMP;šš» Bestselling author of The Teenage Textbook & The Teenage Workbook, which were turned into a play, movie and TV series etc.; andšš» LinkedIn writing extraordinaire (all his posts go viral & even hit the mainstream media headlines!)But who is Adrian Tan, really?How did Adrian Tan end up where he is?What was it like growing up in a HDB community that didnāt understand the concept of āprivacyā?Ā E.g. Everyone treated Adrianās family TV as their own, and crowded outside to watch together. š¤£How did he end up writing bestselling fiction novels (whose royalties put him through university)?Why is he the King of Singapore?And how has cancer ā¹ļø impacted him?Ā š„ So much to cover in STIMYās spanking new Episode 101 Part 1.Youāll just have to listen to find out more! šHighlights:2:23 Singaporeās immigrant story10:33 Getting into Anglo Chinese Primary School through ballot15:54 Maternal gaslighting19:20 The TV belongs to everyone! š«21:59 Top grades doesnāt guarantee success in life24:59 Chinese people can be very racist30:02 Failing to get a scholarship to study law because Adrianās English was too good33:10 Why law?34:31 Writing for magazines & getting a book offer36:31 Getting a book deal to write The Teenage Textbook & The Teenage Workbook38:38 How much royalties do authors get?40:56 Why did a subversive book become a bestseller?Part 2 of Adrian Tanās interview is coming out this coming Sunday (27 Nov)!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/101šæ YouTube: https://youtu.be/QOEeOIiQvykš Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you the most interesting person in the room: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
11/22/2022 ā¢ 43 minutes, 48 seconds
Ep 100: So Is This MY Why?! | ft Red Hong Yi (guest host) x Ling Yah
Welcome to STIMYās 100th episode!In this landmark episode, Red Hong Yi (former STIMY Ep 2 guest) is back as the guest HOST!She brings the š„ & asks about my entire journey because since June 2020, STIMY has grown to:12k+ followers31k+ downloads35+ countries;Ā A book offer; andĀ 1 STIMY physical hangout.Ā All in the span of 2+ years!!WOW.Ā If youāve ever been curious as to who I am, why I started STIMY, lessons learned, my 200k word novel and whatāll happen moving forwardā¦ then this is the episode for you.Please leave a review/tag us if you listen to this! Iād love to hear from you.Highlights:4:04 Kathmandu & a pet podcast project5:02 My MBTIĀ 7:38 ISTP10:01 How Red Hong Yi & I met12:02 How serious was I about STIMY?12:27 The milestone age of 30 & Daniel Pink16:23 Juggling work & everything else20:21 Podcast setup21:28 Everything is figureoutable23:22 Creating my 1st website at the age of 1024:31 Being strategic about my travel blog (www.vidadeliya.com)25:81 My secret aim with every STIMY interview28:57 Why do I enjoy stories so much?30:17 The most emotional story - Notle35:07 The dream of being a novelist37:44 Going viral on LinkedInĀ 45:03 Keep going with no engagement45:38 Gaining access to extraordinary people46:16: Being intimidated?53:07 The secret to success55:51 Joe, Bumble & Dating57:37 Web3, NFTs and Memebank1:00:38 How I pick STIMY guests1:01:22 Drag Queens1:02:02 Faith & Davy Liu1:04:41 STIMY Hangouts in person1:10:18 LinkedIn writing is like reading a personal diary1:11:14 Writerās block1:14:47 Whatās after STIMYās 100th episode?1:17:24 Street art & Lawyah1:18:43 Has my why changed?1:19:28 Getting a book offer1:20:20 Serendipity & Cesar Kuriyama1:24:12 Have you questioned your own why?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/100šæ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8Y1Maw1eUwĀ š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā Leave a review on STIMY: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā P/S: Descript is the life-changing video/audio editing app I mentioned, that you can find here: https://www.descript.com/?lmref=sjT9JA
11/13/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 27 minutes, 19 seconds
SPECIAL: Audience Questions - Davy Liu (former Disney Animator)
Welcome to STIMY's special Questions from the Audience episode!Remember Davy Liu, the former Disney animator from STIMY Ep 99?We collected some questions from you, dear listeners of STIMY, and had Davy answer them!To Nathan, Wei Choon & Josh Wong - thank you for being part of STIMY. :)0:24 At what point did Davy's parents change their mind about his profession as an artist?4:02 Thoughts on merging or converting Asian stories in a Western or global audience9:39 Challenges in creating wholesome content when the media is full of NSFW contentšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/99Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
11/10/2022 ā¢ 13 minutes, 56 seconds
Ep 99: Life of a Former Disney #LionKing #Mulan #BeautyAndtheBeast Animator | Davy Liu (Former Disney Animator & Founder, Kendu Films)
Davy Liu is a Chinese Forrest Gump.Heās also aĀ former Disney animator whoās worked on Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King, Aladdin, Mulan, Atlantis and Star Wars, and is the founder of Kendu Films.Fun Fact: General Shang in Mulan was drawn based off Davy! There's an uncanny likeness between both fo them.Now. Given Davyās illustrious career, you wouldāve thought that heās had a smooth career trajectory but thatās hardly the case.He struggled while growing up in Taiwan, where everyone was expected to score straight As but he just couldnāt.Ā Instead, he had the gift of drawing straight lines. And being an artist was not on the cards.When he later moved to the US, he was placed in an all-black school (everyone thought he was Bruce Lee!).Ā While there, Poppy Kincaid, his 8th grade art teacher, transformed his life. Telling him that āhe could do itā.He ended up going to art school (then dropping out when he realised fine arts wasnāt for him), and had to apply 4 times to get into Disney!!Davy intended only to be in Disney for 3 months but that turned into 5 years, and in this STIMY episode, Davy shares what it was like working on some of the most iconic Disney animation films to date, as well as what it takes to craft a great story.We also talked about his faith, why he quit his cushy 6-figure Disney job, the terrible period straight after quitting where he lost everything (his marriage, finances etc.) and how he built himself back up.Davyās story is one of passion and having the gumption and determination to go after what you want.And also the stark difference between Asia and the West.Highlights:2:34 Being ādeadā in his motherās womb for 10 days5:03 Being dumber than Forrest Gump6:37 Moving to an all-black school in Florida8:22 How Poppy Kincaid, his 8th grade art teacher, changed his life13:17 Dropping out of fine arts16:02 Seeing himself as an artist17:21 Nearly drowning21:58 Applying to Disney23:22 Working at Disney26:07 Disney animation films take 4 years to complete - hereās why29:53 Pushing boundaries v generating revenue32:59 What makes a good story?34:11 No one wanted to work on The Lion King!35:27 Disney doesnāt teach you to draw cartoon characters; it teaches you to make the best commercials39:31 Working on Mulan41:05 The backstory to Mushu the Dragon42:20 How to make Asians more creative?46:15 Entering a dark period after quitting Disney49:16 Feeling that God had abandoned him50:49 Vision behind Kendu Films51:25 Power of telling stories from an animalās perspective55:28 Whatās next?P/S: Thereās a special episode focused on Questions from STIMY Audience Segment where Davy answers questions submitted by you! The episode will be released this Wednesday.šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/99Ā Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY updates/learn how to be the most interesting person in the room: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
11/7/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 51 seconds
Ep 98: From Devil Wears Prada to Web3 High Fashion?! | Francine Ballard (Founder, Metagolden)
Devil Wears Prada is the closest thing I have to the world of high fashion.When I asked Francine Ballard how closely it mimicked reality, she said, āThere is some truth to that.āAnd she should know.Francine Ballard has worked in the fashion industry for a while.Ā She was the American Fashion Director at Time Inc (InStyle), Conde Nast (Lucky magazine), and PaperCity Magazine as Style Editor at Large, working with fashion and jewelry brands HermĆØs, Gucci, Fendi, Dolce & Gabbana, Cartier among others before transitioning to the technology space.Francine is also a founding member of BFF, along with Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Hudson, Paris Hilton and founders Brit Morin and Jaime Schmidt, and co-founder of several startups including Metagolden - a web3 emporium selling luxury phygitals.In this episode, we tackle how Francine went from a small island in Hawaii to the world of high fashion publication, what it takes to rise to the top, how she got into the web3 space, how the fashion industry is shifting, why phygitals and more.Highlights:2:52 Growing up in Hawaii4:24 Speed until you get a ticket6:26 Devil Wears Prada in real life?8:10 Climbing to the top of US high fashion publication9:40 Founding a registered resale startup13:09 Testing an idea15:04 Fashion Industry x Web317:11 Origins of Metagolden20:35 Phygitals21:54 Traditional fashion house v fashion house of the future24:51 Building community38:06 Are brands afraid of web3?30:09 Interesting use cases32:07 Launching Francineās 1st collection37:07 How to decide on pricing40:38 Where community comes fromĀ 43:31 Building partnershipsĀ 45:00 Dream partnerĀ 46:51 How to create a sense of belonging47:55 Being a founding member of BFFšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/98š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
10/30/2022 ā¢ 52 minutes, 8 seconds
Ep 97: From Vaccine Research to Head of Strategic Projects in Asia | Jeremy Au (Chief of Staff & Head of Strategic Projects, Monk's Hill Ventures + Podcaster, BRAVE Southeast Asia Tech Podcast)
Jeremy Au is the Chief of Staff and Head of Strategic Projects at Monkās Hill Ventures, a venture capital firm investing in early-stage tech companies, primarily Series A, in Southeast Asia. And is also the host of the BRAVE Southeast Asia Tech Podcast!Prior to Monkās Hill Ventures, Jeremy was CEO & Co-Founder of CozyKin, a VC-backed edtech startup, which was acquired by Higher Ground Education and scaled across multiple cities in North America.Ā He was a Bain & Company consultant and has been recognized with Forbes ā30 Under 30ā and Prestige ā40 Under 40.āĀ If youāre interested in startups, VCs and podcasting, then this is the STIMY episode for you!Highlights:3:42 Helping others5:11 Wanting to be a vaccine researcher7:00 Losing his first love11:23 How the army helped him cope with grief14:25 Life at Berkeley18:44 Founding his first startup20:43 Overcoming scepticism22:57 Finding people who believe in the same cause26:07 Completing his MBA at Harvard University32:31 Co-founding his 2nd startup in mental health39:26 Returning to Singapore & becoming a VC at Monkās Hill Ventures44:30 Being the Head of Strategic Projects47:03 Founders that have stood out49:03 The current Southeast Asian startup scenešShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/97Ā Ā Ā Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
10/24/2022 ā¢ 54 minutes, 41 seconds
ICYMI: Bullish about Generative Art (Art Blocks) - Zeneca 33
ICYMI: Zeneca 33, prolific NFT investor & thought leader (he has 300k Twitter followers!) was on STIMY.If you've ever seen some of Zeneca 33's works/writings, you'll know that he's very bullish about generative art: a type of NFT where the art is generated entirely from code.A particular generative art project that he loves?Art Blocks.We unpacked all that in Zeneca 33's Part 1 STIMY interview & this ICYMI provides a glimpse of that conversation.If you want to listen to the full Part 1 STIMY interview with Zeneca 33, here are the links:šShow notes:Ā www.sothisismywhy.com/86-1Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?:Ā https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates:Ā https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605šļøApple Podcast:Ā https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000566279914šļøSpotify:Ā https://open.spotify.com/episode/037BVfsIJzU25wIkauefnw?si=PiwfYfD3TqyTbNHNWBDHfA
10/19/2022 ā¢ 5 minutes, 34 seconds
Ep 96: Being Mr Stingy | Aaron Tang (Blogger & Country Manager of Malaysia's First Regulated Crypto Exchange)
Aaron Tang is a popular Malaysian blogger known as Mr Stingy (on personal finance & career), and the Country Manager of Luno - Malaysiaās first regulated cryptocurrency exchange.In many ways, Aaronās career has been dictated by his āmaximizer personalityā & desire to make the greatest use of the resources he had.Ā This has resulted in some pretty ingenious moves, including a use of multiple credit card schemes to pay off his RM58k student debt at the start of his career!In this episode, we explore Aaronās journey from a high flying oil & gas career to the world of social entrepreneurship (he took a 50% pay cut!), why he started the Mr Stingy blog and how that landed him a job in the crypto world as the current Country Manager of Luno.Ā And of course, all things crypto/NFTs/DAOs!Highlights:3:06 Maximiser personality6:51 Being a Petronas scholar & breaking his bond9:18 Paying off his remaining RM58k student debt with credit cards (p/s: not financial advice!)12:46 Making a contrarian move in his career17:15 Tendering at a bad time19:04 Taking a 50% pay cut24:21 Maximising profits v helping the greatest number of people25:20 Feedback loops25:50 Starting the Mr Stingy blog34:46 How Aaron started writing for the Huffington Post35:46 How blogging got Aaron a job in the crypto space36:54 Discovering bitcoin38:05 Putting skin in the game41:47 HODL & toxic positivity42:43 Going through a baptism of fire as Employee #143:44 Becoming the Country Manager of LunoĀ 45:06 Being a regulated digital asset exchange47:35 What regulators are most concerned about48:55 El Salvador49:42 Anti-money laundering concerns53:50 Algorithmic stablecoins54:35 Why Luna crashed58:31 Are play-to-earn games all about insider trading?1:00:14 Eating humble pie1:01:44 Big idea that Aaron has changed his mind on1:05:34 Underdogs1:06:48 DAOsšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/96Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
10/16/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 11 minutes, 16 seconds
Ep 95: From Launching Angry Birds Space with NASA to Throwing Parties in Decentraland | Marja Konttinen (Marketing Director, Decentraland)
Ep 94: Turning the Tables on... Me?! | Ling Yah x Freda Liu (BFM 89.9 Radio Host)
This is an interview where Freda Liu (former STIMY Ep 27 guest!), BFM 89.9 radio TV host turned the tables and interviewed.. me!About my personal journey, particularly with starting this So This Is My Why Podcast.It's still strange to hear myself speak even after publishing 94 episodes, but I do hope you find something interesting out of this interview! E.g. how I went from discovering what a podcast was to deciding to launch one, some of the highlights including interviewing James Corden's Big Boss & being featured multiple times on the Late Late Show with James Corden and my epic 40-day journey in the Himalayas, where my Everest Base Camp hike coincided with the start of the global pandemic. š I'd love to know what you think of this episode! So feel free to tag me with a review on any of the platforms you favour, e.g. LinkedIn, Instagram or Twitter.Highlights:2:11 My background 3:38 Discovering the world of podcasts5:05 Learning about how to run a podcast6:03 Why "So This Is My Why"?7:08 Main learnings from interviewing almost 100 podcast guests9:08 Interviewing James Corden's Big Boss12:56 How difficult is it to get STIMY's podcast guests?20:07 Faith21:33 Hiking to Everest Base Camp during the global pandemic25:07 Why I wish I'd started the STIMY podcast earlier26:18 Podcast guests that changed the way I think28:41 Interviewing Guy Kawasaki & the "secret" to getting him onšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/94š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting reads to make you smarter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
10/2/2022 ā¢ 33 minutes, 25 seconds
ICYMI: Can we have MORE than 150 friends?! - Dr Robin Dunbar
ICYMI (in case you missed it) features some of my favourite moments from earlier STIMY episodes.Back in Episode 85, Dr Robin Dunbar (Emeritus Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford) is most known for formulating Dunbar's Number = the cognitive limit of a person in terms of the number of relationships they can handle at any one time.That number if 150.Lots of people disagree, particularly that one person can only have around 150.So what does Dr Robin Dunbar think? š¤Listen to the full episode here: šļøApple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000566279914šļøSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4VuxAs76IE0wJgItPzoZHe?si=m1NsNAl6QgCk4n4sY3TTowĀ šļøWatch episodes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSZlcS5ooyCjj_MkrmH_WhQĀ Other Links:šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/85 Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ Please leave a review & rating here! - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
9/27/2022 ā¢ 2 minutes, 20 seconds
Ep 93.2: Web3 for the Economically Marginalised | Geoffrey See (CEO, Poko DAO & WEF Young Global Leader)
What does it mean to be the underdogs? One of the economically marginalised? Unable to open a bank account, cash a chequeā¦ all the things that most of us would take for granted?Geoffrey See - World Economic Forum Young Global Leader & serial entrepreneur - knows this well, because of his extensive work as a social entrepreneur in North Korea via Choson Exchange.But after 11 years, Geoffrey knew that it was time to move on.Ā And in this episode (Part 2), we cover Geoffreyās journey into the Web3 space. Why his experiences working in North Korea and Vietnam opened his eyes to the potential of blockchain, what heās aiming to achieve with his new Y Combinator-backed startup, Poko, and his collaboration with the Kazakhstan government to provide the legal wrapper that many DAOs need but struggle to implement.Highlights:3:46 Introduction to Web36:33 Being economically marginalised10:05 Is the ethos behind blockchain flawed?12:18 What are DAOs?14:24 Investment DAOs versus a Traditional VC15:39 Reward mechanism18:19 Proposals20:22 Hallmarks of a successful DAO22:02 Working with the Kazakhstan governmentĀ 27:20 Why pick the Astana International Financial Centre?Ā If youād like to learn about Geoffreyās childhood and his experiences working in North Korea via Choson Exchange (it was turned into a Harvard Business School case study!), do head over to STIMY 93 Part 1 for a listen!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/93Ā šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting things to make you a more interesting people: Ā https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhy
9/25/2022 ā¢ 33 minutes, 4 seconds
Ep 93.1: Raising North Korean Entrepreneurs | Geoffrey See (former Chairman, Choson Exchange & WEF Young Global Leader)
North Korean women are entrepreneurs.Not the first thing you might think of, but a reality that STIMYās latest guest - Geoffrey See - knows very well.So who is Geoffrey See?Hereās a quick run down šš»Graduated from Yale University & the Wharton Business School;Ā Worked as a Bain consultant;Co-founded Choson Exchange: a social enterprise that created the largest training program for female entrepreneurs in North Korea - which ended up being profiled in a Harvard Business School case study;Helped launch a blockchain protocol that had a $2B coin cap at its cap;Is a digital currency taskforce member and consumer protection report author at the World Economic Forum Global Council for Digital Currency Governance;Is a Ethereum Foundation fellow and a Kauffman Fellow; andIs now the CEO of Poko: a Y-Combinator backed startup focused on building DAOs to empower the next generation of investors, entrepreneurs and creatorsIn Part 1, we cover his childhood & experience building Choson Exchange.Highlights:3:22 A strange relationship with authority5:28 Wharton Business School8:15 First brush with North Korea10:31 North Korean men in politics, women in business11:17 What does ābusinessā mean in North Korea?14:51 Building partnerships with North Korean Universities16:34 Overcoming paranoiaĀ 20:16 How to find champions21:48 Doing due diligence on potential partners23:48 What North Koreans thought of the ārule of lawā28:26 Choson Exchangeās financing model30:06 Measuring impact31:15 Keeping the faithĀ 33:58 The people that helped Geoffrey the most (i.e. a former Foreign Minister, National Security Advisor to multiple South Korean Presidents & ex-Global Managing Director of McKinsey & Company)Ā 37:05 Deciding to leave Choson ExchangeĀ 38:56 The difficulties of letting goOnce youāve listened to Part 1, head over to Part 2 to learn about how Geoffrey entered the web3 space and what heās doing with Poko!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/93Ā šĀ Weekly Newsletter on upcoming STIMY guests/interesting things to make you a more interesting people: Ā https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhy
9/25/2022 ā¢ 40 minutes, 47 seconds
Ep 92: Life of a 4 Star General Who Founded the Malaysian Special Forces | General Tan Sri (Dr) Borhan bin Ahmad (former Chief of Defence Forces, Malaysia)
How do you get a Deputy Prime Minister* to give you RM 500 million (USD 105M)?By having the guts & conviction of a Tiger General. šš»Several months ago, I interviewed General Tan Sri (Dr)ā Borhan bin Ahmad (Retired): a retired 4 star General & former Chief of Defence Forces in Malaysia - the highest military rank that one can attain.āļø This was the 82-year-old man who had:Established Malaysiaās special forces in the mid-1960s;Fought in the Congos, the Vietnam War (escaping days before the fall of Saigon) & Malaysiaās Undeclared War;Swam from Singapore to Johor because the British said that Malaysians could never become Commandos.And weāre just getting started.Ā I donāt want to spoil his epic story, so youāll just have to listen to it yourself!Highlights:Ā 1:43 Growing up under Japanese occupation3:54 Pretending he had died5:29 Running away to military school6:27 Military life7:41 Swimming through shark-infested waters from Pangkor Laut to Pulau Pangkor8:56 Swimming from Singapore to Johor to prove that the Malaysians could be Commandos too (to the British)9:51 Almost studying medicine11:59 Being transformed into a professional soldier12:49 Military strategies he learned15:40 Whatās it like to kill someone?16:12 Was the General ever afraid of death?17:40 Be cruel in order to be kind18:28 What makes a good officer?19:51 Fighting in the Congos23:18 Fighting in Malaysiaās Undeclared War27:08 Founding the Malaysian Special Forces26:43 What makes a Commando?27:52 The Generalās toughest operation30:49 A father + 3 sons32:36 Fighting in the Vietnam War38:43 Giving up the Green Beret41:05 What is your leadership style?Ā 41:58 The greatest leader he ever met44:44 Just join the system?Ā 45:56 His greatest achievement as the Chief of Defence Forces47:00 Finding a treasure trove of oysters + getting Anuar to give him RM 500 million!49:02 Being threatened with court-martialĀ 50:26 What he thinks of the Malaysian special forces todayĀ 54:29 The Generalās greatest regretĀ 55:35 Advice for those who want to be CommandosSpecial thanks to Lt Col Assoc Prof Dr. Ananthan (Retired), National Defence University of Malaysia, for making this interview possible.P/S: The General has his own book out. DM me if youād like to get a copy!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/92Ā Ā Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Subscribe to STIMYās weekly newsletter for exclusive STIMY updates & other interesting people/things Iāve come across during the week: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
9/19/2022 ā¢ 59 minutes, 6 seconds
Ep 91: This Room is Filled with Crazy! - SPECIAL EDITION
Welcome to a very special STIMY Episode 91 & I'm delighted to see all the new STIMY followers this week!Instead of the normal guest format, this episode will highlight:The reasons behind why I started So This Is My Why;The kind of guests youāll find featured;A very shocking incident last summer involving the Late Late Show with James Corden; and4 lessons learned from past STIMY guests.Ā The short clips from 10 of STIMYās past 90 guests will hopefully give you a feel for their episode, and whether itās the one for you.Ā The guests youāll hear on this podcast include:Ep 1: Chloe Buiting - Wildlife conservationist & vetEp 2: Red Hong Yi - Renowned architect turned artist whoās worked with the likes of Google, Nespresso & Jackie ChanEp 3: Dr Julian Tan - BCG Consultant turned then Head of Digital Business Initiatives & Esports at Formula 1, LondonEp 30: Dr Finian Tan - Chairman, Vickers Venture PartnersĀ Ep 51: Nick Bernstein (Part 1, Part 2), - Senior VP of Late Night Programming (West Coast) & James Cordenās Big BossEp 55: Karl Mak - Co-founder & CEO of HEPMIL Media Group (SGAG, MGAG, PGAG, SGEEK)Ep 60: David Grief - Former Senior Clerk at Essex Court Chambers who nurtured the careers of barristers & judges including the former Chief Justice of England and WalesEp 79: Nicole Quinn - General Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners (investor/board member of HAUS (Lady Gaga), The Honest Company (Jessica Alba), Goop (Gwyneth Paltrow), Girlboss (Sophia Amoruso) etc.)Ep 84: Eric Toda - Global Head of Social Marketing, MetaEp 87: Phil Libin - Co-founder of Evernote & mmhmmTo see a YouTube compilation of STIMYās appearance on ViacomCBSā The Late Late Show with James Corden, follow this link.And please feel free to take a screenshot & tag me on LinkedIn/Twitter (or whichever platform youāre most comfortable with) & let me know what you thought of this episode, how you think it can be improved & future STIMY guests to consider.See you next Sunday!P/S: Youāll have to stick to the end of the episode to understand the weird sounds in the initial 6 seconds. š ššShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/91Ā Ā Ā šĀ I share my latest learnings/exclusive updates on STIMYās weekly newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ
9/11/2022 ā¢ 42 minutes, 27 seconds
Ep 90: Building the Bloomberg & Yahoo Finance of Crypto | TM Lee (co-founder & CEO, Coingecko)
TM Lee is the co-founder & CEO at Coingecko - one of the worldās largest crypto data aggregators with over 150 million users in 2021 alone!Ā But before becoming a founder, TM was first influenced by his brother to become a coder. He learned about Reddit and Digg, and even ended up studying computer science at Purdue University, where he was exposed to the likes of Jason Fried (Basecamp) - a huge proponent of the bootstrap mentality.Ā TM tried many things. He wrote an aggregator in college until things went south, and eventually worked at a Big 4 audit firm but at the back of his mind was the thought that he wanted to start a business.Ā Then in April 2014, he co-founded Coingecko with Bobby Ong. It began as a side project with a starting capital of $100, launched soon after the collapse of Mt Gox. And as youāll see from our interview, they went through lots of ups & downs to get to where they are today.Ā Highlights:3:52 How his brother exposed TM to coding5:01 Influenced by Kevin Rose (Digg)5:44 Jason Fried of Basecamp9:17 Evaluating business partners10:35 Returning to Malaysia11:47 Side projects14:56 Building Coingecko17:05 Meeting his co-founder, Bobby Ong18:30 The early days of Coingecko20:00 The significance behind the crash of Mt Gox21:30 Why launch Coingecko right after the Mt Gox crash?22:40 Building trust22:40 Bootstrapping with $10025:31 Building collaborations with universities26:40 Scaling via organic marketing27:47 Getting Coingecko translated into 15 languagesĀ 30:19 Was TM worried about sharing his code to the public?31:10 Getting investors on boardĀ 24:12 Why the banking/fintech industry is so different from the crypto industry35:51 Why maintain Coingeckoās API for free forever?37:05 How Coingecko ensures that they have accurate price data feeds38:25 Deciding on the tokens to listĀ 39:09 Sifting out the scams & rug pulls40:53 Will Coingecko ever delist a token?Ā 42:21 Main milestones behind Coingecko43:31 How the crypto space is impacted by banks (e.g. DBS) launching their own crypto trading services44:14 Impact of Binanceās purchase of Coinmarketcap on CoingeckoĀ 45:07 Is TM now more important to investors to remain competitive?50:38 NFTs52:00 The secret behind Coingeckoās rocket growth in 2021: From 50 million to 150 million in 11 months53:03 Thoughts on the current bear market55:34 Crash of the Luna token56:54 Coinzillaās malicious app scriptĀ 1:02:52 What to expect from Coingecko moving forward1:03:42 Things to expect if the metaverse takes off1:05:37 How much of your success is due to hard work v luck?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/90Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
ICYMI: What's it really like being part of BAYC - Zeneca 33
ICYMI: Zeneca 33, prolific NFT investor & thought leader (he has 300k Twitter followers!) was on STIMY.He's a part of some of the most influential NFT projects around, including Bored Apes Yacht Club (BAYC), Cryptopunks, Goblintown, Art Blocks and more.We've all heard of BAYC/Jimmy Fallon.We hear (seemingly) everyone talk about being part of the Bored Apes community.But... what is it really like?What true value does it give Bored Apes holders?Are BAYC overvalued?Could BAYC's valuation crash?We unpacked all that in Zeneca 33's Part 1 STIMY interview & this ICYMI provides a glimpse of that conversation.If you want to listen to the full Part 1 STIMY interview with Zeneca 33, here are the links:šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/86-1Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605šļøApple Podcast:Ā https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000566279914šļøSpotify:Ā https://open.spotify.com/episode/037BVfsIJzU25wIkauefnw?si=PiwfYfD3TqyTbNHNWBDHfA
8/10/2022 ā¢ 9 minutes, 37 seconds
Ep 88: How Fortune 500 Brands Can Enter the Metaverse | Diego Borgo (Metaverse Strategist - Adidas, Gucci, Salesforce, L'Oreal)
Diego Borgo is a metaverse & Web3 strategic advisor to Fortune 500 brands like Adidas, Salesforce, Unilever, Boson Protocol and more.Ā Having featured a number of NFT founders & artists, this STIMY episode showcases how brands have and can enter the metaverse with Diego, whoās been in many Fortune 500 boardrooms & has his finger on the latest alpha: whoās done well, who hasnāt, how important āsustainabilityā is and ways to ensure that both employees and existing customers are onboard when a brand is launching a new metaverse initiative.If youāve ever wondered what a company/brand should look out for when taking the leap into the Web 3.0 space, then this is the episode for you.Highlights:3:11 How Diego entered the Web3 space8:21 Why Diego took the leap18:50 Brands driven by FOMO24:31 What other brands can learn from Nike29:26 Incorporating DAOs & shared ownership into brand strategies34:48 Creating products with large communities37:23 Mitigating risks41:16 Bringing existing clients from Web2 to Web343:31 G-Star RAW Denim - why itās an interesting use case48:10 How important is climate change?49:30 How brands can mitigate against environmental harm arising from use of blockchain53:33 What happens when your own employees riot and go against your metaverse initiative?56:37 The secret to the success behind Adidasā Into the Metaverse, which generated USD 22 million within hours!1:01:03 Diegoās favourite NFT project1:02:59 What is big tech doing?1:07:39 What Diego would love to see done, but hasnāt happened yetšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/89š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
8/7/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 18 minutes, 2 seconds
ICYMI: Can Virtual Friends be REAL Friends?! - Dr Robin Dunbar
ICYMI (in case you missed it) features some of my favourite moments from earlier STIMY episodes.Back in Episode 85, Dr Robin Dunbar (Emeritus Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford) shares why he thinks that the only way we can make REAL friends is through physical IRL interactions. Virtual friends?Meh, they're fake. But do you agree? š¤Listen to the full episode here: šļøApple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000566279914šļøSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4VuxAs76IE0wJgItPzoZHe?si=m1NsNAl6QgCk4n4sY3TTowĀ šļøWatch episodes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSZlcS5ooyCjj_MkrmH_WhQĀ Other Links:šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/85 Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ Please leave a review & rating here! - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
7/26/2022 ā¢ 6 minutes, 5 seconds
Ep 87: Building Evernote, Startup Success is Worse than Startup Failure & Why Blockchain is Bullsh*t | Phil Libin (co-founder, Evernote, mmhmm & All Turtles)
STIMY 87 features Phil Libin. Some things heās most known for:Ā Co-founder and CEO of Evernote, which he grew to become a beloved product for hundreds of millions of usersManaging Director at General CatalystCo-founder and CEO of All Turtles, a globally distributed product studioĀ Co-founder of mmhmm, an all-in-one platform for making, watching, and talking on videosĀ This is an episode thatās all about startups, growth, regret and why Phil hates the metaverse & thinks blockchain is bullshit and ācommunist propagandaā.Hereās a little background:Phil Libin was 8 years old when he moved from Leningrad (now St Petersburg) to Parkchester, New York as a refugee. His parents were both classical musicians and he lived in a fairly dangerous neighbourhood in the Bronx.Ā Despite being a self-described āpunchableā kid (he was poor, very physically uncoordinated and didnāt speak English well), he did well in school, earned good money doing repair work and freelance programming and sold his first company, Perseus Data systems, for $500.But at the same time, he also got fired from his job selling ice-cream and took 30 years to get his Bachelors degree!Why?How?What?Here are the highlights:3:43 Moving to New York as Russian immigrants4:52 Being fired from his job selling ice-cream6:11 Taking 30 years to complete his degree?!8:15 Working with essentially the same core group of friends to build 5 startups11:13 Selling Engine5 for $26 million, Hollywood-style15:52 Building something for himself (Evernote)18:19 Startup failure is brutal; startup success is much worse & much harder20:57 Three types of regret22:48 Maintaining his principles & ethicsĀ 24:53 Metrics used to measure impact26:30 3-year game plan for mmhmm28:13 How mmhmm improves livesĀ 31:07 Why Phil hates the metaverse32:27 Crypto blockchain is bullsh*t33:45 The promise of blockchain is just communist propaganda?37:14 Training himself to like what he hates, including durians!Ā 39:57 How listeners can help Phil LibinšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/87š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
7/24/2022 ā¢ 43 minutes, 56 seconds
Ep 86.2: How to x100 your net worth in 1 year via NFT investments | Zeneca 33 (NFT Thought Leader with 300k Twitter Followers & ZenAcademy Founder)
Weāre back with Part 2 of STIMYās interview with Zeneca 33!ICYMI: Zeneca is a former professional poker player (15 years!) turned NFT founder, investor and educator. He has nearly 300k followers on Twitter, founder of ZenAcademy, an NFT community that aims to create a safe learning environment for people discovering their place in web3, has a newsletter, YouTube channel and 2 podcasts!If you want to listen to Part 1, head over to https://www.sothisismywhy.com/86-1Things get juicy in this episode as we dive further into the world of NFT investments starting withā¦ how did Zeneca x100 his net worth via NFT investments in 1 year? Whatās the secret?!Highlights:2:25 How Zeneca x100 his NFT investment net worth3:44 Moonbirds & Kevin Rose4:56 Why did Moonbirds succeed?7:26 Is Kevin Rose tooā¦ establishment?10:14 Why havenāt women-led projects taken off?12:57 How men can help Web3 women founders13:36 Is it better to help women in Web3 by letting their projects fail fast, rather than investing and prolonging their hope?15:12 Are āwomen in web3ā events more divisive than helpful?18:52 How Zeneca began his content creation journey23:57 Zenacademy30:40 Why 7,484 Genesis NFTs?31:50 Isnāt itā¦ unethical to claim to want to educate the general public about Web3.0, but keep exclusive access/opportunities to ask Web3.0 questions only to NFT holders?36:01 What success looks like for Zenacademy37:49 Building virtual relationships40:59 How to build relationships on Twitter42:15 What does mainstream adoption of NFTs look like?43:41 Bear market44:49 What Zenecaās crypto portfolio look like during this bear market45:54 Does Zeneca hesitate to share his investments because so many people would blindly follow his suggestions? What does he do?50:29 With all his successes, is Zenecaā¦ happy?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/86-1Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
7/17/2022 ā¢ 54 minutes, 59 seconds
ICYMI: Investing in Celebrities like Lady Gaga - Nicole Quinn, General Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners
ICYMI (in case you missed it) features some of our favourite moments from earlier STIMY episodes.Back in Episode 79, we met Nicole Quinn: General Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners aka the "Celebrity Whisperer". Nicole led the Series A in Cameo and Lady Gaga's Haus Labs and seed rounds in Girlboss, Illumix and Sagely. She also invested in the Series B in Calm and Series C in Goop and sourced Rothy's and Zola.Here, Nicole Quinn shares how she did her due diligence on Lady Gaga as a potential investor by measuring her "engaged followship" & what it's like working with her, as well as how one separates the "celebrity" from the company.If you've enjoyed this ICYMI, you can listen to Nicole's full episode here:Ā šļøApple Podcast:Ā https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000557140887šļøSpotify:Ā https://open.spotify.com/episode/5QkxgQyRfgQ9bg53TwGyqI?si=zyrHVkeSRc-QuCySTV_DZAšļøWatch episodes on YouTube:Ā https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSZlcS5ooyCjj_MkrmH_WhQĀ Other Links:šShow notes:Ā www.sothisismywhy.com/79š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?:Ā https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive event updates here:Ā https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā Please leave a review & rating here! -Ā https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
7/9/2022 ā¢ 4 minutes, 10 seconds
ICYMI: Why We Fall for Romantic Scams - Dr Robin Dunbar
ICYMI (in case you missed it) features some of my favourite moments from earlier STIMY episodes.Back in Episode 85, Dr Robin Dunbar (Emeritus Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford) shares why we fall for romantic scams against our better judgment (even when everyone around us is warning us against it!!).Listen to the full episode here: šļøApple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442?i=1000566279914šļøSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4VuxAs76IE0wJgItPzoZHe?si=m1NsNAl6QgCk4n4sY3TTowĀ šļøWatch episodes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSZlcS5ooyCjj_MkrmH_WhQĀ Other Links:šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/85 Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ Please leave a review & rating here! - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
6/28/2022 ā¢ 5 minutes, 32 seconds
Ep 86.1: FOMOing into NFTs, BAYC, Cryptopunks & Goblintown with Zeneca - NFT Thought Leader, 300k Twitter Followers, Founder of ZenAcademy
If youāve been following STIMY recently, youāll have noticed our recent Web 3.0 trend.Ā Yes, the market is bearish. Crypto is crashing. But more companies & individuals than ever are entering the space. NFT NYC just ended. Soul tokens are comingā¦To make, hopefully, some sense of it all, STIMY is proud to present its latest guest - one of the most prolific NFT content creators & thought leaders around - to provide his take on all things NFTs:Zeneca ā a former professional poker player (15 years!) turned NFT founder, investor and educator. He has nearly 300k followers on Twitter that follow him for his opinions and analysis in the space. He is also the founder of ZenAcademy, an NFT community that aims to create a safe learning environment for people discovering their place in web3, has a newsletter, YouTube channel and 2 podcasts!We had such a wide-ranging conversation that the episode has been split into 2.Ā This is Part 1.Highlights:4:22 Becoming a professional poker player6:27 Money is a tool10:24 What success means for a poker player13:58 Going back to crypto in 202016:35 When everything āclickedā for Zeneca about the NFT space21:57 Best NFT learning resources24:13 The āinfinite regretā behind Zenecaās 1st NFT purchase25:20 FOMO30:42 Deciding on an NFT investment in 10-15 seconds based on gut instinct31:44 Goblintown.wtf33:56 Why no roadmap?36:42 CC0 NFTs have no copyright?39:37 Why Cryptopunks got so huge41:52 Cryptopunks v Bored Apes Yacht Club45:27 What itās actually like being part of the BAYC community48:14 Is BAYC overhyped?50:49 What would it take for BAYCās valuation to crash?53:28 Buy a Punk, Sell an Ape?55:04 What is generative art & why is Zeneca so bullish about it?58:05 No copyright for generative art like Artblock?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/86-1Ā š Like STIMY? Buy us a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Get the latest STIMY alpha/exclusive updates: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
6/26/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 52 seconds
ICYMI: Plan it like a WAR - Dr Finian Tan (Chairman, Vickers Venture Partners)
#ICYMIĀ Back in STIMY Ep 30, we met Dr Finian Tan - Chairman & Co-Founder of Vickers Venture Partners - a $3 billion deep tech venture capital fund based out of Singapore. Some things heās done:Ā founder of J.Aron (APAC trading arm of Goldman Sachs)Deputy Secretary of Singaporeās Ministry of Trade and Industry, where he was tasked with creatingĀ Chairman of SingaporeāsĀ $1 billion TIF Fund, to create the Silicon Valley of the East in SingaporeExecutive deputy chairman of A*StarĀ Founding partner of Draper Fisher Jurvetson Eplanet, a Silicon Valley VC that invested in Skype & Hotmail.Ā While at DFJ, Dr Finian Tan made his first & most well-known investment in a little-known startup called Baidu.Ā This is a ICYMI snippet that I felt really illustrates Dr Finianās character & it happened all the way back when he was still a student.He swept ALL the book prizes, and got perfect scores while at university.How did he do it?By planning it like a WAR.šļøListen to the rest of Dr Finian's episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJELxqip89MĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/30Ā š Like STIMY? Buy me a āļø?: https://beacons.ai/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Be the 1st to learn about upcoming STIMY guests & exclusive events: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605 šĀ Leave a review!Ā https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
6/22/2022 ā¢ 6 minutes, 49 seconds
Ep 85: How many friends can you have? | Dr Robin Dunbar (Emeritus Professor of Evolutionary Psychology, Oxford University)
How many friends do you have?50?100?Now how about close friends?If youāll recall back in the early days of Facebook, everyone was busy adding every single friend, casual acquaintance and stranger that they came across as a āfriendā until it became too much and a āpurgeā took place. A purging that was partly influenced by a burger chain and this thing called Dunbarās number: which concerns the maximum number of friends that one person can have at any one time.Ā The person who formulated it?Professor Robin Dunbar: Emeritus Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford, who was awarded the Huxley Memorial Medal for services to anthropology by the Council of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, the highest honour at the disposal of the RAI.Fun fact: Robin was a featured character in the adaptation of Yuval Noah Harariās book, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind into a graphic novel in 2020!In this episode youāll learn about who Robin is, how he went from philosophy to tracking primates in Africa to formulating Dunbarās Number, why we can only have 150 friends, the psychology behind romantic scams and what he thinks of the Web 3.0 space.Do you agree that one person can only have 150 friends?Highlights:2:56 How Robin got hooked onto human evolution7:18 Why Robin wanted to do philosophy8:50 Tracking monkeys & antelopes in Africa in the early 1970s24:50 The 7 pillars of friendship30:35 Do opposites attract?35:47 Where Dunbarās Number came from40:11 Why 150?45:06 Even dogs can be part of your 15051:54 Can you guard yourself against romantic scammers?55:05 The problem with Web 3.01:02:21 How do you build a strong virtual community?1:10:58 Common misconception with Dunbarās Number1:13:18 Challenging 1501:16:34 How listeners can help RobinšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/85šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ Please leave a review & rating here! - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442Ā
6/13/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 24 minutes, 5 seconds
Ep 84: Becoming a Facebook Executive | Eric Toda (Global Head of Social Marketing & Head of Meta Prosper, Meta)
Eric Toda has built the American Dream.Heās the Global Head of Social Marketing & Head of Meta Prosper at Meta as well as an advisory board member of the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. Prior to Meta, Eric was the CMO at Gap Inc, Global Head of Social Marketing and Editorial Content at Airbnb and Global Digital Brand Marketing Director at Nike.Ā But Ericās path has hardly been an easy one.Heās had to deal with racism his entire life, despite being a fourth generation American and having a World War II veteran as his grandfather.Ā When he landed his first job at Facebook, he was told that the key to succeeding was to never look a white executive in the eye.Ā And even when he reached the pinnacle of his career - becoming CMO at Gap Inc - he was eventually fired.Ā But Eric Toda has also had tremendous successes and his work was awarded by Cannes Lions, Webbys, Clios, Effie, Adweek ARC Awards, Brand Innovators amongst others for combining purpose, creativity, and business results. You mightāve seen some of them - Airbnbās #LiveInTheMovies and the launch of Gap Incās Hill City brand.So how has racism and failure moulded Eric into becoming a greater leader?How do you become best friends with your executives?And who isā¦ Jonathan Mildenhall?If you want to learn how to be a great leader and triumph over adversity and discrimination, then this is the episode for you.And if you liked this episode, do share this episode and leave a review!Highlights:2:38 How Ericās grandfather fought for him before he was born10:05 Why Eric wanted to become a lawyer12:08 Joining a little startup calledā¦ Facebook15:59 Donāt look a white executive in the eye20:42 Getting credit for your work23:21 Being fired from Gap Inc as Chief Marketing Officer25:09 Why Eric failed to challenge the status quo28:19 Becoming friends with executives30:35 Being an approachable leader32:25 Jonathan Mildenhall34:48 āOi, you coming?ā36:28 Airbnbās successful 2016 campaign during the Oscars40:24 #WeAccept44:54 You canāt teach ambition & fire46:22 Launching the hardest, but right thing in Ericās career - Meta Prosper51:01 My people are dying in silence & Iām here with a megaphoneĀ 53:31 Why Eric doesnāt want his children to remember him only as a businessman or marketer56:01 Not being allowed to go to the Smithsonian57:38 The challenges of Web 3.0 todayĀ 1:01:48 Why is Eric Toda so easy to contact?! (p/s: his mobile number is availableš )šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/84Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
6/2/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 9 minutes, 1 second
Ep 83: From Running an Arsenal Review blog with 500k views to Google & Podcasting | Bilal Zaidi (Entrepreneur & Podcaster at Creator Lab & Not Investment Advice)
Itās always exciting for me to introduce another podcaster on STIMY, and todayās guest has not 1, but 2 highly successful podcasts:Creator Lab: an entrepreneurship podcast & growth marketing consultancy Not Investment Advice: a weekly business podcast covering the latest in business, tech & web 3Bilal Zaidi has interviewed some of the world's best, including people like Jim Mckelvey, the billionaire co-founder of Square, Tim Urban from Wait But Why, Kat Cole, president of Athletic Greens, Daymond John from Shark Tank & Gary Vee.Beyond entrepreneurship - he's interviewed a wide range of creators ranging from Hollywood actors, Emmy-winning performers, leading writers, billionaire investors & non-profit founders.Ā He started his first company, an e-commence business, aged 16yrs old after selling sim cards, CDs & clothes at school & also an Arsenal Review blog that racked over 500,000 views. He later spent 7.5yrs working at Google managing a $100mil+ business. After meeting the founder of leading social enterprise, charity: water, Bilal left his job to join their leadership team full time as their first ever Director of Brand Partnerships, partnering with brands like Saint Laurent, J Crew, Amazon & 100+ others to raise money & awareness for clean water. To date, charity: water has helped almost 15mil+ people get access to clean drinking water in 29 countries.Bilal is now a full time entrepreneur & creator, working on several ventures as a podcaster, consultant & investor.Ā Highlights:3:40 Growing up in East London as a Pakistani British6:52 Being a fan of Nars the rapper7:42 Taking money seriously9:47 Starting his first company, Street Vibes, as a student12:49 Learning the art of selling from the vendors at London street markets15:24 Running an Arsenal Review website with over 500,000 readers18:44 Being headhunted by Google on LinkedIn22:14 Almost turning down the opportunity to work at Google23:25 Being seen as a drug dealer?!25:37 Spending 7.5 years at Google27:19 Shutting down a $300M company within Google29:19 Getting out of his low period32:16 Starting the Creator Lab podcast36:43 How Bilal lands amazing guestsĀ 43:49 Focus on one platform48:26 Landing podcast sponsorship deals53:05 Milestones in Bilalās podcasting journey55:30 Meeting the Winklevoss twins58:40 Interviewing Gary Vee1:05:39 Jack Butcher - going from cold DMs to close friends1:14:40 How much personality should you show?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/83šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhy
5/24/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 32 minutes, 48 seconds
Ep 82: The Law around NFTs & DAOs - Jamilia Grier (Founder, ByteBao)
Jamilia Grier is a privacy and regulatory attorney with over fifteen years of experience. She is licensed in New York and Connecticut and has worked in a wide range of industries including financial services, technology, hospitality, and manufacturing. She is also experienced in working with different countries and cultures and has significant expertise in cross-border transactions. She handles matters concerning corporate law and contracts and is well-versed in data privacy and protection.She currently serves as CEO & managing partner of ByteBao. Her experience includes leading Data & Privacy Operations at Standard Chartered Bank and the Legal Compliance team for Marriott International based out of China and Singapore.Ever wanted to know more about the laws surrounding NFTs and DAOs?Then this is the episode for you.Highlights:6:55 What are NFTs?8:26 IPRs in NFTsĀ 9:44 Where does copyright subsist?11:32 Copyright in a high drop NFT project?13:58 What happens if there is no licensing agreement?15:16 Any legal recourse for NFT holders?16:44 Effectiveness of DMCAs18:44 How can you mitigate the scope of your liabilities?19:41 Liability for copyright infringement if your NFT infringes the original ownerās IP rights?20:45 Are NFTs a type of security?25:45 Would you face greater regulation from the SEC if your NFT has a social purpose?27:55 Hearing about WOW Pixies28:37 The role of a lawyer in a DAO29:35 What is a DAO?30:53 Why DAOs arenāt a decentralised VC32:58 Incorporating Web2 legal structures for a DAO37:51 Legal documentations for a DAO41:27 Giveaways44:14 Airdrop issuesšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/82 Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
5/17/2022 ā¢ 47 minutes, 31 seconds
Ep 81: Building a cute, educational & interactive NFT platform for Web3 beginners | Mai Akiyoshi (CEO & Co-Founder, Curious Addys' Trading Club)
Itās time to meet our 5th #Web3 #NFT guest on STIMY!Mai Akiyoshi is a Silicon Valley engineer from Japan who has had a rather unconventional route littered with what one might conventionally consider to be āfailuresā.And it all beganā¦ with Mai applying for a sales position at a Japanese company.Ā The company decided unilaterally that they would train her up as a software engineer instead and it proved to be really difficult. She was consistently at the bottom of her cohort, but still made it through the training andā¦ got into the most technically demanding department of the company, where she was treated like an alien!Mai then got into a startup by accident - applying for a position she had no prior qualifications in, and even tried to rescind her application! That position eventually led her to the States, where she met Ben Yu (her co-founder & partner) through Nuseir of Nasdaily/Nas Academy and where her Web3 journey began.Ā Now, Mai is the CEO and co-founder of Curious Addys, a Web3 startup building the best educational platform and community for newcomers to Web3 while celebrating ADHD. She is building ember.help, a platform where anyone can ask questions on Web3 and get guaranteed answers from experts.Ā If youāre interested in all things Web3/thriving despite all the difficulties that life throws at you, then this is definitely the episode for you.Highlights:2:32 Growing up in Japan4:35 Being diagnosed with ADHD5:55 Being influenced by her grandparents, who founded their own company after World War II7:02 Wanting to go to the US8:27 Applying for a sales position & becoming a software engineer10:02 Japanās shaming culture11:29 Feeling like sheād landed on an alien planetĀ 12:24 Moving to a new startup, Logbar14:18 Moving to the US15:03 How Nuseir of Nas Academy introduced her to Ben Yu & is the āmotherā of Curious Addys16:56 Studying at App AcademyĀ 19:19 Becoming the senior software engineer at Gusto21:55 How Mai first entered the Web3 space22:51 Why Ethereum is so interesting23:37 Meeting Zeneca & helping him with his smart contractĀ 24:47 Starting a Tamagochi education platform?26:54 Why NFTs are here to stay28:23 NFTs are the best way to bootstrap a community29:32 The vision behind Curious Addysā Trading Club: Education, Cute, NFTs32:07 Why an octopus for a mascot?33:56 The early days of building Curious Addys36:01 Finding her founding team members37:24 Maintaining the right values as the community grows39:28 100% refund policy40:15 Why release only 5,000 in the initial launch40:51 How they promoted Curious Addysā Trading Club42:02 Building partnershipsĀ 42:59 The type of products under Curious Addysā Trading Club44:39 What is Ember?47:03 NFT portfolio trackerĀ 50:12 Reading smart contracts52:35 Maiās favourite NFTĀ 53:53 What Mai believes in that most people donāt in the crypto space54:15 Biggest mistake Mai has done in the Web3 space55:03 How to spot NFT/crypto scamsšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/81Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
5/3/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 3 minutes, 14 seconds
Ep 80: Ee Ling Lim, Executive Director of Global Programs, 500 Global & Co-Founder of Smarter Me + Young Leaders Summit Asia
Ee Ling Lim leads the Global Programs team at 500 Global, overseeing the strategic development and implementation of programs for 500's network of startups all over the world. In her role, she also advises governments, corporations, and foundations in designing and developing startup ecosystems and innovation programs. Prior to 500 Global, Ee Ling was an Investment Banker with Bank of America Merrill Lynch and CIMB Investment Bank, executing M&A, equity and debt capital market transactions in Southeast Asia.Ee Ling is also the Co-Founder and CEO of Smarter Me, a K-12 edutech startup headquartered in Singapore, that equips primary and secondary school students with the skillset, mindset, and heartset to define their own success and happiness in the future. Through digital technology and entrepreneurship education, students develop mastery in problem-solving, critical-thinking, collaboration, and creativity. She also hosts Young Founders Summit Asia, a leading startup program in Asia that provides aspiring teenage founders with workshops and mentorship to launch impact-based startups.Ā Ā In this episode, we discussed Ee Lingās journey as an entrepreneur - including why for the longest time, she never considered herself an entrepreneur and how that perception changed, and how she shares her struggles with her own daughters, including having to fire people. We also delved into the topic of youth entrepreneurship: whether children are too young to learn about entrepreneurship, what they care about, and setting up a DAO.Highlights:3:13 Setting up her own preschool4:43 Founding her first startup7:49 The problem that Smarter Me is trying to solve10:23 Determining the curriculum12:08 Are children too young to learn about entrepreneurship?14:49 Why Ee Ling wasnāt comfortable with calling herself an entrepreneur17:10 Sharing her struggles with her girls18:43 Young Founders Summit Asia19:56 Organising the inaugural summit28:53 What the youth care about most30:30 Launching an NFT project with a DAO element33:22 Managing the community35:09 How funds in a DAO are managed36:14 Biggest challenges37:39 Why kids were writing off NFTs/DAOs39:29 How to bring people from the Web 2.0 to Web 3.0 world40:51 Great DAOs to look at42:23 Being the Executive Directorof Global Programs at 500 Global44:17 Main elements of a successful accelerator45:23 How founders can make full use of accelerators46:46 Going virtual49:17 Having āPeople & Intentionā as her 2022 driving words52:40 How to be a good leader & lead othersšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/80 Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
4/19/2022 ā¢ 58 minutes, 41 seconds
Ep 79: Celebrity Whisperer & Investor of Lady Gaga, Gwyneth Palthrow, Sophia Amoruso, Tom Brady etc.
Nicole Quinn is a General Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners, where she focuses on consumer and FinTech investing. Consumer behaviour, founder insights, and company brand are core in Nicoleās mind. Nicknamed the āCelebrity Whispererā, she has led the Series A in Cameo and Lady Gaga's Haus Labs and seed rounds in Girlboss, Illumix and Sagely. She also invested in the Series B in Calm and Series C in Goop and sourced Rothy's and Zola.In this episode, we learn how Nicole went from helping her dad run his online pharmacy chain as a child to spending around 8 years at Morgan Stanley to finally entering the VC space.Nicole shares what a true brand is, how she measures an engaged followship, what itās like working with celebrity-led companies, how to separate the celebrity from the company, the due diligence she did prior to investing in Lady Gagaās company, what make founders like Sophia Amoruso of Girlboss stand out and why she produced a sizable term sheet to Lunchclub in less than 7 days.Ā If youāve been interested in consumer products and wondering what itās like to spot & invest in future trends, then this is the episode for you.Ā Highlights:2:56 Learning the value of money4:04 Working at Morgan Stanley for 8 years5:06 Angel Investing6:04 Joining an European fintech startup7:40 Focus on your strengths & make them stronger (in Stanford)9:46 Meeting members of Lightspeed Venture Partners, including Jeremy Liew12:22 How founders find the thing they were born to do14:40 Working with Lady Gaga to build Haus Laboratories16:13 Doing due diligence on Lady Gaga to measure engagement17:42 Separating the celebrity from the company19:26 Leading indicators of a true brand being built20:23 Why Nicole invests in early stage founders (e.g. Girlboss & Rothyās)22:03 How Lightspeed spots new trends22:47 Being wrong about future trends24:42 Why Nicole offered Lunchclub a sizable term sheet in less than 7 days26:58 The ICE Influencer policy at Calm29:50 Companies incorporating NFTs well into their businessšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/79Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhy
4/11/2022 ā¢ 33 minutes, 34 seconds
Ep 78: Creating a Web3 Accelerator & Curate-to-Earn Platform with Randi Zuckerberg | Debbie Soon (Co-Founder, HUG & former VP, Head of Consumer Products, ONE Championship)
Debbie Soon is the co-founder of HUG alongside Randi Zuckerberg - a Web3 platform that supports creators and collectors through: HUGhub (curate-to-earn discovery platform for NFTs), groupHUG (NFT growth accelerator), and hedgeHUG (early stage pre-mint program).Prior to Web3, Debbie was an equity investor where she managed over $1 billion of global consumer sector investments for one of the largest sovereign wealth funds in the world, GIC. She then pivoted into the world of startups where she founded Singapore and Southeast Asia's first boutique indoor cycling studio before going on to build three businesses from scratch for one of the most successful unicorns in Southeast Asia, Sequoia Capital-backed ONE Championship.Ā While there, she was Chief of Staff to the CEO, Chatri Sityodtong - yes, she was the OG Chief of Staff. Her colleagues joked that when she was promoted to VP, Head of Consumer Products, Chatri had to launch an entire reality show just to find her replacement! While at ONE Championship, Debbie spearheaded ONE Championshipās expansion into Japan, launched ONE Esports and ONE Shop, amongst many other things.Ā As for how Debbie got into the Web3 world?Well, it all began with her making a wish at the Wishing Well.Youāll have to listen to find out more. šHighlights:4:20 āAccept the changeable, change the unacceptableā6:00 Launching 7Cycle Pte - Southeast Asiaās first boutique indoor cycling studio8:26 Joining ONE Championship10:36 Being the OG (āThe Apprenticeā) Chief of Staff to CEO, Chatri Sityodtong12:49 Establishing ONE Esports15:50 Launching ONE Shop as VP, Head of Consumer Products17:42 Moving to LA19:52 Nearly stealing the furniture of a homeless person in LA21:20 Launching her second startup26:23 Meta Angels NFT & the Wishing Well31:43 Getting on a Zoom call with Randi Zuckerberg33:16 Getting a Web3 job without any relevant Web3 experience35:25 The problem that HUG is trying to solve - discovery for creatives38:48 Scaling HUGās Curator Club from 300 to 3,000?41:17 Making HUGās Discord channel the go-to channel for people42:03 Hosting weekly Twitter Spaces with Randi Zuckerberg43:10 Analysing 3,000 reviews of NFT projects44:46 Is art an important factor?45:36 Analysing roadmaps for NFT projects46:55 HUGhub - the curate-to-earn discovery platform for NFTs49:00 How to make HUG unique from other NFT accelerators/platforms51:04 Sharing of confidential information?52:32 How groupHUG is different from a typical Web2 startup accelerator53:39 How the groupHUG cohorts are curated55:12 Biggest needs of NFT founders56:03 Raising USD $5 million in VC funding for NFT projects in 1 month57:32 When is a NFT project ready to pitch for VC funding?58:51 Web 2.51:01:03 How NFT Collection founders can pitch for partnerships1:04:13 Web3 influencers that Debbie recommends following1:05:22 What a Web3 dating app might look likešShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/78Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
4/6/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 14 minutes, 3 seconds
Ep 77: Founding Two 7-figure Businesses & Launching the First Venture DAO for Women | Lily Wu (Startup Partner Lead, SEA & Co-Founder, WOW Pixies NFT)
Welcome to the 3rd guest in STIMYās NFT/Web3 series!Lily Wu is currently the Startup Partner Lead, SEA at Stripe and co-founder of WOW Pixies, the first DAO to invest in the women-led web3 ecosystem. DAO stands for decentralised autonomous organisation where rather than decision making being centred at the very top, that decision making power is given away to everyone (aka all WOW Pixies NFT holders). Which is something that is being made possible in the Web3 world.But how did Lily get into the world of NFTs and DAOs?Ā Well, Lily has her grounding in the startup world.Ā When she was 16, she founded her first startup - and ended up making half a million dollars selling shoes.At age 19, she started her second business in the education space, Austern International, which ended up generating over 7-figures in revenue with over 1,000 students attending physical Career Bootcamps in New York, Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Sydney and Melbourne.Thereafter, she became the Head of Programs for NewCampus, a Series A edutech startup based in Singapore before joining Stripe as the Startup Partner Lead. She is the founding ambassador of Future Females Singapore, a global organisation dedicated to helping female entrepreneurs get the resources and connections.Ā To learn about all things startups, growth hacking, NFTs, DAOs and what it means to be part of groupHUG - an NFT accelerator co-founded by Randi Zuckerberg & Debbie Soon, then listen on!Highlights:3:56 Being taught by her parents to not ask for permission, ask for forgiveness6:15 How being left with $100, led to Lily starting her first startup at the age of 168:19 Adidas Jeremy Scott wing shoes and the power of arbitrage12:00 Spreading by word of mouth15:43 Accounting20:27 Finding her own internship in China (and getting 20 friends to do the same for $2000!)25:06 Having the police called on her28:47 Starting Austern International30:11 Building the curriculum at Austern International34:42 Helping Uber launch Uber Eats36:50 Marketing Austern International42:39 Working at New Campus47:48 Becoming Startup Partner Lead at Stripe50:44 What is an NFT?55:04 WOW Pixies as a Venture DAO56:55 Investing in women-led NFT projects1:03:12 Decision-making process at WOW Pixies1:06:29 Marketing efforts for WOW Pixies, which sold out in 5 days1:08:37 The āthunderclapā1:11:26 Roadmap for WOW Pixies1:21:25 Metrics of success1:23:41 How to invest in NFT projectsšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/77Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
3/28/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 33 minutes, 5 seconds
Ep 76: How to Sell Out a 8,888 NFT Collection & Run It As A Business | Nicole Yap (Co-Founder, 8SIAN NFT Collection)
Nicole Yap, co-founder of the 8SIAN NFT Collection, began her cryptocurrency journey back in 2013 when she stumbled across an article on digital currency and its future implications while she was in high school. Despite its challenges & the dodgy sites available then, she figured out a way to purchase Bitcoin (it was being sold for $60!!) and soon after, managed to buy a Chanel bag from her crypto investments!She joined the world of NFTs in early 2021 after noticing the serious lack of representation of Asians and Women in the space.Ā Together with 2 other co-founders, she launched 8SIAN: 8,888 NFTs of beautiful, Asian women painstakingly-crafted where even the most intricate details are steeped in historical significance. 8SIAN became the number 1 project ranked on OpenSea in 24hours based on percentage increase of traded volume with over 3k+ Eth!If youāve ever been curious about what itās like to launch an NFT collection, from hustling in the lead up to the launch to building a team (reputable, experienced web3 developers arenāt exactly easy to find!), building a community on Discord with 15k members, and continuing to bring value by purchasing virtual land, building collaborations, setting up a legal entity and moreā¦ then this is the episode for you!Highlights:3:29 Getting into crypto/Bitcoin in 2013 & buying her first Chanel bag6:48 Discovering NFTs8:17 What is an NFT?9:10 Not a scam?10:30 Being told she didnāt belong in the NFT/crypto space because she was a female12:49 How Nicole figured out the way to create and launch an NFT collection14:43 Finding a Web3 developer (that doesnāt rug pull!)16:42 Why NFTs?17:57 The roadmap for 8SIAN19:31 The launch of Genesis and Goddess collection before the main 8SIAN collection was dropped22:24 Marketing 8SIAN & the hustle you donāt see24:14 Launching the main collection & getting Steve Aoki as an 8SIAN NFT holderĀ 25:09 Whatās next for 8SIAN?26:33 Why companies in Asia havenāt jumped into the NFT space yet27:36 The plans for building Chinatown in the metaverse29:37 Managing a 15k strong Discord community30:59 Creating value while still generating revenue from royaltiesĀ 32:56 How the 8SIAN 8% royalties are split35:02 Why 8SIAN is setting up a legal entity35:49 Are we in an NFT bubble?36:29 Advice to females looking to get into techšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/76Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhy
3/22/2022 ā¢ 42 minutes, 36 seconds
Ep 75: Selling Her 1st NFT to Mike Shinoda (Linkin Park)! | Mumu the Stan (Founder, MalaysiaNFT)
Welcome to the start of STIMYās mini NFT sub-series.Ā Our first NFT guest is Mumu the Stan, aka MOON HMZ. Sheās a young Muslim mother from Malaysia whoās an artist, poet, and published author and illustrator, while also being an advocate for diversity, inclusion, mental health and environmental awareness in the NFT space. She is the founder of MalaysiaNFT and a member of the local art collective, NFXT.io, and her work has been exhibited at Art Basel Miami 2021!Moon shares how she first got into the world of NFTs - because the lead singer for Linkin Park, Mike Shinoda, encouraged her to do so and promised to buy her first NFT!! Her thoughts on why itās exciting for artists, the reality of being a female in the crypto space, how the Malaysian NFT space is evolving, how to spot scams in the NFT space and how you can get involved/learn more about NFTs (if you arenāt already down the rabbit hole!).P/S: This interview starts off with Moon battle with depression so please take note if that is of concern!Highlights:4:34 Battling depression7:10 Spending 7 years feeling lost & how Moon got out of it9:01 Creating a stan account9:57 Mike Shinoda takes notice of Moonās art11:40 What are NFTs?13:09 How to create an NFT16:08 Environmental impact is linked to minority representation18:28 Finding her NFT community18:55 What the Malaysian NFT space is like22:53 Getting Malaysian artists onto the international NFT scene25:14 Being blacklisted25:55 NFTs v traditional digital art collection28:07 Has NFTs enhanced Moonās art?28:52 Do artists need to know the tech to get into NFTs?29:23 Identifying the scams in the NFT space (aka the rug pulls)31:52 Identifying when an artwork has been copiedšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/75Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhy
3/12/2022 ā¢ 37 minutes, 51 seconds
Ep 74: Raising USD 70M+ in Southeast Asia | Michael Lints (Partner, Golden Gate Ventures)
Michael Lints is currently a Partner at the Singapore-based venture capital firm Golden Gate Ventures. He joined the firm in 2013 and is currently leading growth venture efforts, which include LP fundraising and portfolio management for Golden Gate Venture's investments at Series B and beyond. He has helped to raise over USD $60M for Golden Gate Ventures and its portfolio companies, including helping to raise later stage rounds from external investors as well as leading two early strategic acquisitions.Ā In this episode, we uncover what Michael was like as a child (he took apart the first computer he received), how he convinced his dean to let him skip a year at university, before selling his house and car to start his first IT managed services startup.Ā That startup was acquired by a large data and telecom company six years later.Ā In 2007, Michael founded a venture fund focused on Dutch small- and medium-sized enterprises to help them with capital financing, business development, and strategy. During the same period, he was invited to join the Economic Development Board Rotterdam as Vice Chairman. In that role, he launched the Young Economic Development Board where he brought together a highly influential Dutch network to develop a sustainable framework for public-private relationships that increased local business investment while leveraging the public infrastructure.In this episode, we cover all things startup, investments and also his recent documentary, Broken Chains - mending the missing links in the racial wealth gap.Highlights:2:53 Taking apart his first computer3:59 Being on the Dutch National Karate Team5:00 Skipping a year at university6:20 Getting into insurance & realising he never wanted to work for another corporation again8:14 Selling his car & house to co-founder his first IT startup9:40 Pivoting from being a comparison site to a data center10:51 Being on the same board as the CEO of ING & Unilever, Prime Minister of New Zealand & Head of the UN15:53 Obsession with focus17:00 Studying at Harvard17:53 Discovering the venture scene in Singapore/Southeast Asia19:38 How can I be helpful?21:29 Raising over USD 60 million22:54 Getting a foot in the door24:46 Experience fundraising in the Middle East & Europe26:20 How the Southeast Asia startup scene has evolved29:39 What Michael looks for in a founder31:54 Importance of local knowledge34:32 Getting deal flow35:46 Investment mistakes madeĀ 36:59 Investment thesis37:49 Areas of interest to Michael40:17 How the pandemic has impacted Michaelās portfolio companies41:37 Fundraising in the pandemic/post-pandemic era43:44 Framework for maintaining focus45:36 How to find good mentors for yourself47:06 Broken ChainsšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/74Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
3/6/2022 ā¢ 51 minutes, 25 seconds
Ep 73: From Ai Wei Wei to Building Generation T (Tatler) | Lee Williamson (Regional Editorial Editor, Generation T, Tatler Asia Group)
Lee Williamson is the Regional Editorial Director of Generation T, Tatler Asia Group and currently oversees three of Tatlerās flagship brands: Gen.T, Front & Female and Asiaās Most Influential. He was previously the Editor at Time Out Beijing and Editor-in-Chief at Thatās China and was selected as a WAN-IFRA Young Media Leaders Fellow 2020.If youāve ever wanted to know what itās like to work as a foreign journalist in China, dealing with state censorship, producing ācontroversialā editorials and also producing media products like the Generation T list, then this is the episode for you!Highlights:6:48 Moving to China8:58 Working as a journalist at Thatās ChinaĀ 11:33 āYouāll Never Be Chineseā15:19 Censorship in China17:26 RelaunchingĀ 18:21 Being Editor at Time Out Beijing21:12 Publishing Ai Wei Weiās first interview following his detainment in China23:14 Working at Tatler25:05 Why Gen.T?26:21 Defining success, influence and power27:17 Whatās the point of another ālistā?29:42 Building the Gen.T community34:48 Gaining trust35:52 Getting people to share what they really want even after they say āI donāt really need anythingā39:05 Seeing Gen.Tās brand value increase43:11 Deciding who gets on Gen.T45:08 Tribes47:21 Safeguards48:57 Trends among Gen.T honoureesĀ 50:22 Whatās in it for Gen.T?51:09 The Crazy Smart Asia podcastĀ 56:21 Planning for the future of Gen.TšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/73Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
3/1/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 7 minutes, 20 seconds
Ep 72: From (almost) DropKick to Scaling Fast-Growing Startups | Vincent Wei (Head of Growth, VEED.IO)
Vincent Wei is the Head of Growth (Product & growth) at VEED.IO, one of the fastest growing startups by revenue in the world.Ā He was first introduced to the world of startups when he began CodeCreate, one of Australiaās first coding school for kids, while still at university. The school generated 6-figure revenue but his next startup unfortunately didnāt do so well.Burnt out, Vincent decided to take a break and travel the world before returning as Employee #3 on the growth team at AirTasker - which later became one of Australiaās largest marketplace for services. That was no mean feat, given that the startup was burning $35 million annually and on the verge on collapse then!They managed to turn the startup around but Vincent left before AirTasker IPOed in 2021 (and we discuss why in this episode!) to join VEED.io - the Canva of video editing - as Head of Growth. VEED recently raised $35M from Sequoia and is currently going through an exciting growth phase, so this is definitely a startup to keep an eye on!Highlights:3:32 How Harry Potter helped Vincent learn English5:20 Being driven to succeed8:41 Not wanting to be a dropkick13:51 Founding CodeCreate to teach kids how to build Minecraft18:48 How CodeCreateās cohort went from 3 to 86 kids23:00 Getting a contract role at Suncorp29:29 Founding his 2nd startup32:37 How Lambda School inspired them35:48 Why Cody failed38:16 Travelling the world42:35 The power of LinkedIn outreach & chatting with James Clear47:26 Joining AirTasker when it was burning $30 million annually49:27 How they turned AirTasker around54:51 Why Vincent left AirTasker56:25 How Vincentās role at VEED has evolved over time59:09 What Vincent looks for when he hires1:01:08 Influencing others virtuallyšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/72Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ P/S: "Dropkick" is an Australian slang that refers to someone who isn't very smart & hasn't made it very far in life.
2/20/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 9 minutes, 48 seconds
Ep 71: Surviving A Suicide Attempt & Thriving | Sabrina Ooi (Co-Founder, Calm Collective Asia)
WARNING: This episode may have some trigger points as we talk about things like depression, suicide and death.Ā Sabrina Ooi is the co-founder and CEO of Calm Collective Asia - a community that was established during Singaporeās first circuit breaker to talk about all things mental health in Asia.To understand how Sabrina ended up establishing Calm Collective Asia, itās necessary to dive into her story. She shares why she felt like an imposter while studying at Raffles Girlsā School (Singaporeās top school), how she started DJing for the likes of Dior & Rolls Royce, getting through debilitating depressive episodes since the age of 11, how she was initially misdiagnosed as being depressive only to discover that she was bipolar, being āarrestedā for attempting to end her life and her journey to recovery.Ā This is STIMYās first mental health episode and I felt that Sabrinaās story is so incredibly powerful and important. It is time to destigmatise discussions around mental health and I hope that this episode contributes a little to that ongoing conversation, particularly in Asia.Ā Ā Highlights:3:41 Being told by her mum to be āaverageā5:23 Having her first depressive episode at age 1112:33 How her DJ career beganĀ 17:35 Triggers for her depressive episodes21:59 Going for therapy23:55 Not going for private practice25:05 Having suicidal thoughts27:36 Taking antidepressantsĀ 29:52 Depression v Bipolar31:49 Survive, Live and Thrive35:11 Journey to recovery36:52 āHow I went from Leaving to Livingā42:36 Starting Calm Collective Asia47:24 The vision51:13 Symptoms to look out for52:31 How to find the right therapistšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/71Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ Please leave a review & rating here! - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/so-this-is-my-why/id1521191442
2/15/2022 ā¢ 58 minutes, 37 seconds
Ep 70: Running London's iconic Jewish Beigel family business | Daniel Cohen (Managing Director, Beigel Bake Limited)
London has plenty of incredible food. Italian, Greek, Middle Eastern.. And the bakeries are something to behold too. So it makes sense when youāre in town to try some of its best offerings and Beigel Bake should certainly be at the top of your list!Which brings me to todayās guest: Daniel Cohen, Managing Director of Beigel Bake Limited - one of Londonās most iconic Jewish beigel shops, located along Brick Lane (also an iconic location in the City).Beigel (or bagel, depending on where youāre from) is a second-generation family Jewish bakery that Danielās father began with two uncles back in 1974. Serving 7,000 dense and chewy Jewish beigels daily, 24/7, it has since been rated 3 stars by Time Out London in 2010 (4 stars by its online users) and featured by the photographic pictorial Life in the East End by London-based cabaret duo, EastEnd Cabaret.In this episode, Daniel shares how Beigel Bake first came to be, what his father was like, how he got involved in the family business, the story behind its ārivalryā with a neighbouring Jewish beigel shop, how it fared during the pandemic and so much more.If youāre ever in London, Iād recommend a visit to Beigel Bake!Highlights:4:10 Growing up with Beigel Bake as a prominent part of his life5:01 The Jewish history of beigels (or bagels)7:02 Brick Lane history8:57 How Beigel Bake began & its ongoing ārivalryā with a neighbouring Jewish beigel shop10:34 How Beigel Bake went from being a wholesaler to serving the public12:37 Growing by word of mouth (no advertising!)14:24 Most popular fillings14:43 The story behind the salt beef/pastrami filling served at Beigel Bake16:26 What was Danielās dad like?20:28 Did Daniel feel obliged to join the family business?21:55 Why Beigel Bake started serving sandwiches 24/724:14 Realities of running a family businessĀ 25:54 Becoming managing director28:58 Why Daniel released the recipe for their Jewish beigel29:49 Will Beigel Bake ever open a branch?30:53 Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic34:34 Launching their own delivery app (and some mishaps!)38:38 Working with charitiesĀ 40:12 Having the Duke & Duchess of Cambridge come to visit42:23 How the business is currently faringšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/70Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ P/S: For recommendations, try Beigel Bakeās hot salt beef with mustard and gherkins, and/or cream cheese and salmon flavours!
1/31/2022 ā¢ 53 minutes, 45 seconds
Ep 69: Creating a Free & Open Internet for All | Nnenna Nwakanma (Chief Web Advocate, World Wide Web Foundation)
Nnenna Nwakanma is the Chief Web Advocate at the World Wide Web Foundation.Ā She is also a Nigerian FOSS activist, community organiser, co-founder of the Free Software and Open Source Foundation for Africa. In 2018, she was chosen as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in the field of digital government and has over 15 years of experience working with the UN in areas such as the information society, gender and digital equality.In this episode, we learn about what it was like growing up in Nigeria - and why she wasnāt even given a name for the first 3 months of her life because of her gender! - how she became one of the very first to use the internet in Africa, why she views the internet as a tool for social justice, how she has learned to walk with her adversaries (as Mandela used to say), and what drives her to create an internet that is free and open to all.Ā Ā Highlights:2:40 Why Nnenna was born & not given a name for the first 3 months of her life4:43 Being human is enough7:21 āNnenna from the Internetā8:57 Being one of the first Africans to be exposed to the internet12:08 Use of the internet in African villages16:44 Being a FOSS activist & walking with your adversaries18:31 Attitudes are like ass holes22:39 The mission of the World Wide Web Foundation25:01 Running the global coalition, the Web We Want28:39 Backstory to Brazilās Internet Bill of Rights (first in the world)32:56 How close are we to an open and free internet for all?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/69Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
1/23/2022 ā¢ 40 minutes, 15 seconds
Ep 68: Creating Content for 3+ Million Subscribers at Morning Brew | Neal Freyman (Managing Editor, Morning Brew)
Neal Freyman is the Managing Editor at Morning Brew, a new media company that provides informative and digestive business news to over 3 million subscribers. He oversees Morning Brewās flagship product - a daily newsletter, as well as the weekend light Roast edition and native advertisements.Ā The Morning Brew happens to be one of my favourite newsletters so I was excited to dive into the behind-the-scenes with Neal!Highlights:4:43 Studying at the University of Maryland College Park7:16 Teaching geography and urban studiesĀ 8:07 Applying to work at Morning Brew as a writer (and being rejected!)9:00 Sending a nice rejection letter10:05 The newsletter industry in 201713:05 Working as a young newsletter startup out of a room in NYU14:41 Morning Brewās ideal customer and how that definition has evolved over time18:12 Having readers get super pi**ed at them18:45 Creating a political newsletter20:18 āWrite, grow and sellā as the tactic for Morning Brewās explosive growth from 2016-2019Ā 22:51 Writing continuously for 5 yearsĀ 24:24 Milestones that contributed to Morning Brewās growth26:19 Main reasons for Morning Brewās subscriber count going from 100k to 1.5 million in the 2018/19 period27:01 The importance of Morning Brew having its own in-house referral system29:40 How Morning Brew manages to get 25% of its signups from its referral program32:29 Capitalising on momentum, as Alex Lieberman discussed34:24 How Morning Brew launched the Emerging Tech newsletter37:18 The importance of having a strong online following like Alex Lieberman & Austin Rief41:44 Checks & balances42:49 Becoming Managing Editor of Morning Brew44:23 Maintaining a close knit working culture45:43 When Neal felt that they had created a great product with the newsletter47:59 Staying relevant49:35 Retaining talent staff51:40 Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic53:01 The Essentials54:02 Impact of Morning Brewās reported $75 million acquisition by Business Insider54:35 Creating the podcast arm of Morning Brew: Business Casual & Founderās Journal56:23 Building in public59:39 Entering the education space with the MBA AcceleratoršShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/68Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
1/16/2022 ā¢ 1 hour, 10 minutes, 44 seconds
Ep 67: Building Viral Campaigns for Social Enterprises | Daniel Flynn (Co-Founder, Thankyou)
Daniel Flynn, co-founder of Thankyou, is one of Australiaās most recognisable & successful social entrepreneurs. He is the recipient of EY Entrepreneur of the Year Award (Southern Region) and Forbes Asia 30 Under 30 Social Entrepreneurs.Thankyou was conceived while Daniel was still in college and he learned, to his horror, that there were 900 million people who didnāt have access to clean water. 4500 kids were dying every day from water-borne disease and the women needed to trek 20km by foot to obtain clean water (they even risked being raped along that trecherous journey!).Determined to make a difference, Daniel, his girlfriend (now wife) Justine and friend, Jared Burns, got together as first-year university students to launch the consumer brand now known as Thankyou.Since 2008, Thankyou has raised over $17 million and impacted the lives of people across 22 countries. Thankyouās products can be found in major retailers across Australia & 100% of its profits go towards ending extreme global poverty.Thankyou has run many viral campaigns. To get 7-Eleven to stock Thankyou Water, they produced a youTube video that asked their followers to visit the 7-Eleven Australia Facebook page to promise to buy Thankyou water if it was stocked. Within two weeks, they had fans singing, dancing and rapping, and it was covered all over the media. 7-Eleven said yes & Thankyou became the third best selling brand (they were also top at certain points in time).A similar viral campaign happened when they tried to get Coles and Woolworths, which controlled over 70% of Australiaās grocery market share, to stock Thankyou products. This time, they launched a video called the Coles and Woolworths campaign and also had two helicopters flown over Coles and Woolworthsā respective headquarters in Melbourne and Sydney. Unsurprisingly, both said yes!And again in 2015, Daniel wrote a bestselling book, Chapter One, which generated over $1.4 million in sales & sold over 55,000 copies in its first month using an unorthodox āpay-what-you-wantā model.However, these viral successes came after Daniel and his team experienced a great deal of setbacks.Ā We explore all that and more in this episode.Ā Highlights:4:00 Selling helicopters, yabbies & gobstoppers as a child5:15 Wanting to enter property development6:14 Learning about how 900 million people donāt have access to clean water (the genesis of Thankyou)10:17 Whether Daniel knew what a āsocial enterpriseā was in the early days11:21 Figuring out how to enter the water industry as 19-year-olds13:39 Getting his business coach to donate $20,00017:57 Experiencing huge setbacks21:39 Deciding to not pivot22:54 The idea behind the viral 7-Eleven campaign to stock Thankyou water24:54 Running the viral Coles & Woolworths campaign27:37 Building a core base of fans29:46 Managing the risks behind each campaign33:22 The āuncomfortable middleā34:46 Being almost crushed by the pressure42:19 Deciding to leave the water industry44:16 How Daniel & the Thankyou team celebrate their wins45:27 Any big idea Daniel has changed his mind on recentlyšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/67Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
1/3/2022 ā¢ 51 minutes, 43 seconds
Ep 66: The Business of Lettering | Lauren Hom (Designer, Illustrator & Hand Lettering Artist)
Lauren Hom is a California-born designer, illustrator & hand lettering artist with a 250k strong following on Instagram. She is known for her use of bright colour palettes & playful letterings and has worked for clients such as Starbucks, YouTube, TIME Magazine, Google and AT&T. She has also been recognised by Communications Arts, the Art Directors Club, the One Club, the Type Directors Club and the Webby Awards.Ā But how did it all start?As with all STIMY episodes, we start from the very beginning: with Laurenās childhood & how she ended up studying at the School of Visual Arts for, of all courses, advertising! While there, she met influential figures who had a deep influence on her decision to become a freelance artist. Turns out, being the junior director of a big ad agency in New York wasnāt the dream job sheād thought it would be!Ā Ā Lauren also peels back the layers on some of her most popular passion projects, beginning with Daily Dishonesty - which landed her a book deal upon graduation! That proved pivotal, as it gave her a financial cushion to launch a freelance career.Ā Three things stood out with Laurenās life story:her talent in lettering;her ability to use passion projects to change the trajectory of her freelance career, repeatedly; andher willingness to be open about how she executes her projects, markets them and what she earns! And finally, why she is now going on a sabbatical and entering culinary school.If youāve ever been curious about the business side of an artistās career, then this is the episode for you.Highlights4:58 Work hard, snack hard5:38 Doing advertising11:40 Becoming a Junior Art Director in a big New York city ad firm13:36 Daily Dishonesty16:52 Seeing Daily Dishonesty go viral18:51 Getting an illustration agent20:14 Knowing when to say no to a client22:59 Planning to go freelance24:17 Earning $100,000 by Year 3 of freelancing25:12 Growing an audience on Instagram28:27 āWill Letter for Lunchā side project31:28 Getting clients like Microsoft & LinkedIn in less than 1 year34:12 Flour Crown & Peen Cuisine39:30 Traveling 1.5 years around the world40:47 Being inspired more by every day life44:35 Taking Back Sunday46:36 Taking a creative sabbatical to go to culinary school54:48 Would Lauren ever do street art?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/66Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
12/12/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 5 minutes, 37 seconds
Ep 65: How AI is manipulating our behaviour & how to regulate it | Ansgar Koene (Global AI Ethics & Regulatory Leader, EY)
Ansgar Koene is the Global AI Ethics & Regulatory Leader at EY, Senior Research Fellow at Horizon Digital Economy Research Institute at the University of Nottingham, a Trustee at 5Rights and chair of the IEEE Working Group P7003 Standard for Algorithm Bias Considerations.Today with Ansgar, weāll be talking about all things artificial intelligence.AI is an inescapable part of life. Whether it's the songs that Spotify recommends to us or the similar videos that pop up on our YouTube feed after watching one cat video, AI is monitoring & downloading data about us which is used to enhance our experiences on these social platforms. But there are darker elements to this, where it ends up manipulating our behaviour without us even realising it.So how can and should AI be regulated? What are the issues surrounding algorithm bias? Have recent legislations like the GDPR helped to better define the boundaries surrounding the use of AI? And what does Ansgar think about some of the current developments e.g. Facebook choosing to stop the use of its facial recognition software?If you want to learn more about the current state of AI, and the ethical and regulatory concerns surrounding its use, then this is the episode for you.Highlights:8:50 Every model is wrong, but some models are useful16:49 Ethical concerns around use of Twitter18:12 Issue of consent & privacy20:56 Types of recommender systems used by online platforms26:07 Using youth juries in the Unbias Project27:25 A series of ānudgesā that manipulate our behaviourĀ 29:59: An oversight committeeĀ 31:52 Who should bear editorial responsibility?36:25 Inherent algorithm bias40:30 Opening & streamlining access to platforms also restricts your freedom of expression44:19 How effective current regulation is49:23 Ansgarās thoughts on Facebook stopping use of its facial recognition technology51:31 How effective is the #deleteFacebook movement?55:22 Why young people feel ādisempoweredā when using social media1:00:50 YouTube Kids versus Instagram KidsšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/65Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
11/30/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 4 minutes, 13 seconds
Ep 64: The "T.R.I.CK." to How You Can Raise Successful People | Esther Wojcicki
Esther Hochman Wojcicki is an author, journalist, educator, vice-chair of the Creative Commons Advisory Council and founder of the highly regarded Palo Alto High School Media Arts program (the largest journalism program in the States).Ā She is also known as the āGodmother of Silicon Valleyā. And has raised 3 daughters, regarded as some of the most successful women in Silicon Valley.Ā Thereās Susan Wojcicki, the oldest, who is the CEO of YouTube; Janet Wojcicki, a Fulbright-winning anthropologist & professor of pediatrics at the University of California, and Anne Wojcicki - co-founder of 23andme: a genomics company that lets you test for ancestry and health risks. Anne was most recently listed as number 93 in Forbes List of Worldās 100 Most Powerful Women in 2020!But what does it take to raise successful people?Ā What is Esther Wojcickiās famed T.R.I.C.K. methodology & how do those principles translate into the classroom?Ā What was Steve Jobs like in person?Is it good to be a tiger mum sometimes?And what has she been up to during the COVID-19 pandemic and what advice does she have for parents raising children during this strange period in time?All that and more in this episode.Highlights:3:54: Growing up as a Russian Jewish immigrant7:02 Why Esther thought education was necessary for her survival10:41 Being disowned for pursuing a university degree13:59 Becoming a mother16:51 Figuring out how to be a parent19:41: The lemon girls20:59: Swimming at 12 months old!23:05: Table manners27:38: Teaching at Palo Alto High School33:09: Steve Jobs & 7 free MacintoshĀ 36:54: āHow to Raise Successful PeopleāĀ 38:34: Defining āsuccessā40:09: What the T.R.I.C.K. methodology48:58: How tiger mums can help kids become more independent49:45: Are there instances when you need to be a tiger mum?50:43: Founding the Tract with Ari Memar56:41: The 20% rulešShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/64Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
11/22/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 5 minutes, 39 seconds
Ep 63: Creating the "Perfect" Sabbaticals for Peak Experiences | DJ Didonna [Founder, the Sabbatical Project]
Have you ever thought about taking a sabbatical? Or have taken one yourself?If so, then this weekās STIMY guest will be of interest to you.Ā DJ DiDonna is the founder of the Sabbatical Project, which is the first-of-its kind research into when and why sabbaticals are being taken by professionals, and how they lead to positive outcomes and an opportunity to tap into their inner self.Ā DJ shares his personal story of first completing his MBA at Harvard Business School before spending the next 7 years of his life building Entrepreneurial Finance Lab: a microfinance startup he founded because was deeply passionate about pursuing access to finance and credit. It was a highly successful startup and they succeeded in unlocking over $1 billion for entrepreneurs and individuals that would otherwise not have access to such funding.Ā However, no one told him that you could burn out from doing the job you loved.And thatās exactly what happened.In this episode, we dive deep into DJās experiences being burnt out, what he did during his sabbaticals as well as the findings that the Sabbatical Project has produced to date.Highlights:4:08 Doing an MBA at Harvard Business School6:37 Launching a microfinance startup that would unlock over $1 billion for entrepreneurs & be featured in the New York Times8:58 Burning out from doing a job you love10:01 Burning out versus just needing a vacation12:13 Guilt12:49 Maximising productivity during his sabbatical as a Type A15:10 Completing the 900 mile (1200 km) Shikoku Pilgrimage in JapanĀ 16:13 āOssentaiā22:51 Collaborating with Professor Matt Bloom24:00 Founding the Sabbatical Project26:26 Defining what a āsabbaticalā is27:33 Is there such a thing as a sabbatical thatās gone on for ātoo longā?30:06 Travel doesnāt guarantee disconnectionĀ 33:11 Getting in touch with your inner selfĀ 34:20 Testing your assumptions with others35:52 Has anyone ever regretted taking a sabbatical?37:19 Sabbaticals help to fight FOMO38:03 How to structure a sabbatical40:08 Designing a system to capture your learnings from your sabbatical43:16 Employers who want to implement sabbatical policies in their companies45:24 Forced sabbaticals46:56 When people should think about taking sabbaticals (without waiting for burnouts or something bad to happen in life)48:13 Best way to ask employers for sabbaticals50:42 Functional workaholismĀ šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/63 šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
11/14/2021 ā¢ 58 minutes, 38 seconds
Ep 62: Serving the World's Cheapest Michelin-Starred Meal | Hawker Chef Chan Hon Meng
Hawker Chef Chan Hon Meng is a Malaysian-born, Michelin-starred chef who is best known for serving the worldās least expensive Michelin-starred meal.He won his first Michelin star back in 2016 for his $2.50 soy sauce chicken noodle dish, and proceeded to do so for the next four consecutive years. Since then, his chicken rice store has exploded from one store in Chinatown to a franchise restaurants in 7 countries & 17 outlets within 2 years. In Singapore alone, there are 6,000 stalls in over 100 hawker stalls.In this episode, Hawker Chan shares:Ā what it was like growing up in Ipoh, Malaysia;how he obtained his apprenticeship under a Hong Kong chef, where he learned and perfected his famed soya sauce chicken recipe;Ā starting his Liao Fan Soya Sauce Chicken Rice & Noodle in Chinatown Complex Food Centre in 2019;what it was like first obtaining a Michelin star in 2016;how his business developed as a franchise;Ā the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on his business; andĀ advice for others seeking to follow in his footsteps.Note: This interview was conducted entirely in Mandarin!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/62Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhy
11/10/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 32 minutes, 20 seconds
Ep 61: Austen Allred (Co-Founder & CEO, Lambda School) - Building the Next-Gen Coding School with ISAs
Austen Allred is the co-founder & CEO of Lambda School: a virtual coding school that is completely free to attend, until its graduates earn at least $50,000/year. Lambda School is betting on its studentās success as its success, and has seen its graduates go on to work as developers in Fortune 100 companies and prominent startups including Google, Microsoft, Goldman Sachs and more.But even prior to founding Lambda School & being accepted into Y Combinator, Austen has had a wealth of interesting experiences. From working for two years as a Mormon missionary in Eastern Ukraine - where every foreigner was viewed as a spy - to dropping out of college, vagabonding around China, blogging while being homeless in Silicon Valley (which eventually led to him securing his first funding & job in the Valley!) & going through 5 rounds of interviews before being accepted onto Y Combinator.We explore all that, including his viral & controversially titled article in 2012, āSuccessful Entrepreneurs Are Usually Liarsā in this STIMY episode.Ā Highlights:3:17 Growing up in a Mormon family6:12 Learning HTML at age of 1110:06 Going on a mission trip in Donetsk, Eastern Ukraine15:18 Founding Stubtopia25:27 Dropping out of college29:44 Vagabonding around China31:22 Writing the viral 2012 article, āSuccessful Entrepreneurs Are Usually Liarsā33:49 Blogging while homeless in Silicon Valley (which led to his first job in Silicon Valley & investment for his own startup!)38:24 Noticing the discrepancy between Utah & Silicon Valley in terms of opportunities & pay39:31 How the concept of Lambda School came about51:21 The right time to raise VC money54:58 Getting into Y Combinator59:13 Biggest takeaway from working with Geoff Rolston (now President of Y Combinator) & Daniel Gross1:03:54 Issues surrounding the Income Sharing Agreements (ISA)1:06:47 How COVID-19 has impacted Lambda SchoolšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/61Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ
10/25/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 9 minutes, 32 seconds
Ep 60: David Grief (former Senior Clerk, Essex Court Chambers) - Building the Careers of Barristers & Judges
David Grief is the CEO of David Grief International Consultancy Pte & former Senior Clerk at Essex Court Chambers - known as one of the UK's most prominent commercial sets with a multimillion-pound turnover.Ā Described in a recent TIMES article as a āgiant among clerksā, David has spent over 40 plus years managing barristersā chambers including at Grayās Inn Chambers, 17 Old Buildings, Lincolnās Inn and finally, as Senior Clerk and Head of Administration at Essex Court Chambers.Ā But what does a barristersā clerk actually do?This might be a bit of a struggle to understand if youāre unfamiliar with how the UK legal system works and indeed even for practicing lawyers. Unless youāve worked in chambers in London before, itās difficult to pinpoint exactly what they do!But the short of it is this: barristersā clerks are traditionally referred to as āthe Lawās Middlemanā and are known to āmake or breakā a barristerās career. They manage the diaries of their barristers in chambers, the client relationships, the negotiations and collecting of fees and general running of chambers. They are also a barristerās therapist, marriage counsellor, discipline master, agent, debt collector and some might even say, āpimpā!Much has been written about the clerking world but less so in the modern day and in this episode, David peels back the layers.He shares how he first got into the world of clerking, his love of flying, how he manages and grows his relationships with instructing solicitors and barristers, and how he has moulded the careers of his barristers, helping them become silks and even getting onto the bench.Some of the barristers he used to clerk for include the former Chief Justice of England & Wales and other barristers who have gone on to sit at the UK Supreme Court, International Court of Justice and Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.David also shares his plans in helping to develop the legal industry in Singapore and his plans moving forward with the establishment of his new consultancy - David Grief International Consultancy Pte.Ā Highlights:4:46 Being passionate about flying8:30 His interviews to become a junior clerk9:45 Clerking before the age of the Internet11:46 What a barristersā clerk actually does17:19 Knowing the breaking points of a barrister19:40 Collection of fees22:49 Going through the 1974 UK Minersā Strike & 3-Day Work Week24:47 Building relationships with instructing solicitors30:02 Being the only clerk with a license to fly35:18 Working with barristers37:06 Direct access38:53 Managing situations when a barrister cops out43:09 Identifying barristers with star quality & when theyāre ready to take the silk48:17 People who have most influenced Davidās career50:47 Joining Essex Court Chambers57:05 Why David moved to Singapore1:01:32 Challenges in establishing Singaporeās first pure chambers practiceĀ 1:04:41 Innovations that David anticipates happening in the legal sector1:06:26 āDonāt ask, donāt getāšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/60Ā Ā šŖ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sothisismywhyĀ šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
10/19/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 10 minutes, 48 seconds
Ep 59: Ooi Boon Hoe (CEO & Director, Jurong Port Pte Ltd)
Ooi Boon Hoe is the current Director and Chief Executive Officer of Jurong Port Pte Ltd, which is one of Singaporeās two main commercial terminal operators.In this episode, we explore how Boon Hoe went from working in the military, where he obtained a 1st Class Pass from Britannia Royal Naval College, was a recipient of the Singapore Armed Forces Overseas Training Award, and a Singapore Armed Forces Merit Scholarship.Boon Hoe later worked in corporate finance in DBS Bank before moving into the port and shipping industry first with Portek International in 2002 (where he discovered his faith!), then Jurong Port Pte Ltd in 2014.Ā Highlights:3:30 Growing up in Singapore in 1960s4:28 Having a flourishing military career7:27 Working in corporate finance at DBS Bank9:21 Becoming COO of Portek International10:46 Why Boon Hoe transitioned into the port & shipping business12:04 Discovering God14:46 Reading the Gospels18:29 Making Portekās maiden investment in Algeria26:30 Creating the worldās largest port based facility27:33 Creating an ecosystem centered around LNG31:31 Maintaining safety during the global pandemicšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/59Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
10/5/2021 ā¢ 35 minutes, 44 seconds
Ep 58: Nigel Stanislaus (Celebrity Makeup Artist, Mr Maybelline & Judge on Australia's Next Top Model + Asia's Next Top Model)
Nigel Stanislaus is a highly celebrated makeup artist whoās been a part of international television shows like Project Runway, X-Factor, Make Me A Supermodel and also a judge on Australiaās Next Top Model and Asiaās Next Top Model.Ā His editorial works span the likes of Harper's Bazaar, Cosmopolitan LāOfficiel, Elle, Marie Claire, GQ, and Esquire and he has worked with celebrities like John Legend, Suki Waterhouse, Kelly Osborne, Gigi & Bella Hadid, Scary Spice - Melanie Brown, and most recently, Jenna Dewan and Tina Arena.But what is it really like being such a celebrated makeup artist who was known for almost a decade as āMr Maybellineā? What did it take to get to where he is today?In this episode, we dive into what it was like growing up in Singapore, how he almost became a professional sniper, discovering the world of fashion and makeup as well as the realities of living the jet-setting life, and what he is now up to since leaving his position as Makeup Director at Maybelline, where he had represented Singapore in NYFW.Highlights:1:59 The story behind the name āStanislausā2:44 Being influenced by the feminine energy around him4:59 Discovering his āfront of houseā7:22 Being different from other guys8:27 Studying apparel design & merchandising at Temasek PolytechnicĀ 11:19 Obtaining an internship in New York & attending his first catwalk (which included meeting Kate Moss!)17:45 Completing national service in Singapore & discovering a talent for being a sniper20:20 Excelling at Monash UniversityĀ 22:41 Doing freelance makeup on the sideĀ 23:40 Being told he would never make it as he ādidnāt fit the profileā25:39 Getting over his rejections27:20 Getting his first agent28:53 The importance of social mediaĀ 30:52 Nigelās wildest briefs32:51 How Nigel constantly upskills34:32 Admiring āstalker-ishā persistence in his assistants37:39 The reality of living a jet-setting life44:14 Appearing on television47:21 How Nigel decided to stop being the Makeup Director of Maybelline aka Mr Maybelline54:33 How Nigel overcomes lonelinessšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/58Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
9/28/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 3 minutes, 19 seconds
Ep 57: Robert James Ashe - x4 Emmy-nominated Hollywood editor & title designer + former Head of Post Production, Conan show
Robert James Ashe is a 4-time Emmy nominated editor and title designer, best known for being the Head of Post Production on Conan for nearly 8 years. He has also worked for Conan O'Brien on the Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien, The Legally Prohibited From Being Funny on Television Tour, The 2014 MTV Movie Awards, and his show CONAN on TBS. Rob also served as the announcer, title designer, and lead editor for The Pete Holmes Show on TBS.Here, Robert shares how he went from being an army brat and Disney kid, to life in musical theatre and how he ended up working in post production in Hollywood. As well as what itās like being a parent to three young children with physical challenges.Highlights:2:43 Being a Disney kid4:40 The realities of being in musical theatre8:45 How Robert first got into production in Hollywood15:51 Designing the original Conan logo & incorporating his daughterās silhouette into it17:40 Delivering a 42 minute show in 19 minutes20:06 Knowing what to cut22:59 The most time-consuming parts of travel segments25:27 Why editing is like speed chess27:09 Finding a rhythm to editing29:47 Cutting for the Notebook 2 with Ryan Reynolds & Conan OāBrien38:09 Most memorable parts of working on Conan38:09 How Robert first heard that the Conan show would be ending41:05 Advice for people who want to make it44:31 Figuring out how to ace interviews in Hollywood45:48 Caring for children with physical challenges51:14 Advice for parents looking to adopt children with physical challengesĀ 55:06 Breaking into Hollywood through charitiesšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/57Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
9/14/2021 ā¢ 57 minutes, 40 seconds
Ep 56: Amra Naidoo (Co-Founder, Accelerating Asia & General Partner, Accelerating Asia Ventures)
Amra Naidoo is the co-founder of Accelerating Asia, an early stage venture capital fund that runs programs for startups and investors, and General Partner at Accelerating Asia Ventures. Prior to that, she was the Head of Corporate Partnerships at UN Women, including Project Inspire (a UN Women global social entrepreneurship program) and a part of muru-Dās, which was one of the top startup accelerators in Asia.Ā She is also the APAC Regional Lead for Shaper Impact Capital and Outgoing Curator for the Global Shapers Singapore Hub, an initiative of the World Economic Forum and is the host and creator of the Doing Good Podcast. She has been interviewed and featured as a guest author on industry blogs, including The Straits Times, Techcrunch, Reuters and named as one of Harper's Bazaarās Women Who Inspire Others.Highlights1:56 Growing up in Zimbabwee3:14 Moving to Australia5:23 Why Amra started dreaming of working at the UN7:26 Selling SKII & Shiseido13:53 Deciding on how to change her life16:18 Getting a UN internship20:03 Becoming Head of Corporate Partnerships at UN Women21:00 Running Project Inspire25:50 How startups can run successful crowdfunding campaigns27:28 The struggle with marketingĀ 31:35 Why Amra ended up leaving the UN34:17 Obtaining a marketing degree from the University of Newcastle36:30 Meeting Craig, her current co-founder, at muru-D37:19 How the idea of Accelerating Asia began39:20 The āmissing middleā41:26 The biggest challenges in setting up an independent accelerator43:21 Bootstrapping to set up a consultancy program44:16 Running the 100 days accelerator program47:22 The regulatory challenges behind running a venture fund48:24 Fundraising for their venture fund50:37 Why selling a fund is similar to selling Chanel56:25 Why Accelerating Asia focuses on pre-Series A companies58:48 Whether Amra looks for social impact in their startups1:04:00 Starting the Doing Good podcast1:05:44 What Amra thinks about the creator economy & how VCs/startup founders should get into the space1:07:31 How Amra ended up joining the Paymentās Race - MoneyAsia 2020šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/56Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
8/30/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 14 minutes, 14 seconds
Ep 55: Karl Mak (Co-Founder, Hepmil Media Group - SGAG, MGAG, PGAG) - Running a Meme Business
Karl Mak is a Singaporean entrepreneur and co-founder and CEO of HEPMIL Media Group: a holding company that owns SGAG, MGAG, PGAG, SGEEK and HEPMIL Creatorsā Network.If youāre a fan of memes, then youāre in for a treat because that is precisely what HEPMIL specialises in!Karl shares how he almost became a professional swimmer, how he built a flourishing real estate career while in school, his experiences (and failure) with his first startup & how he ended up co-founding SGAG with Adrian Ang, whom he had first met back in 2005 in junior college.Ā Highlights:3:32 Swimming competitively9:53 Entering the real estate business13:28 The gift of the gab20:26 Learning from Professor Soon Loo22:23 Attending a coding bootcamp to find a co-founder26:26 āCrazyā things Karl did to get enterprise clients28:22 Why Televate, Karlās first startup, failed33:43 Meeting Adrian & starting SGAG38:27 How they come up with memes40:32 The Ah Lian meme, which was picked up by mainstream media42:36 Milestones to track47:47 The early days of SGAG49:04 Land grabbing tactics used by SGAG51:42 Distinguishing SGAG from other similar pages56:40 Selling vulgar T-shirts59:18 How the business deal with Scoot happened1:00:57 Changing the engine of a plane in mid-air1:06:03 Your failure makes you more valuable1:07:26 Building a creatorsā network1:15:58 How COVID-19 impacted Karl & HEPMIL Media GroupšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/55Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
7/19/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 27 minutes, 55 seconds
Ep 54: Yulia Brodskaya (Paper Artist & Illustrator)
Ep 53: Rahul Chaudhary - MD & CEO, CG Corp Global & CG Hospitality Holdings - on running a 140-year family empire
Rahul Chaudhary is the Managing Director & CEO at CG Corp Global and CG Hospitality Holdings. And the second son of Binod Chaudhary, who is the first & only Forbes-listed multi-billionaire from Nepal!Ā In this STIMY episode, Rahul shares what itās like being the 4th-generation heir of a 140-year family business empire, starting from being a sporting champion at boarding school to striking his first business deal in New York, where everything that could possibly go wrong, did!And how the CG Hospitality arm has grown and even thrived during the global pandemic.Highlights:3:12 Rahulās great-grandfather, whose birth is taken as the genesis of the Chaudhary Group6:48 Core family values10:43 Always focusing on the good18:02 Civil war in Nepal20:30 Striking his first business deal, where everything went wrong28:34 Leaving the US for opportunities in Asia31:54 Forging a partnership with the Taj Group39:44 Creating CGās own hospitality brand, Zinc42:19 Entering Dubai46:25 Starting Prestellar Ventures, CGās own VC fund51:17 The CG Foundation & how itās helped out during the 2015 earthquake in Nepal & the global pandemic54:45 Becoming aware of the severity of the COVID-19 pandemic59:36 Changes that have allowed CGās hotels to thrive during the pandemicšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/53Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
7/4/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 13 minutes, 27 seconds
Ep 52: Kendrick Nguyen (Co-Founder of Republic) - on Creating the Amazon of Private Investing
Kendrick Nguyen is the co-founder & CEO of Republic - one of the USās top equity crowdfunding platforms where over USD$ 100 million has already been raised in just 2021 alone. And boasts a heavily curated list of startups that, according to Kendrick, is harder to get into than Harvard!Before Republic, Kendrick was a trading and securities lawyer at Wall Street. Knowing that this wasnāt for him, he eventually transitioned into becoming a Stanford teaching fellow and COO of Kanbar Enterprises. He later became the General Counsel of Angellist (also its first non-engineering hire!) and simultaneously spearheaded Angellistās expansion into Canada and Europe and the launch of various products.Ā That is, until the JOBS Act passed, which changed the investment landscape and allowed non-accredited investors (i.e. anyone regardless of net worth) invest in startups.Ā With the blessing (and investment!) of Angellist before him, Kendrick decided to launch his own startup, Republic, with the ultimate aim of becoming the Amazon of private investing. Where anyone can invest in the next potential Uber or Airbnb for as little as $10.Ā Ā Highlights:3:26 Studying neuroscience & law at Berkeley and Oxford4:38 Becoming a securities & patent litigatorĀ 7:20 Becoming a teaching fellow at Stanford University11:48 Joining AngelList as its General Counsel & first non-engineering hire14:22 The JOBS Act16:04 The vision for Republic to become the Amazon of private investing17:51 Telling the AngelList board that he wanted to quit & launch his own startup19:46 Getting 2 investments out of 250 VCs in 8 months25:12 Republicās curation process28:25 The different lens between Republic and VCs31:38 Allowing a 12-year-old founder to raise funds on Republic?!34:48 Getting deal flow37:43 Why startups would raise on Republic & not from other VCs39:47 Republicās business model42:12 Hallmarks of successful campaigns on Republic43:53 How Sahil Lavingia (founder of Gumroad) raised USD $5 million in 12 hours from just under 7,000 investors45:51 How founders can activate their community51:06 Distinguishing Republic from other competitors52:54 Republic Notes - launching Republicās own digital tokens54:29 Partnership with Meet the Drapers television show1:00:21 Use of Republicās recent $36 million for Series AšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/52Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
6/21/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 8 minutes, 28 seconds
Ep 51.2: Nick Bernstein (Senior Vice President, Late Night Programming (West Coast), ViacomCBS) - on the Pete Holmes show & Late Late Show with James Corden
Nick Bernstein isĀ the Senior Vice President of Late Night Programming (West Coast) at ViacomCBS & is the executive in charge of the Late Late Show with James Corden.Ā In Part 2 of this STIMY episode with Nick, we explore how the Comcast's 51% acquisition of NBC Universal impacted Nick personally, how he ended up being the executive producer of the Pete Holmes show & ultimately (currently!) the executive in charge of the Late Late Show with James Corden.Ā Nick talks aboutĀ allĀ things related to the Late Late show including his initial conversation with Nina Tassler (then President of CBS), how the show has transformed over the past 5 years, the impact the global pandemic has had on them and not forgetting, how Nick ended up inĀ frontĀ of the cameras (with his own camera and mic!).Highlights:16:19 The announcement that James Corden would take over the 12.30 show17:58 Speaking with Nina Tassler (then President of CBS)19:45 The mad dash to get the Late, Late show ready for launch23:25 How Carpool Karaoke came about26:14 Why the Justin Bieber Carpool Karaoke video exploded on YouTube27:38 When Nick felt that the Late, Late show had āmade itā31:37 Jumping out of a plane with Tom Cruise33:01 Having a direct relationship with fans of the show36:58 āKidnap One Directionā?38:30 Impact of the global pandemic on the Late, Late show43:57 How Nick ended up on the show itself!47:47 GAP clothes, Carnival Cruiseā¦ updates?52:17 Advice for those wanting to be just like Nick BernsteinšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/51-2Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
6/16/2021 ā¢ 59 minutes, 33 seconds
Ep 51.1: Nick Bernstein (Senior Vice President, Late Night Programming (West Coast), ViacomCBS)
Nick Bernstein is the Senior Vice President of Late Night Programming (West Coast) at ViacomCBS & is the executive in charge of the Late Late Show with James Corden.Ā In Part 1 of this episode with Nick, we explore what it was like growing up in Maryland and how he would spend 4 hours every Sunday morning charting Americaās Top 40 biggest hits on radio, the impact that Camp Taconic had & continues to have in his life, and how he ended up being an NBC page and working with legendary late night television executive, Rick Ludwin.Highlights:7:04: Why summer camps were & continue to be so important to Nick15:13: Majoring in broadcast journalism at Syracuse University19:28: How Nick became a NBC pageĀ 24:39: How Nick ended up working for Rick Ludwin, whoās worked with every The Tonight Show host from Steve Allen to Jimmy Fallon30:28: What makes a good host33:11: Why Rick was a āman of convictionā who stood behind hosts like Conan OāBrien when no one else would39:05: Believing that Conan OāBrien & Jimmy Fallon were the future of late night back in 200242:41: Replacing late night hosts48:41: The Conan/Jay Leno debacle56:00: Giving as much runway to shows as possible orā¦ not?šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/51-1Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
6/13/2021 ā¢ 59 minutes, 58 seconds
Ep 50.2: Ning-Geng Ong (Founder, Chocolate Concierge & Culture Cacao)
PART 2 of STIMYās interview with Ning-Geng Ong - Artisan chocolate maker, farmer, and founder of Chocolate Concierge & Culture Cacao.For Part 1, please refer to the earlier episode.Ā Highlights:2:48: How the signature flavours of chocolate are brought out4:34: What Ning means by saying he is āfiercely unbendingā12:10: Why Ning runs fermentation anywhere between 6 to 71 days!18:23: The sheltered, sun-drying process21:54: Creating some of Chocolate Conciergeās signature flavours, including Assam laksa and nasi kerabu bon bon34:10: Impact of the global pandemic37:24: Advice for those seeking to be chocolate makers toošShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/50-2Ā ļ»æšĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
6/9/2021 ā¢ 47 minutes, 19 seconds
Ep 50.1: Ning-Geng Ong (Founder, Chocolate Concierge & Culture Cacao)
Part 1 of STIMY's episode with Ning-Geng Ong - a farmer, chocolate marker, flavour fanatic and founder of Chocolate Concierge & Culture Cacao, where he makes incredible single-origin Malaysian chocolate.Ā In this episode, Ning shares his journey from majoring in physics and computer science, to founding a business in chocolate making. In particular, what it is like working with the indigenous community (including stories involving tigers, a durian thief and a murder!).Highlights:2:31: Loving the outdoors (the dangers of being a boy scout!)5:52: Backpacking in Europe6:59: Doing programming work11:53: Diving into the world of fermentation17:37: Why chocolate making stood out21:39: Cocoa seeds taste like.. Unicorn milk?!24:26: Obsessing over creating Malaysian single origin flavour25:08: Chocolate-making process26:33: Creating the universe27:08: Why Ning struggled to find reliable cocoa beans30:13: Starting Culture Cacao32:11: Living with the Semai community38:38: Tigers40:15: Durian thief!44:17: Not having a contractual arrangement with the indigenous community49:08: Struggling to get cocoa beans from the indigenous community50:52: Giving up?Stay tuned for PART 2 of Ning's episode, coming out this Wednesday!šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/50-1Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
6/6/2021 ā¢ 53 minutes, 11 seconds
Ep 49: Dato' Thomas Mun Lung Lee - Senior Partner, Lee Hishammuddin Allen & Gledhill & son of Tun HS Lee (Malaysia's 1st Finance Minister)
Datoā Thomas Mun Lung Lee is a Senior Partner & founding member of Lee Hishammuddin Allen & Gledhill - one of the largest law firms in Malaysia. He was also previously Chairman of AIA Public Takaful Bhd and AIA Malaysia Berhad, had directorships at AIG Malaysia Insurance Berhad, was a member of the Appeals Committee of Bursa Malaysia Berhad and Chairman and Non-Executive Director Alliance Bank Malaysia Bhd & Alliance Merchant Bank Berhad. He also served on the Board of UMW Holdings Berhad, Saujana Resort (M) Berhad and Bank of America Malaysia Berhad.In addition, Datoā Thomas was an arbitrator with the Court of Arbitration for Sport, Lausanne, Switzerland and a member of the Ad Hoc Panel of Arbitrators at the 1988 Commonwealth games at KL, the Commonwealth Games 2006 at Melbourne, the Olympic Games 2000 at Sydney, Olympic Games 2008 at Beijing & Olympic Games 2012 at London.Last but not least, he is also the son of Tun HS Lee - Malaysiaās first Finance Minister!In this episode, we cover Datoā Thomasā life story, beginning with his earliest memories (of air raid sirens & bombs dropping over Kuala Lumpur!) to then fleeing to India after the Japanese placed a bounty on his fatherās head, and how he eventually made his way to the UK with his brother for his studies at the age of 13.Ā And his fascinating legal career, which included being in the same pupil batch as Tun Hussein Onn (who eventually became Malaysiaās 3rd Prime Minister) & Chan Sek Keong (who became the 3rd Chief Justice of Singapore).Highlights:1:57: Earliest memories of air raid sirens & bombs2:40: Fleeing to India7:52: Living under the British imposed emergency rule during the height of the communist insurgency9:42: Travelling to the UK from Malaysia via a 3-week boat through the Suez Canal10:42: Studying at Leys School, Cambridge14:14: Being guided to study law at St Johnās, Cambridge University16:29: Working as a tourist guide at Costa Brava, Spain18:36: Completing a pupillage at 2 Crown Office in the 1950/60s27:20: What KL & the Malaysian legal scene was like in the 1960s28:54: Beginning his career in debt collection30:34: Seeing Bannon & Bailey dissolve in 1963 & joining Skrine & Co31:15: Why Datoā Thomas wanted to be like John Skrine32:19: āDonāt harbour a grudge. Life is too short for that.ā - John Skrine34:24: Working in the same pupil batch as Hussein Onn36:12: Impact of 13 May 196937:57: Royal Selangor Golf Club39:30: What Tunku Abdul Rahman was like in person40:29: What Tun Dr Ismail was like in person41:06: Setting up of Lee Hishammuddin in 199344:06: Turning down 2 offers to join the judiciary (including the Court of Appeal!)45:03: Whether he ever felt pressured by his fatherās legacyšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/49Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
5/25/2021 ā¢ 55 minutes, 3 seconds
Ep 48: Oz Pearlman (Emmy Award-Winning Mentalist & America's Got Talent Finalist)
Oz Pearlman is an Emmy award-winning mentalist & magician who recently emerged as the runner up & finalist in Americaās Got Talent Season 10 in 2015.Ā In this STIMY, Oz shares what he was like as a child, discovering magic on a cruise ship to Bermuda and how that transformed his life as he obsessed over mastering magic.Ā Oz got so good, he paid his own way through college and even continued it as a side hustle while working at Merrill Lynch before deciding to take the leap & become a full-time mentalist.Ā He hasnāt looked back since.Ā Oz Pearlman has performed for an impressive list of A-list celebrities, Fortune 500 companies, politicians and professional athletes, and also appeared on numerous networks including NBCās Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, The TODAY Show & ABC World News. He is also an avid marathon & ultra-marathon runner, having competed in events like the Badwater 135 Miler, Hawaii Ironman World Championships, Western States 100 and Spartathlon.Highlights:3:47: Being a child math prodigy (scored a perfect 800 for his SATs at age 12)4:36: Discovering a love of magic6:19: Meeting Ryan Hertz & Bruce Kessler9:41: Getting his first magic gig at age 1412:13: Knowing how to break the ice with strangers16:34: Deciding to stay behind in USA & pay for himself through college19:00: Finding his own magic community20:49: The balance between sharing magic tricks & keeping your secrets to yourself26:54: Simple magic tricks for anyone to learn31:30: The Off Broadway Show, Watch Magic, that attracted Ethan Hawke & the New York Times35:44: āMaking itā as a full-time, freelance magician37:46: Why Oz thinks he didnāt make it the first time he applied for Americaās Got Talent in 201238:46: Coming up with new magic tricks on AGT within days39:56: Competing on Americaās Got Talent while training for 3 marathons!43:17: Impact of COVID-19 on Ozās businessšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/48Ā
5/16/2021 ā¢ 52 minutes, 49 seconds
Ep 47: Lincoln Lee Ming (Co-Founder, Rice Inc & Winner of HULT Prize 2018)
Lincoln Lee Ming is a Malaysian social entrepreneur, biomedical science graduate from University College London, UK & founder of a social enterprise called Rice Inc., which seeks to combat the 26 million tons of rice wasted during production every year & help smallholder rice farmers break through the convoluted supply chainĀ In this STIMY episode, we cover how Lincolnās entrepreneurial streak first came up in his childhood in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (beginning at the age of 13!) and how he tried to organise a Pokemon Walkathon just before leaving for his university studies.Having arrived at UCL, Lincoln quickly realised in his second year that he wanted to pivot to business / entrepreneurship. He also learned about the most prestigious startup competition for university students: the $1 million HULT Prize - which is said to be harder to win than the lottery!The HULT Prize took an entire year & came with lots of ups and down. Lincoln shares the experience of being at the finals (judges included Arianna Huffington!), how they have used the $1 million investment they won from the HULT Prize, the impact of Brexit & COVID-19 on Rice Inc's operations, and what drives him to do what he is now doing.Highlights:4:43: Losing his parentsā money at age 13 when dabbling in entrepreneurship8:10: Running a past year paper printing startup (by pretending to still be students!)12:17: Organising a Pokemon Walkathon19:04: Learning about the $1 million HULT Prize21:52: Finding a problem to solve33:29: Introducing big changes after UCL & regional HULT Prize rounds34:54: Raising $20,000 in funds to visit Myanmar & run a pilot program45:58: Adventures in MyanmarĀ 51:29: Girls following Kisum53:38: Attending the HULT Prize accelerator at Henry VIIās former residenceĀ 55:46: Working & playing (too) hard59:59: Building connections with high-ranking people1:03:16: How a UN security guard helped Sunrice / Rice Inc win the HULT Prize competition in New York1:13:21: Getting stuck inside the UN building at midnight1:17:33: Balancing winning the HULT Prize with getting a 1st class at UCL1:20:33: What to do with an investment of $1 million at age 191:22:34: Impact of Brexit on Rice Incās operation1:24:02: Getting into the top 5 caterer distribution services & meeting with the Board1:28:47: What keeps Lincoln going1:30:07: When Lincoln knew that there was nothing else he would rather be doing than this (Rice Inc)šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/47Ā
5/9/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 36 minutes, 39 seconds
Ep 46: Azran Osman-Rani (CEO of Naluri Hidup; formerly CEO of AirAsia X & iFlix)
Azran Osman-Rani is one of Malaysia's most well-known CEOs & entrepreneur and in this STIMY episode, we cover his colourful & highly impressive career that has included being:CEO and Co-Founder, Naluri Hidup (now)CEO of iflix Malaysia. Dragon-Keeper of the TaoCEO, AirAsia X BerhadSenior Director, Business Development, Astro All Asia Networks plcSenior Vice President, Kuala Lumpur Stock ExchangeAssociate Partner, McKinsey & CompanyAssociate, Booz Allen & HamiltonĀ But how did it all begin?ChildhoodGrowing up with two professors for parents, Azran was always encouraged to speak up and speak out. This began when he was just 4 years old, where he would participate in adult conversations with his parentsā visiting guests that other professors.Stanford UniversityAzran eventually went to Stanford University to pursue a degree in electrical engineering although he did end up doing the barest minimum amount of engineering classes required. Instead, he ended up taking lessons in history, culture, psychology, economics, ballroom dancing and even sailing!Ā After completing his masters, Azran ended up becoming a management consultant first at Booz Allen Hamilton, then McKinsey. He eventually left for Bursa Malaysia, which set him on his incredible path as an entrepreneur.Highlights:6:37: Studying at Stanford University before the dot com boom8:01: Ultimate frisbee13:45: Working at Booz Allen Hamilton14:25: Bombing his client presentation & being warned he would be kicked out if he repeated his performance14:25: Moving to Korea for work16:18: Earning the trust of his Korean clients20:28: Working to turn the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange from a nonprofit government linked organisation to a for-profit company (Bursa Malaysia)25:14: Phone call 1 that led him to Astro All Asia Networks27:06: His big failure at Astro, where he had to shut down their Indonesian business & letting go of 450 staff28:42: Phone call 2 from Tony Fernandes that led to him becoming CEO of AirAsia X30:16: AirAsia Xās value proposition31:27: Building a sustainable airline business model36:47: Making the pitch of a lifetime to the European export credit agency to save AirAsia X39:34: Securing an upward flow of information47:06: AirAsia Xās $15 million in-flight entertainment mistake50:47: Staying ahead of the competition51:47: Becoming CEO of iFlix54:13: Starting iFlix with a few people & laptops, but no product!56:14: How iFlix gained 1 million subscribers, 6 months after its launch1:00:03: Learning about Omada Health1:01:41: Launching Naluri Hidup1:02:59: Why Azran bet his kidsā education, life savings etc. on Naluri Hidup1:07:00: The importance of localisation1:10:25: Educating the public about digital health1:11:10: Why Azran is a YouTuber & active content creator1:11:58: A life-changing car accident in May 20181:12:32: How Azran kept going & completed his Ironman 6 months after his brutal car accident!1:15:31: Fundraising before & during COVID-191:17:05: Azranās mirrors to deal with his confirmation biasšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/46Ā Ā Ā Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
4/29/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 24 minutes, 53 seconds
Ep 45: Pui Wan Lim ("Picoworm") - Life of a Professional Miniature Artist
Lim Pui Wan is a Malaysian miniature artist who discovered her love of miniatures at the age of 14 and has, since 2014 under āPicowormā, become a full-time professional miniature artist. In 2020, she was even part of Ryan Reynoldās āRyan Doesnāt Knowā Snapchat series!In this STIMY episode, Pui Wan shares what it takes to forge a path to becoming a professional miniature artist.Ā Highlights:4:10: Figuring out how to make miniature art8:02: Making her first miniature art9:08: Joining her first competition by remaking a Studio Ghibli dollhouse!11:25: Behind-the-scenes of najubg nubuatyre art14:17: Why she loves capturing dirt16:52: Why Pui Wan loves Chinatown22:42: Why she ended up studying mechanical engineering24:08: Being tempted to drop out of university early27:31: Turning a hobby into a business28:15: Doing market testing31:23: Pricing her works33:33: Her first commercial sell34:43: Giving up?36:45: Filming with Ryan Reynolds40:06: Advice for those who want to become miniature artistsĀ 43:33: Making personal miniature art every week for the year 2021 šShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/45Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
4/20/2021 ā¢ 52 minutes, 51 seconds
Ep 44: Joe Sidek - Festival Director, George Town Festival
Best Known as director of the George Town Festival, Joe Sidek has established himself as one of Malaysiaās strong advocates for the arts.Prior to becoming a festival director, Joe Sidek played major roles in various forms of art expression ā from event management, art curator-ship, restaurant ownership and even costume design. He also still runs his familyāowned textile chemical factory, Chemdyes Sdn Bhd.Since 2010 when he began GTF, in 2018, Joe also directed the 3-year-old Rainforest Fringe Festival in Kuching, having founded the festival in 2017. He also helmed the Butterworth Fringe Festival for 3 years (2015ā2017) and earlier in 2014, he brought Tropfest, the worldās largest short film festival to Southeast Asia and showcased the inaugural Tropfest South East Asia in Penang.He is 2020-2022 chairman of Federation of Asian Cultural Promotion, an industry expert on the industry panel of Malaysian federal agency for the arts and culture, Cultural Economy Development Agency (CENDANA), and chairman of Penang Arts Council.In this STIMY episode, Joe shares his fascinating life story: from wanting to do art in Central Saint Martins to returning to Malaysia, recovering from his first āfailedā festival to eventually be one of Malaysiaās biggest, and most well-known advocate for the arts & culture!Highlights:1:52: Joe has noble blood!3:18: Moving to Penang3:42: Why Joe thinks Penangites are āarrogant, confident, and proud of who they areā4:36: Wanting to do art in London & John Galliano5:45: Not wanting to return home6:50: His relationship with his dad10:37: Taking over the family business11:35: Why Joeās first festival in 2001 failed14:33: Becoming the festival director of the George Town FestivalĀ 17:02: Getting help from the Penang Chief Minister19:15: Why Joe brings in not just local, but also international artists21:48: How Ernest Zacharevic got involved in the George Town Festival (resulting in the subsequent street art boom!)24:01: Gentrification & over-commercialisation24:54: GTFās student and community tickets project31:49: Finding historical, old & meaningful places to stage GTF32:41: The biggest challenges of a festival director35:50: Artists that have adapted well to COVID/virtual world37:50: How artists can build their personal brand & stand outĀ 42:21: How to become a festival director49:45: Where artists can find their communityšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/44Ā Ā ļ»æšĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
4/14/2021 ā¢ 53 minutes, 15 seconds
Ep 43: Nicky Gumbel (Vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton, London & Pioneer of the Alpha Course)
Nicky Gumbel is an English Anglican priest, vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton, London and pioneer of the Alpha Course - a course that has reached over 25 million people who are looking to discover the meaning to life!This episode is so special to me not least because I used to attend HTB myself!Ā In this STIMY episode, we explore Nickyās incredible faith journey - how he went from being an argumentative atheist to someone completely on fire for God! - and what HTB and the Alpha course was like back in the 1970s, including the pivotal moments that led to what it is today. As well as his thoughts on online church and online Alpha!Highlights:3:48: Growing up in London in the 1950s5:13: Having an eventful conversation with his mum at the age of 1411:44: Why Nicky labelled himself a ālogical deterministā while at Eton12:50: Why Nicky entered Cambridge University to do economics (before switching to law!)13:56: The Nicky lunches15:02: Coming to faith in February 197419:46: How Nicky ended up in Kitchen with Phil Lawson Johnston22:13: How Sandy Miller came into Nickyās life24:01: The change in HTB culture from robed choirs to contemporary worship26:25: Why Nicky went from working as a barrister in a tax chamber to criminal then a mix set27:34: Meeting John Wimber in 198128:10: āCome, Holy Spiritā 29:23: Why Nicky studied theology at Oxford30:46: Learning that he had tied his self-esteem to his job32:12: Being rejected from 9 parishes!32:55: How Nicky went from Agnostics Anonymous to the Alpha course35:36: How the first Alpha training conference in May 1993 came about37:58: The 1994 Toronto blessing that spread to HTB39:35: Alpha Asia Pacific40:42: Doing online church & online Alpha42:34: Where Nicky gets his drive fromShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/43Ā
4/3/2021 ā¢ 46 minutes, 7 seconds
Ep 42: Wai Ken Wong - Country Manager, StashAway (Malaysia)
Wai Ken Wong is the Country Manager of StashAway (Malaysia). He first worked in investments in Khazanah Nasional Berhad, then became the Vice President of the Equity Capital Markets at Affin Hwang Capital, before entering the startup world.Ā Want to learn what it's like working in the fintech startup world, all things investments & the intricacies of how StashAway is set up?This is the episode for you!Highlights:2:38: Using ang pow money to invest in unit trusts6:10: Why he moved to Australia at the age of 167:54: Enjoying business9:24: Whether Wai Ken was ever tempted to drop out of college to launch a startup10:41: What drove Wai Ken to start working while still studying17:56: Working in Khazanah21:33: Working with Dato Hisham22:35: Working at Affin Hwang26:07: Why Wai Ken decided to join StashAway - then a 2-year-old startup that began in Singapore32:13: Whether he had any doubts about joining StashAway33:34: His role as Country Manager from Day 135:36: How Wai Ken built a 5000 person waiting list before StashAway launched in Malaysia41:42: The role of content creation in StashAway44:27: What does ārobo advisoryā mean?47:38: Robo Advisory v ETFs49:51: StashAwayās investment framework - known as the Economic Regime Base Asset Allocation (ERAA)52:40: How StashAway came up with its risk index54:56: Guaranteeing a 1% chance of your portfolio dropping?57:17: How StashAway categorises risk1:01:58: Will customers get to determine their own assets with StashAway in the future?1:04:44: StashAway Simple1:06:51: Why StashAway Simple doesnāt have PIDM protection1:09:01: What guarantees StashAway has for its customers1:11:51: How StashAway came up with its projected rate of 2.4% for StashAway Simple1:14:05: How StashAway compares to Wahed & MyTheo1:15:47: Whether StashAway will ever invest in crypto1:17:53: StashAwayās Series B & Series C fundraising rounds1:22: What do the rich know, that the poor should know?šShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/42šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
3/29/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 28 minutes
Ep 41: Richard Lui (MSNBC & NBC News TV Anchor & Producer of Sky Blossom)
Richard Lui is a TV news anchor for MSNBC and NBC News and was previously at CNN Worldwide, where he became the first Asian American male to anchor a daily, national cable news show. He also earned the Peabody and Emmy awards for his team reporting at CNN during Hurricane Katrina and the Gulf Oil Spill. Mediaite ranked Richard among the top 100 in news buzz on its "Power Grid Influence Index of TV Anchors and Hosts" & was also listed by Business Insider as one of 21 dynamic careers to watch alongside Warren Buffett and Mark Cuban.In addition, Richard is also a columnist for USA Today, Politico, The Seattle Times, Detroit Free Press and San Francisco Chronicles.Prior to journalism, Richard spent 15 years working with Fortune 500 and tech companies, including at Citibank where he co-founded the first bank-centric payment system.Ā But how did it all begin?Highlight:3:12: Why Richardās real last name is āWongā, not āLuiā6:05: Learning to be selfless11:10: Learning kungfu from a Shaolin temple master12:23: Working at Mrs Fields Cookies15:41: Being exposed to politics20:25: Going back to college21:32: Working at KALX radio station, reporting on Senor Dianne Feinstein, Magic Johnson and Rodney King24:04: How Mike Breslin influenced Richard at Clean Environment Equipment16:18: Working at Citibank in Singapore29:38: Working at Channelnews Asia31:19: Working at CNN Worldwide35:36: Winning the Peabody & Emmy awards38:19: Reporting on humanitarian issues & offering a helping hand40:00: Being a 7-year-old feminist42:02: What feminism means to Richard43:36: Learning of his fatherās Alzheimers46:59: Traveling ā million miles a year47:48: Coming up with a family caregiving plan48:36: Knowing when to let go & whether they are keeping their dad around for too long52:59: Richardās new book, Enough About Me: The Unexpected Power of Selflessness54:49: Three lunches56:26: Why Richard produced Sky Blossom58:07: The meaning behind āSky Blossomā1:00:59: Why joy is featured so prominently in Sky BlossomšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/41Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
3/20/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 8 minutes, 5 seconds
Ep 40: The Woke Salaryman (ft. He Ruiming & Goh Wei Choon) - on building a 400+k following in less than 2 years!
He Ruiming & Goh Wei Choon are the Singaporean/Malaysia duo behind The Woke Salaryman: an incredible personal finance page that educates people about making better financial and life choices through the use of simple albeit beautiful comics.Ā Since 2019, they have rapidly grown to over 204k followers on Instagram & 218k on Facebook - and we spend this STIMY interview uncovering how they first met and began building their Woke Salaryman brand: creating a consistent publishing schedule, dividing the work among themselves, getting their first piece of sponsored content, negotiating with clients, their thoughts on what the secrets are to virality, expanding the team and more.3:27: Wei Choonās love of animation since young4:39: The impact that the 1997 economic crisis had on Ruiming5:53: How Ruiming was blogging & writing gossipy columns in school7:44: How Wei Choon & Ruiming met at Ngee Ann Polytechnic12:23: Not letting anything sully his art13:57: Wei Choonās wake up moment when he graduated with a $25k debt21:23: The meaning behind creating āimpactāĀ 25:27: The āsecretā to creating viral content26:14: Where virality was attached to their sense of self-worth31:52: How Wei Choon got into personal finance33:03: What ābeing richā means to Wei Choon34:10: Writing the viral article on saving $100,000 before turning 3037:48: The start of the Woke Salaryman39:31: Figuring out the division of labour42:40: How they stayed consistent in publishing regular content46:56: Discovering that financial planners were stealing the Woke Salaryman content53:38: Planning to go full-time on the Woke Salaryman56:34: The āsecretā behind the virality of the Woke Salaryman, which is now over 204k strong on Instagram!57:18: Building a passionate communityĀ 59:35: Getting their first sponsored post from CPFĀ 1:01:49: Staying true to their values & turning away opportunitiesĀ 1:06:02: Negotiating with clientsĀ 1:07:25: Expanding the team for the Woke Salaryman1:15:45: Biggest highlights to dateĀ 1:17:31: What drives Wei Choon & Ruiming1:21:32: Tangible steps for people to begin their personal finance journey1:25:27: Advice for content creatorsĀ 1:28:32: What Clubhouse means to themšShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/40šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
3/15/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 36 minutes, 13 seconds
Ep 39: Guy Kawasaki - Chief Evangelist of Canva (formerly at Apple), Podcaster, Book Author, Venture Capitalist & Serial Entrepreneur
Guy Kawasaki is the chief evangelist of Canva and the creator of Guy Kawasakiās Remarkable People podcast. He is an executive fellow of the Haas School of Business (UC Berkeley) and an adjunct professor of the University of New South Wales. He was the chief evangelist of Apple and a trustee of the Wikimedia Foundation. He has written Wise Guy, The Art of the Start 2.0, The Art of Social Media, Enchantment, and eleven other books. Kawasaki has a BA from Stanford University, an MBA from UCLA, and an honorary doctorate from Babson College.Ā Ā Ā In this STIMY episode, we explore what it was like growing up in Honolulu, Hawaii and the important people/events that set Guy on the path to becoming one of the world's most well-known brand evangelists!Highlights: 3:09: Growing up in Kalihi Valley4:17: Harold Keebles - one of the toughest teachers Guy ever had5:11: Stanford in the 1970s5:45: Why Guy quit law school after 2 weeks6:59: Working at a jewellery manufacture company7:26: Why Guy describes sales as hand-to-hand combat9:28: Getting into Apple through nepotism10:22: What it was like working at Apple in the 1980s11:24: How Apple was set up then13:29: Why Guy quit Apple for the first time15:00: Why Apple rejoined Apple in the 1990s, when everyone thought the company would die15:41: What a Chief Evangelist does16:11: The Evange-List18:02: How Guy first got involved in Canva19:29: Guyās role in CanvaĀ 21:19: Building brand awareness22:54: Getting into podcastingĀ 24:33: Getting Jane Goodall as his first podcast guest28:08: How Guy first got onto Clubhouse29:32: How Guy decides who to let onto the Clubhouse stage in his AMA roomsĀ 31:02: What Guy thinks Clubhouse needs to achieve to go mainstream32:19: Why Guy keeps giving out his personal email freelyShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/39
3/7/2021 ā¢ 35 minutes, 45 seconds
Ep 38: John Kim [Managing Partner, Amasia; Vlogger, Musician & Serial Entrepreneur]
John Yohan Kim serves as Managing Partner at Amasia, a cross-border venture capital firm that helps technology companies get global. He is a Kauffman Fellow, a Term Member at the Council of Foreign Relations, a member of the Young Leader's Circle at the Milken Institute and serves on various corporate and non-profit boards including those of Dialpad Communications, Kairos Society Asean and the Choson Exchange.But before all that, John began his career as a serial entrepreneur, founding a music internet and e-consulting business called The Y Group before joining as a violinist in the Ally, where he toured around the US and collaborated with top artists across the US and Korea, most notably receiving a platinum record for contributing to an album with Grammy Award winner, Brandy.Ā All of that ended when John realised that he was still depressed despite pursuing his passion in music and during one performance, he heard Godās voice calling him to come home. Which kickstarted a journey that took him from the USA to Korea and now, Singapore.Ā Highlights:3:36: Being a rebel to be accepted by society6:04: Suffering senioritis & nearly losing his place in University of Pennsylvania!Ā 9:04: Hearing God telling him to āCome homeā17:56: Joining the rock band, The Ally, as a performing musician19:09: Getting a platinum record for contributing to Grammy award-winning Brandyās album22:25: Crossing paths with Johnā¦ Legend!29:35: Pivoting from music to hedge funds31:56: Corporate culture in Asia versus the West33:18: Co-founding his own VC firm, Amasia41:22: God is not a vending machine43:25: Workplace conflict when work clashes with faithĀ 54:57: Amasiaās 4Rs of Behaviour Change58:01: Investing in Dialpad1:05:00: Hearing God tell him to become a vlogger1:06:00: Meeting Nuseir Yassin of Nasdaily1:09:00: What Nas advised John to go from 200 views to 170k views and now, almost 1 million views!1:12:23: Involving his family in his vlogs1:17:14: Thoughts on ClubhousešShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/38Ā šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
3/1/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 26 minutes, 16 seconds
Ep 37: Kai Yuan Ng (Co-Founder, Our Grandfather Story)
Ng Kai Yuan is the co-founder of Our Grandfather Story: a Singapore-based digital publisher dedicated to uncovering timeless and overlooked stories across Southeast Asia.Founded in 2017 with three other co-founders, Our Grandfather Story started as a school project! More specifically, an assignment for an Advance Photojournalism module at Nanyang Technological University. All four college students were tasked with coming up with a digital startup and the first video they created was on Singaporeās distinctive green & pink ice-cream sandwich bread.Ā To their surprise, the video went viral! And after acquiring investors (while still in college) and big corporate clients including Nippon Paint, Temasek Holdings & Singaporeās National Heritage Board, the four friends decided to turn their assignment into a real startup.And in this STIMY episode, Kai Yuan shares exactly how that happened.Ā Highlights:4:51: Getting an advance photojournalism assignment that sparked the genesis of Our Grandfather Story6:40: Why they named it āOur Grandfather Storyā7:17: Coming up with the concept of Singaporeās Ice-cream bread video, which went viral!10:50: Turning a college assignment into a full-fledged digital media publishing company, OGS11:30: Obtaining a seed investment of $50,00012:09: Reaction from friends & family14:46: Securing corporate clients without any track record17:20: Managing budget while growing the team in the early days of OGS18:18: OGSā target market20:16: Focusing on food content23:11: How OGS uncovered āuntoldā stories24:06: The most unique & ākepoā way that OGS has used to obtain a story26:22: OGSā biggest success - the Can Ask Meh? Series28:56: How OGS created the video on āParents Who Lost a Childā for the Can Ask Meh series30:35: Remaining sensitive to the questions asked32:57: Creating O+ - the animation illustration arm of OGS34:38: Creating the Something Private podcast37:13: How OGS has gained its dedicated following - in 3 years, OGS has grown to over 300k on Facebook, 250k on YouTube & 70k on Instagram.Ā 39:07: Sharing Southeast Asian stories during the COVID-19 pandemic40:01: Who OGS is looking for to join the team41:34: Maintaining relationships with the people they meet for OGS storiesšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/37šĀ Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
2/21/2021 ā¢ 48 minutes, 34 seconds
Ep 36: Kyne Santos (OnlineKyne): Mathematician, Tik Tok Star & Drag Queen (starred in Canada's Drag Race)
Kyne is the stage name of Kyne Santos: a mathematician, YouTube/Tik Tok star with nearly 1 million followers collectively, Drag Queen & contestant in Season 1 of Canadaās Drag Race.Born in Manila, Philippines, Kyne moved to Kitchener, Ontario at the age of 5 with his family. Since young, mathematics and academics were a priority at home and he developed a love and knack for it.In Grade, 9, Kyne began experimenting with makeup. What started out as almost invisible menās makeup turned into full-blown, dramatic horror makeup that he would then post on his YouTube channel as part of his repertoire of makeup tutorials! This consequently led him down the path to becoming a Tik Tok drag queen star & contestant on Canada's Drag Race!Highlights:2:34: Maths & academics as a priority since childhood3:27: Wanting to be a priest at the age of 125:07: Coming out6:28: Experimenting with makeup at the age of 14/1510:15: Wearing makeup to schoolĀ 12:46: How Kyneās understanding of drag evolved over time15:18: Coming up with his drag aesthetics16:04: Finding maths to be very beautiful and elegant19:45: Maths can be used for evil or for the social good22:01: Joining Tik Tok & posting short educational math videos while in drag26:30: How Kyneās video showed that the graph for Georgiaās coronavirus cases was misleading, and how it resulted in officials changing the graph and issuing an apology27:13: What constitutes a faulty graph?28:36: Participating in Canadaās Drag Race30:46: Facing backlash after Canadaās Drag Race premiered32:15: Advice for those wanting to get into dragšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/36š Ā Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605āĀ
2/14/2021 ā¢ 38 minutes, 3 seconds
Ep 35: Chye Neo Chong - ex-MD of IBM Malaysia
Chye Neo Chong is the former Managing Director of IBM Malaysia with over 30 years in the information technology industry, and current independent director at Hong Leong Financial Group and Bursa Malaysia.Ā Chye was appointed to the role of MD in 2015, becoming the first woman to helm the company in its 57-year history in Malaysia and was also awarded the CEO Champion Award by Talentcorp in 2015 and recognised by the Malaysian Business publication as one of Malaysiaās Women of Influence in April 2018.Highlights:1:36: Growing up with 5 siblings (including an elder twin sister!)3:22: Why Chye studied computer science at University of Science, Malaysia4:47: Working as a software development engineer in Penang10:26: How Chye managed to get so many work opportunities coming her way (without applying for them!)12:06: Why Chye turned down the opportunity to be the MD/CEO of IBM Malaysia in 200714:36: Does Chye regret her decision to reject the position of CEO?16:08: Taking 2 sabbaticals at the peak of her career19:03: What am I worth without my (work) title?23:33: Staying relevant while being on year-long sabbaticals25:26: Returning to IBM & becoming MD/CEO of IBM Malaysia (the first woman to do so in its 57-year history in Malaysia!)32:49: Leaving a legacy behind38:32: Chyeās succession plan40:20: The best way to ask for a salary increase42:07: How do you find out that youāre being paid what youāre worth?42:59: Networking with peopleĀ 44:54: What value can you bring as a young person to a CEO?46:33: Reinventing the wheel at IBM49:45: Why Chye took early retirementšShow notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/35š Sign up for the weekly STIMY newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605ā
2/7/2021 ā¢ 58 minutes, 4 seconds
Ep 34: Shawn Chong (x3 Diageo World Class Malaysia Champion, Mixologist, Co-founder of Omakase + Appreciate & Bar Class Academy Asia)
Shawn Chong is one of Malaysiaās top mixologist, a three-time Diageo World Class Malaysia champion, once listed as the No. 25 Bartender in the world and co-founder of Kuala Lumpurās pioneering speakeasy, Omakase + Appreciate. A speakeasy that was listed in the Top 10 of Asiaās 50 Best Bars Award 2016. He is also the founder of Bar Class Academy Asia.Ā Today, Shawn shares why he decided to enter the F&B industry, which led to him finding his calling as a bartender!Highlights:3:03: Having his first sip of alcohol at ageā¦ 5!3:53: Moving back to Kuala Lumpur from France5:07: When Shawn decided he wanted to enter the F&B industry8:30: Working in the fine dining restaurant at Hilton Kuala Lumpur11:50: How Shawn entered his first bartending competition18:16: Why Shawn left Hilton KL for an independent restaurant20:31: Opening Omakase + Appreciate - Kuala Lumpurās very first omakase bar22:57: Being inspired by the 1920s Prohibition Era in America25:13: Coming up with the omakase concept, and mixing their Japanese/Western approaches26:14: Changing the drinks menu every 6-8 weeks28:05: The unique marketing tactics used by Omakase + Appreciate29:02: Inviting big-name guest bartenders30:57: Mise en place33:13: Reaching the global finals for the Diageo World Champion competition for the second time33:13: Winning the 10th spot of Asiaās 50 Best Bars in 201637:30: Finances40:02: Deciding to close Omakase + Appreciate in December 201941:43: Starting Bar Class Academy Asia42:23: Why Shawnās endeavour in PJ failed47:33: Best way to enter the bartending industryĀ š Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/34Ā šĀ Sign up for STIMY Newsletter here: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605Ā
1/31/2021 ā¢ 53 minutes, 14 seconds
Ep 33: Maurizio Leo (Software Developer & Sourdough Blogger/Writer at The Perfect Loaf
Maurizio Leo is a software engineer-turned-baker from Albuquerque, Mexico whose blog, The Perfect Loaf, remains one of the most authoritative sources when it comes to all things sourdough!Ā To date, The Perfect Loaf is a two-time Saveur Magazine Blog Award winner. In 2016 The Perfect Loaf won both Editors' and Readers' Choice Awards in The Food Obsessive category and the 2018 Readers' Choice Award for Best Special Interest Blog. In addition, The Perfect Loaf was a 2019 Webby Award nominee.Maurizio is a regular contributor to the King Arthur Baking blog and is the Resident Bread Baker at Food52. Maurizio has written articles on bread baking for Edible Magazine, the Bread Baker's Guild of America, and Bread Magazine.But how did it all begin?3:21: Growing up with Italian cooking6:27: Latching onto things obsessively8:07: Entering the world of computers & softwares11:41: Founding Terminal Eleven & creating the stargazing app, Skyview17:02: Seeing Skyview go viral (itās achieved over 10 million downloads!)18:21: How Maurizio first got into the sourdough making world through the book, the Tartine Bread by Chad Robinson 20:37: Meticulously planning for his first sourdough bake (and how it turned out)23:25: Using the same starter from 10 years ago25:14: How The Perfect Loaf blog startedĀ 29:06: The biggest challenges Maurizio faced from a baking & business perspectiveĀ 34:46: How Maurizio experiments to create the perfect sourdough recipes36:01: Impact of baking at high altitude in AlbuquerqueĀ 37:27: Why Maurizio mills his own flour39:14: Learning from Jeffrey HandelmanĀ 40:19: Being known in the sourdough communityĀ 46:04: Best places to find & get plugged into sourdough communitiesĀ 50:04: Maurizioās favourite baking techniquesĀ 51:17: Whether he uses high hydration to achieve open crumb52:08: A recipe that Maurizio makes over and over again53:40: Impact of COVID-19 on sourdough making55:23: Why Maurizio uses so much rye flour in his baking59:10: The best investment Maurizio made in his baking journeyShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/33
1/24/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 7 minutes, 40 seconds
Ep 32: Darrion Nguyen ("Lab Shenanigans" aka the Asian Millennial Tik Tok version of Bill Nye the Science Guy)
Darrion Nguyen is currently a lab research technician at Baylor College of Medicine & the face behind āLab Shenanigansā: a social media brand that makes fun, easily digestible science content that has garnered over 600,000 followers to date (Ā½ million on Tik Tok!)!But who is Darrion?Ā What led him down this path towards marrying his twin loves of theatre & science, quickly becoming the Asian Millennial Tik Tok version of Bill Nye the Science Guy?Ā And how can others do the same?!We unpack all that and more in this STIMY Episode.Highlights:3:18: Incident at Darrionās familyās convenience storeĀ that led to his father's unfortunate passing :(5:40: The moment he discovered a talent (and love!!) of improvisation9:07: Watching Bill Nye at his grandmaās tailor shop10:21: Realising he was gay & coming out to his friends and family (except his mum?! š š¤£)13:46: Why Darrion ended up pursuing science when he also loved theatre18:13: His love of organic chemistry & biochemistry in high school21:57: Getting into voice acting & coming to terms with his higher pitched voice as part of his identity24:14: Creating fun videos that went viral on Facebook meme pages25:48: Creating Lab Shenanigans27:43: Why Darrion decided to take a gap year rather than immediately doing his PhD31:09: His work as a research technician32:13: The ecosystem of a lab & their stereotypes (as seen in his Lab Shenanigan videos!)34:00: What is the āmfing teaā?!37:35: How Darrion first ended up on Tik Tok (P/S: As a joke!)42:30: Suffering burnoutĀ 43:58: Creating 10-15 second Tik Tok videos anywhere between a 5-10 minutes to 3 hours, and why it takes so long!46:00: How Darrionās PI (aka boss) reacted when she first learned about his lab shenanigans lates at night in the lab!49:16: Collabs with other fun science content creators like Chris Sutherland, Raven & Nick Uhas50:08: How Darrion builds his passionate online community51:51: Facing keyboard warriors as an Asian gay man53:36: Advice for those wanting to venture into the world of Tik Tok57:13: Splitting his time between his work as a scientist (yes, he does do real work!) and a content creator1:00:14: Advice on monetization for content creatorsĀ 1:01:11: Launching his Lab Shenanigans merchandise storeĀ Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/32 Subscribe to STIMY Newsletter: https://sothisismywhy.ck.page/ebf231f605
1/17/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 9 minutes, 15 seconds
Ep 31: Kenji Chai Vui Yong - On Life as a Street Artist (aka "Chaigo")
Kenji Chai Vui Yung is a popular Malaysian graffiti artist most known for his alter ego, Chaigo the Stray. A dog that, if youāve ever been to Kuala Lumpur, youāll have probably seen spray painted all over!But more than that, Kenji Chai has done plenty of mural art and collaborations with companies such as Tiger Beer, Netflix, Volkswagen, Uniqlo, and CIMB. His drawing of a giant cockerel on the side of Nandoās building at Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock even made it into the Lonely Planet Pocket Kuala Lumpur guidebook and Lonely Planet Malaysia, SG & Brunei guidebook.In this STIMY episode, Kenji Chai shares:1:46: Coming from a broken home2:41: Childhood love of comics, cartoons & storybooks like Ninja Turtles4:05: Changing his name to Kenji at the age of 154:57: Why Kenji thought all his dreams could be fulfilled in Kuala Lumpur10:31: His former street name, Black Fryday14:35: Getting a job at Sakai Sushi19:40: Doing free work to get his name out20:18: Winning the Character Licensing eSport Asia 2010 Thailandās Custom Toy Design Contest24:57: Being hired to draw a giant cockerel for Nandos (his first building mural artwork commission)30:31: How Kenji got his numerous commissions while just starting out31:35: How āChaigoā, his alter ego, was formed34:07: The first time he (illegally) drew Chaigo at Kampung Attap36:33: The rules of street art to avoid getting caught!37:42: Why does Kenji keep doing street art when it can land you in jail?!38:26: Why Kenji doesnāt always sign off on his art & how people can trace it back to him39:51: Working on 25-storey RED by Sirocco mural art over 21 days46:04: Being filmed for art projects49:13: How Kenjiās collaborations with other street artists come about51:06: Working with international artists like Gus Eagleton52:19: Life transforming experience painting in Mongolia54:26: How street artists like @Kaws make it big on the international stage58:31: What up & coming artists should do to build their careers1:00:43: Donāt waste time on haters1:01:48: The importance of social mediaĀ Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/31Ā
1/10/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 6 minutes, 36 seconds
Ep 30: Dr Finian Tan (Chairman, Vickers Venture Partners - 5th most consistently performing fund manager worldwide)
Dr Finian Tan is a Singaporean venture capitalist and Chairman of Vickers Venture Partners: a VC he founded in 2005 with 4 other partners and which is now ranked the 5th most consistently performing fund manager worldwide.Prior to Vickers, Finian was inter alia:Regional Director & Head at J.Aron - Goldman Sachsā Asian trading arm;Deputy Secretary of the Ministry of Trade and Industry for the Singapore Government, where he oversaw the creation of the $1 billion dollar TIF fund (he was subsequently appointed as chairman of the said fund); andA Managing Director at Draper Fisher Jurvetson Eplanet & the founding partner of its Asia Pacific Operations, where he led the investment into Baidu and remained its largest backer until IPO.But how did it all begin?Born on St Finian of Clonardās Day, Finian had what might be considered an āunconventionalā childhood for someone who grew up in Singapore. He would spend his days on the beach with friends and family crabbing, spearfishing, snorkeling, and swimming in the sea!He ended up studying engineering at Singapore Polytechnic before pursuing a degree at Glasgow University where he swept all of the academic awards.In this STIMY episode, Finian shares:4:10: What it was like growing up in Singapore in the 1960sĀ 6:14: How he ended up studying engineering at Singapore PolytechnicĀ 8:19: How the bankruptcy of his fatherās company impacted his family9:15: Planning it ālike a warā to win all the academic awards at Glasgow University13:09: Completing his Masters & PhD at Cambridge University15:05: Working as a Chief Trader at Shell15:51: Being poached by Goldman Sachs & later heading J.Aron - the Asian arm of Goldman Sachs18:12: Why Finian decided to leave Goldman Sachs to become the Deputy Secretary of Singaporeās Ministry of Trade & Industry24:21: Joining Draper Fisher Jurvetson Eplanet & figuring out where to invest by drawing a line in his book27:01: Why Finian chose Baidu to be his first & only investment (at $7.5 million!)28:57: Big decisions made by the Baidu boardĀ 31:51: Founding Vickers Venture Partners34:15: Building Vickerās reputation in the VC space35:07: Best platforms to generate deal flow36:44: Why Vickers pivoted into the deep tech spaceĀ 44:24: Investing in Samumed, which is working to reverse aging by drugging the Wnt signaling pathway!47:05: How Emergex is involved in the COVID-19 vaccine fight55:31: RWDC - a company that is creating 100% biodegradable plastic that looks, feels & costs like plasticĀ 58:01: The silver bullet1:00:28: Spending time with entrepreneurs1:01:52: Values that Finian looks forĀ 1:03:01: What went wrong with 24 Quan (Finianās biggest investment failure)1:05:31: How Eavor is making breakthroughs in the geothermal space1:12:13: Plans for Vickerās Fund IV1:15:21: Institutionalising knowledge as part of Vickerās succession plan1:17:11: What Finian looks for when hiring someone1:32:17: āTo whom much is given, much is requiredā1:37:16: Charity Water & education in AfricaShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/30
1/3/2021 ā¢ 1 hour, 50 minutes, 47 seconds
Ep 29: Darren Teoh (Head Chef & Owner of Dewakan - Asia's Top 50 Restaurants 2019)
Chef Darren Teoh Min Guo is the head chef and restaurant owner of Dewakan, where in April 2019, it became the first Malaysian restaurant on Asiaās 50 Best Restaurants list at 46th place with the title Best Restaurant in Malaysia.āDewakanā derives its name from a combination of two Malay words: Dewa (meaning āGodā) and āmakanā (meaning āto eatā). And at Dewakan, Chef Darren is known for taking rare and forgotten ingredients from peninsular Malaysia ā including the sea, mountain, jungle and farmlands ā and elevating them into unique dishes that diners have described as āmodern artā.But how did it all begin?In this STIMY episode, we talked about:2:00: Why Darren once considered doing fashion or graphic design3:38: Being good with his hands5:15: Studying at Ternas, which had a dual programme with Institute Cartel7:13: Why he moved to Singapore to work10:25: Being caught sauteing mushrooms in a pan that wasnāt hot enough14:58: Working in the cafeteria of KDU15:46: Lecturing on molecular gastronomy at KDU17:14: Unexpected challenges in running Dewakan18:44: Diving into the history of āMalaysianā cuisineĀ 21:12: Figuring out how to use local, often forgotten, ingredients in Dewakanās menu23:17: Developing relationships with local producers like Langit, Chocolate Concierge & A Little Farm on the Hill24:09: Differentiating good/bad local producers29:04: Impact of being on Asiaās Top 50 Restaurants List in 201931:55: How listeners can help Darren36:38: Be very, very good at failingShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/29Ā
12/27/2020 ā¢ 41 minutes, 13 seconds
Ep 28: Lily Xu Lijia (x2 Olympic Medallist & x3 World Champion Medallist in Laser Radial)
Lily Xu Lijia (å¾čä½³) is a Chinese sailboat racer who won the bronze medal in the womenās Laser Radial class at the 2008 Summer Olympics and the gold medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London where she was also the flag bearer for China at the closing ceremony. She also medalled at the 2006, 2008 and 2012 World Championships.Ā In this STIMY Episode, Lily shared:3:38: Why Lily had short hair until the age of 154:49: Why Lily told her mother to consider a divorce7:55: Growing up with her disabilities10:45: How Zhang Ning, her first coach, discovered and chose her to attend the Shanghai sailing training camp13:30: Life in the Shanghai sailing program15:43: The consequences of disagreeing with what they were told to do in the sailing program16:35: The incident that led Lily to seriously study English19:10: How Lily narrowly escaped death during a training session off the coast of Wujian;21:46: Discovering a tumour in her left kneeĀ 24:33: Why Lily loves sailing27:12: Why she adopted the name Lily28:38: Her experience at the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics36:02: Communicating with Jon Emmett during the 2012 London OlympicsĀ 41:48: Being Chinaās flag bearer for the Closing Ceremony at the 2012 London OlympicsĀ 44:00: Retiring from the sport after the 2012 London OlympicsĀ 45:01: Participating in her third Olympics at Rio;47:34: Working in media53:01: How COVID-19 has impacted her life & career54:44: Being an author55:31: One thing Lily would do differently56:03: What Lily believes in that most people donātShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/28
12/20/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 20 seconds
Ep 27: Freda Liu (Malaysian Business Radio-TV Host, Book Author, Emcee & Moderator)
Freda Liu is one of Malaysiaās most prominent radio-television hosts, having worked at BFM 89.9 - Malaysiaās only business radio station, for over 12 years. She has conducted over 5000 interviews and some prominent names include Martin Cooper, author Stephen Covey, motivational speaker Nick Vujicic, former GE CEO Jack Welch, the Duke of York HRH Prince Andrew to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.At BFM, her show Enterprise provides the tools to help businesses succeed covering topics with the startup scene, personal development, technology to organizational development. While HerVantage talks about women of leadership and influence to showcase women representation in all strata of society from sports, the arts & sciences to entrepreneurship. Freda has authored 5 books called "PR Yourself" and āShake & Spear Your Business: The Romeo & Juliet Way, ā and "Everybody Loves Ray" (biography) āBursting Fixed Mindsetsā and her latest āIn Your Skinā.She also contributes to The Star, one of the leading English newspapers. She was recently awarded the ASEAN Rice Bowl Awards for Malaysia Startup Journalist Of The Year and a nominee for MaGICās Social Enterprise journalist. Freda is a member of the National Association of Women Entrepreneurs Malaysia (NAWEM) and the Malaysian Association of Professional Speakers (MAS). She started her Lean In Circle called Think and the Malaysian chapter and has over 100 members in her group.In this STIMY interview, we cover:3:05: Growing up in Seria, Brunei & swimming in the open sea4:55: Listening to the British Forces Broadcasting Services (radio) as a child6:30: Moving from Brunei to Kuching, Sarawak at the age of 149:47: Returning to Kuching after graduation to look after her father10:21: Having the opportunity to appear on RTMās live telecast, which launched her career in news readingĀ 12:51: Working in PR at Edelman in Kuala Lumpur14:00: Leading the #duakerja life (i.e. working 2 jobs at the same time)16:41: Being headhunted to work at IBM19:24: The Gideon test20:57: The early days of working at a startup called BFM 89.922:22: Crafting BFM 89.9ās working culture of Educate, Entertain, Enlighten24:57: A typical day as a BFM 89.9 radio host26:29: Whether Fredaās interview process has changed after conducting over 5,000 interviews (which includes Julian Assange & HRH Prince Andrew!)27:56: How Freda finds the unique guests she brings onto her show28:30: Interviews she has felt she couldnāt air29:13: How Freda got Nick Vujicic to appear on her show31:31: Getting into book writing33:58: Writing her book, Everybody Loves Raymond, on the life of Raymond Chew36:04: Writing her 6th book during COVID-1938:25: Being better, not bitter41:43: How COVID-19 has impacted Freda42:58: The importance of goal setting & putting it down in writing43:57: What Freda would tell her 21 year old self47:30: A new story about Freda that isnāt already covered in the media!Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/27
12/6/2020 ā¢ 51 minutes, 12 seconds
Ep 26: Cesar Kuriyama (Founder, 1 Second Every Day)
Cesar Kuriyama is a video maker, director, producer, animator, and founder of 1 Second Every Day - a mobile application that allows users to record one second of video every day and then chronologically mashes them together into a single film. And an app that is well on track to being the No.1 Downloaded Free App in the App Store!In this STIMY episode, we covered:2:42: His struggles in picking up the English language3:16: Growing up as a science & math nerdĀ 4:50: Wanting to be an architect6:13: Wanting to work on the Stars Wars movies after graduation8:23: Studying at Pratt Institute11:29: Being a Marvel intern17:03: Finally breaking into the NYC advertising scene & getting into Curious Pictures21:43: Shooting 45,000 photos to create the music video for Fat Cat Reprise (Long Gone)23:56: Impact of Stefan Sagmeisterās TED talk, Power of Time Off26:38: Writing a future email to himself on futureme.orgĀ 28:36: How he first came across the idea to shoot 1 second of video every day as a form of a private diary34:03: How Cesar ended up giving a TED talk that went viral & changed his life38:11: Filming 1 sec of every difficult day he experienced40:57: How Cesar figured out how to build a mobile app from scratch41:37: Meeting Tim Ferriss & the advice he gave45:29: Running a highly successful Kickstarter campaign48:54: Getting 50,000 on Day 1 of the launch of 1 Second Every Day51:52: What Cesar had planned to do next after the launch of 1 Second Every Day53:54: The tweet Cesar sent that resulted in Marvel Director & Actor, Jon Favreau, featuring 1 Second Every Day in his 2004 movie, Chef1:00:42: The value proposition for 1 Second Every Day1:03:44: Impact of COVID-191:04:49: The future for 1 Second Every Day1:06:44: What Cesar would do differently1:10:35: The best sources to find information/get help from Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/26
11/29/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 17 minutes, 12 seconds
Ep 25: Chong Chan-Yau (CEO, CarbonCare Innolab & President, Hong Kong Blind Union)
Chong Chan-Yau is the CEO of CarbonCare InnoLab, the President of the Hong Kong Blind Union, former Chairman and current Director of The Board of the Dialogue in the Dark Hong Kong Foundation, former Chairman of and current Board Director of Carbon Care Asia, former Executive Director of Oxfam Hong Kong.He has received many awards including Ten Outstanding Young Persons Award, MBE, China Poverty Alleviation Award, and Honorary Fellowship from the University of Hong Kong.Ā Chan-Yau grew up in Kowloon City, Hong Kong and became blind at the age of 6. However, Chan-Yau has never allowed his blindness to hold him back from defying societyās expectations & creating great impact whether itās in the area of fighting for equal rights for the disabled to combating global poverty and climate change.Ā In this STIMY episode, we discuss:1:41: Growing up in a large family of 10 in Kowloon City, Hong Kong3:49: Going blind at the age of 67:37: Studying at the Ebenezer School for the Blind & why it took 1 year for his family to decide to let him go (including learning Braille)9:28: What itās like learning BrailleĀ 12:03: Being rebellious & defying expectations of what being blind could do as students16:04: Aspiring to further education & not doing what was expected of blind people then (being telephone operators or fortune tellers)20:44: What drove Chan-Yau to constantly prove others wrong, that āour ability is not affected by our blindnessā21:39: Attending regular school & receiving assistance from Sister Moira of the Maryknoll Convent School25:10: Entering the University of Hong Kong as one of its first blind students27:07: Petitioning the Governor of Hong Kong to provide more equal rights and opportunities to blind people30:44: Studying at the London School of Economics33:35: Becoming the first Hong Kong government administrative officer34:48: Reason for joining Oxfam and becoming the Director of Fundraising36:06: How Chan-Yau developed the monthly donor base for Oxfam Hong Kong from 3000 to over 100,00039:47: Developing Oxfam rice & why rice was the medium chosen42:07: The development of rights of the blind in Hong Kong44:48: Founding the Dialogue in the Dark Hong Kong46:40: How can employers create a more inclusive workplace for the blind?48:31: Entering the climate change spaceShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/25
11/22/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 1 minute, 8 seconds
Ep 24: Malek Ali - Founder of BFM 89.9 & Fi Life
Malek Ali is a former lawyer turned serial entrepreneur most known for founding BFM 89.9, Malaysiaās only business radio channel, and Fi Life, Malaysiaās first online life insurance service. Malek shares a ton of fascinating insights on what itās like being an entrepreneur & trust me when I say he hasnāt had it easy! It seems as though every time he starts a business, a financial crisis hits!Ā Some highlights of our STIMY episode include:Ā 2:52: His childhood & being asked to decide on which parent to stay with during their divorce at the age of 5;4:55: Accompanying his father (and later, brother) on their many overseas business trips particularly in France;7:52: The 1985 recession that crushed the slimming center business chain that his father was running;8:46: Why Malek initially studied law when his first love was in business;10:22: Working at Allen & Overy in London, including on a deal that involved the bankruptcy of Canary Wharf;11:48: Studying for his Harvard MBA & the lessons he drew from that (he was classmates with Sheryl Sandberg!);15:43: Founding KL Classifieds, his first startup, in 1997 & why that landed him RM300,000 in debt;16:50: How Malek got out of his debt & ended up working at JobStreet;21:26: What he learned from his time as Head of Mobile at Maxis, then Yahoo;23:20: What Sue Decker, then CFO of Yahoo, taught him about the importance of creating good products;25:29: What pushed Malek to start BFM 89.9, Malaysiaās only business radio channel;30:50: The challenges he faced in getting investors on board;34:08: How Malek obtained a dormant frequency for broadcasting BFM 89.9;36:10: The collapse of Lehman Brothers & BFM 89.9ās struggle to cover relevant content with their threadbare staff;38:18: Getting sponsors for BFM 89.9 including from Malaysia Airlines;40:51: Sensitive topics that canāt be discussed on air;42:12: Listening to customer feedback & how to handle complaints;43:47: The different interviewees that have come through BFMās doors & how their attitude informs their character;45:47: Whether radio will ever be obsolete;48:41: Why Malek started Fi Life;50:27: Reading up on the investment portfolios of many other people on Fi Lifeās āThis Is How I Investā blog series;50:56: Impact of COVID-19 on the media space; andĀ 53:18: How listeners can help Malek.Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/24
11/16/2020 ā¢ 58 minutes, 27 seconds
Ep 23: Sarah Chen - Co-Founder of Beyond the Billion & Lean in Malaysia
Sarah Chen is many things but she is above all. a powerful advocate & role model for women empowerment. She is the co-founder of Lean In Malaysia, which boasts over 5,000 women within the network, bringing women back into the workforce, accelerating women into leadership positions. And also sits on multiple boards including 131 & counting, which is a bipartisan effort to fete the unprecedented number of women serving in the House and Senate, to encourage more women to run for office in the United States.Sarah is also a global investment professional. She previously worked in the corporate venture capital unit of Sime Darby, a $13 billion Asian conglomerate investing in late-stage biotech stageups, and is now the co-founder and managing partner of The Billion Dollar Fund for Women: a global consortium of venture capital funds that have now pledged beyond US$1Bn to be invested into women-founded companies; now known as Beyond The Billion. Specifically, she works with limited partner investors to diversify their portfolio through venture as a returns strategy.In addition, Sarah was named World Economic Forum Young Global Leader and Forbes 30 Under 30, and has also been featured amongst others on Der Spiegel, the Wall Street Journal and Forbes.But what is her story?Ā In this STIMY Episode, we explore:4:27: Her parentās parenting style of ādream big, aim highā;5:43: Becoming a national child TV host for the Golden Kids Club on TV2 RTM (a Malaysian channel) at the age of 9;8:49: How Sarahās dad gave her the push she needed to audition for the Golden Kids Club;10:42: Family dinner conversations that included listening to her dad advise her mom on her career;14:17: The ping pong competition story;18:54: How Sarah was told, āHey as a girl, I think youāre too ambitiousāĀ 21:11: Why Sarah did law at Kingās College London;26:27: Why Sarah ended up being the interim director of MRI Network at the age of 21;30:25: How Sarah ended up working in the corporate venture capital unit of Sime Darby (p/s: by taking initiative & asking for a coffee chat!);35:41: Appearing on the reality TV Show, The Apartment, with her brother (Chef Brian Cheng);39:40: Becoming aware of women doing the work, but not getting the recognition for it;40:40: Of how no matter how good a woman is at her job, āshe was not good enough unless she had a ring on her fingerā;50:03: How Sarah met Shelly Porges, who became her co-founder of the Billion Dollar Fund;52:05: The state of the VC industry in 2017;1:03:02: The reception they got at the World Bank when the Billion Dollar Fund was launched in October 2018;1:04:23: Key misconceptions people have about gender diversification in investments;1:07:58: How they gained public attention on the Billion Dollar Fundās mission;1:10:08: The role of Billion Dollar Breakfast events & how the Billion Dollar Fund helps female entrepreneurs;1:14:12: The difference between an LP (Limited Partner) and a GP (General Partner);1:17:49: Impact of COVID-19 on the venture capital space;šļøShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/23
11/8/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 25 minutes, 14 seconds
Ep 22: Alena Murang - Sarawakian Sape Player, Visual Artist & Heritage Advocate
Alena Oseā Murang is a Sarawakian sape player singer, teacher, speaker, social entrepreneur, visual artist & heritage advocate. Born in Kuching, Sarawak, to a Kelabit father, Ose Murang and English-Italian mother Valerie Mashman, Alena and her older brother were immersed in their local heritage from young including dance and the local lute instrument, the sape. While Alena has never formally studied music, she answered her calling to be a keeper of stories for her people and in 2016, released her first EP, Flight - a collection of traditional Kenyah & Kelabit songs.Since then, Alena has performed at many renowned world music festivals including the SXSW (USA), Colors of Ostrava (Czech Republic), Paris Fashion Week (France), Rudolstadt Festival (Germany), OzAsia Festival (Australia), and Rainforest World Music Festival (Malaysia). She was a youth representative at the UNESCO Youth Forum in Paris, and UNESCO Asia-Pacific for her work in intangible cultural heritage.Some of the things we talked about include:3.20: What is was like growing up in Kuching & being immersed in the local culture including visiting villages, studying rituals like basket weaving & hiking6:08: How at the age of 6, Alena & her cousins began to learn the arang kadang (long dance) & solo Hornbill dance from her aunties, before half of them decided to pick up the sape7:26: Getting Uncle Mathew Ngau to teach them the sape & why that was such a contentious issue because of their genderĀ 8:46: The difference between the āspiritā & āhumanā sape17:45: Identity & heritage20:13: Her love of art21:35: Studying fine arts at the Lasalle College of the Arts22:37: Why Alenaās fine arts teacher did not encourage her to pursue art as a career23:59: How she ended up on a US tour with the Diplomats of Drum as a sape player25:58: Her discovery of how the sape could move people26:31: Why she became a fellow with Teach for Malaysia28:28: How she started her social enterprise, ART4 Studio (now known as Kanid Studio)30:35: What led Alena to pursuing world music as a full-time career31:53: How Alena produced & released her first EP, Flight33:45: Working with life coachesĀ 35:15: If Alena was ever plagued with imposter syndromĀ 35:44: When Alena knew that she was doing exactly what she was meant to be doing36:44: How Alena ended up participating in the Norway Fjord Festival (Scandinaviaās largest traditional music festival) & Paris Fashion Week38:47: Whether Alena ever felt she had to get out of Malaysia to grow her musical career41:48: Working with her village eldersĀ 43:09: Being a part of the Small Island Big Song Austronesian production44:53: Why beads are so important to Alenaās indigenous heritage46:56: How COVID-19 has impacted Alena & her career49:14: What listeners can do to help Alena & any other world musicianĀ Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/22
11/1/2020 ā¢ 54 minutes, 7 seconds
Ep 21: Saw Teong Hin - Director, Producer & Writer [Puteri Gunung Ledang; Hai Ki Xin Lor (You Mean the World to Me)
Saw Teong Hin is an award-winning, Malaysian director, producer and screenwriter for film, TV and theatre and was Louis Vuitton Malaysiaās Generation Next (2003), was Tatlerās 100 People You Must Know In Asia (2006), received the CHT Essence Art Award (2009), was August Man, Men Of The Year (2017) and was Chinese Film Association Malaysia Leading Film Industry Person (2018).Ā He is best known for his directorial debut of āPuteri Gunung Ledangā (2004) - the first Malaysian submission for the Academy Awards and the first Malaysian film invited to the Venice International Film Festival. And his production company, Real Films, provided production support for Ang Leeās āLust: Cautionā, produced the Sudirman-tribute musical film, āHoore! Hoore!ā (2012) and the Penang Hokkien film āYou Mean The World To Meā(2017).ChildhoodBorn in Georgetown, Penang in 1962, Teong grew up the youngest son of six siblings. He later obtained a scholarship to study double physics and mathematics at the National University of Singapore; the first of his generation to head to university.Ā However, he never graduated.Ā Teong Hinās parents were incredibly understanding and encouraged him to return as after he was kicked out of NUS, but the shame of what had happened meant that he couldnāt do so and moved instead to Kuala Lumpur.Moving to Kuala LumpurTeong Hin started off couch surfing among his friends, before landing a model gig for Shell.Ā We then discussed:How he ended up as a production assistant to Joe Hasham;Learned the ropes as a production assistant before rising to become a producer in 3 months; andSet up his own company and made a name for himself in the TV commercial and music video (e.g. KRU āFanatikā) world.Puteri Gunung LedangWhat really allowed Teong Hin to enter the public eye was with his directorial debut of āPuteri Gunung Ledangā in 2004. But it was hardly an easy journey.We discussed:How boredom pushed Teong Hin to spend the next 2 years trying to break into the film industry as a director - but failed;How he was on the verge of quitting when a phone call with Tiara Jacqueline changed everything;Why he changed the direction of the Puteri Gunung Ledang script into that of a love story at 2am;The pushback he received for being chosen as the director of one of Malaysiaās largest film productions to date at the time;What it was like directing the Puteri Gunung Ledang film;His experience at the Venice Film Festival (hint: Johnny Depp & Tom Cruise!);Ā Why the success of Puteri Gunung Ledang backfired on him; andHow Mi Fang (Astro at the time) & a feng shui master changed his fortunes!You Mean the World To Me (Hai Ki Xin Lor)In 2009, Teong Hin began writing a semi-autobiography of his life. A script that was written as a tribute to his now deceased mother.Ā Teong Hin faced a lot of pushback, with many asking why he would be willing to air his dirty laundry. But Teong Hin persevered and we discussed:Why Hai Ki Xin Lor first debuted as a stage performance during the Georgetown Festival;The storm that threw everything into chaos on the eve of the performance;The reception he received from viewers & also family members;What it was like filming the silver screen version of Hai Ki Xin Lor;Ā The impact that the film had on moviegoers;Whether he wouldāve still proceeded to create the film version if his family had been strongly opposed to its production;Whether Teong Hin found his āvoiceā with Hai Ki Xin Lor;Whether he would do anything differentlyOther Things We Talked AboutBeing the creative director for opening (19 Aug) & closing ceremonies of 2017 Southeast Asian GamesĀ Impact of COVID on his life and career;The challenges of creating a regional film directing career;Ā Whether itās important to move to other locations to obtain ābetterā career opportunities;Ā Teong Hinās advice for those seeking to break into the industry.Ā Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/21
10/26/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 18 minutes, 6 seconds
Ep 20: Tan Kheng Hua - Singaporean Actress & Producer (Phua Chu Kang, Marco Polo, Crazy Rich Asians)
Tan Kheng Hua is a popular award-winning actress/producer in Singapore and Malaysia. Kheng has appeared on stage, and in TV series and movies that include Phua Chu Kang, The Philanthropist (NBC), The Patriarch (UFA), Serangoon Road (HBO Asia Original Series), Netflixās Original Series, Marco Polo, and most recently, as āKerry Chuā, the mother to Constance Wu in in the movie adaptation of Kevin Kwanās Crazy Rich Asians. She is currently filming CWās Kung Fu series.Ā In this STIMY episode, we dive deep into:What it was like growing up in the 1960s in Singapore;Ā How Kheng first discovered her love for acting in Indiana University;How Kheng balanced her corporate day job with her love of theatre;Ā The moment she decided to take a leap of faith & become a full-time actress;Her experience as a cast member of Masters of the Sea, Singaporeās first English language movie;Ā Some of her fondest memories filming Singaporeās popular sitcom, Phua Chu Kang;How they hid Khengās 7-month pregnancy while filming Phua Chu Kang!At what point Kheng felt secure being a full-time actress;Her experience on the set of Crazy Rich Asians;The impact of Crazy Rich Asians on her career;Ā The reality of going for auditions & working in Hollywood;Ā How COVID has affected her life and career;What Kheng considers to be a āgoodā role; andSo much more!Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com.20
10/18/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 11 minutes, 24 seconds
Ep 19: Patricia Kelikani - Emmy-Award Winning Filmmaker & Entrepreneur
Patricia Kelikani is a multiple Emmy award-winning filmmaker and videographer.Ā Having spent 12 years working at Loma Linda University where she became Director of Advancement Films, she is also the producer, director and cinematographer of the 12-time Emmy award winning TV documentary series, āLife on the Lineā, narrated by Lisa Ling. In 2014, Patricia became a freelancer and founded Kelikani Films & Kelikani Consulting, where she teaches people how to make lucrative videos from home.Ā Some of the things we discussed in this STIMY episode include:Why Patricia & her twin sister wanted to be the Doublemint twins;How God spoke to her while mountain biking before graduation;What she learned during her student missionary trip in Prague;Why the Albania trip was a turning point in her career;Ā How she learned to edit videos herself back in 2003, before YouTube even existed!;Why her trip to Ethiopia - which raised over $1 million - was so impactful;Ā An unfortunate filming incident involving Ryan Reynolds & Matthew Perry;Producing ā Loma Linda 360ā, which eventually turned into āLife on the Lineā - the 12-time Emmy award winning documentary focusing on the resilience on mankind;What it was like filming some of the episodes for Life on the Line, including the San Bernardino shooting;Ā How Lisa Ling became involved in the documentary;Ā What it was like winning the Emmys;Ā Why she decided to quit & become a freelancer;Ā How she built her freelance video production company; andHow COVID has impacted her life & career since.Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/19Ā
10/11/2020 ā¢ 41 minutes, 21 seconds
Ep 18: Dr Jason Leong - Malaysia's Top Stand-Up Comedian & Netflix Special Star (Hashtag Blessed)
Dr Jason Leong is a former doctor turned Malaysian stand-up comedian star who has been enthralling his audience since 2010 when he did his first open mic gig at Zouk, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.Since then, he has gone on to, amongst others,Ā Be the first Malaysian to win the 7th International HK Comedy Competition 2013 & win the title of Crowd Favourite;Perform at Comedy Centralās Stand-Up Asia, Hollywoodās Laugh Factory & New Yorkās Gotham Comedy Club; andHave his own Netflix Special called Hashtag Blessed!!But how did this all come about? What is Dr Jasonās story & has he found his āwhyā?In this STIMY podcast episode, we dig into:1.57: What Dr Jason Leong was like as a child3:23: His experience studying as a medical student in Dublin & experience of working at an Irish pub;Ā 6:06: His first open mic gig at Zouk KL & why that experience was so transformative;Ā 8:17: How he ended up joining the Malaysia Association of Chinese Comedians;13:45: Dr Jasonās first major bomb - which almost caused him to cry on his birthday!!;15;29: Winning the 7th International HK Comedy Competition 2013 and performing at Hollywoodās Laugh Factory & New Yorkās Gotham Comedy Club (where he got to see Jerry Seinfield perform in the flesh!)20:38: Why he wonāt be less Malaysian in his stand-up jokes (to appeal to an international crowd);24:21: His experience watching the live taping of the Stephen Colbert Report;Ā 27:22: Why he spent RM150,000 of his own money to film his Netflix Special (with no guarantee that anyone would ever buy it!)28:47: The process of trying to get Netflix to buy his Special for 2 years;31:52: What Jason has been up to during this crazy COVID-19 period;Ā 33:27: Why not all stand-up comedy jokes translate well to online platforms/social media;34:47: The most contentious joke Jason has ever put forward & why he feels he has never gone ātoo farā37:56: The āFight for Gotchaā Brazillian jiu jitsu fight he will be having with Ean of Hitz;39:25: Why stand-up comedy is one of the hardest art forms you can do; andSo much more!Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/18Ā
10/4/2020 ā¢ 51 minutes, 22 seconds
Ep 17: Louisa Gurski - British Olympian & 3-time World Championship Winner (Sprint Kayaker)
Louisa Jane Gurski is a two-time British Olympian who competed as a sprint kayaker in the London 2012 Olympic Games (5th place) and Rio 2016 Olympic Games (7th place) and the inaugural European Games in Baku.Ā She has obtained incredible achievements including the gold medal in the K-1 5000m at the World Championships, and the silver and bronze in 2013 Montemor-o-Velho and 2009 Brandenburg respectively for the European ChampionshipsLouisa spent nearly 20 years as an elite athlete and she shared:What it was like growing up in Walton-Upon Thames, England;How she got started in kayaking;What her training schedule was like;How she overcame doubt;Ā The difference between being a great athlete and the best athlete;Ā Her most fond memories from competing in the London 2012 (home game) & Rio 2016;The moment she decided to retire after nearly 2 decades of being an elite athlete;Ā What it was like to no longer be an athlete;Finding a new future for herself when she was no longer an athlete;Why she decided to pivot from a corporate job to being a personal trainer;Ā Whether she would recommend her daughter be an elite athlete;Ā How to encourage more sports in a childās life; andHow COVID has impacted her life.Ā Show notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/17Ā
9/27/2020 ā¢ 39 minutes, 21 seconds
Ep 16: Renyi Chin - Co-Founder of MyBurgerLab, MyPizzaLab & MyBobaLab
Renyi is the co-founder of MyBurgerLab, MyPizzaLab and MyBobaLab alongside his friends and partners, Chang Ming and Wee Kiat.Ā If you live in KL, you will probably have heard of MyBurgerLab: the burger joint that went completely viral several years ago with their charcoal buns & continue to hit the headlines due to their innovative flavours. Quirky options that include the nasi lemak burger, the salted egg yolk burger and the upcoming flavour, The Worldās Smelliest Burger!Renyi is a university dropout and the path towards founding MyBurgerLab was hardly an easy one, but there were many significant incidents that happened that resulted in Renyi entering the F&B industry.Ā Some of the things we talked about include:Why he chose to work at Yellowstone park for three 3-month summers straight & the impact this left on him;Ā His prior businesses leading up to founding MyBurgerLab;How he got Wee Kiat and Chang Ming involved in his idea of starting a cafe and why that later turned into a burger joint;Ā The 10 R&D sessions that they conducted to perfect their products - p/s: they almost burned the kitchen down!!How Renyi came up with their signature charcoal burgers;Ā The 2 critical incidents that happened which made MyBurgerLab go viral, resulting in people queuing for 2 hours every day for their charcoal burgers!Running MyBurgerLabRenyi & his team succeeded in maintaining the virality around MyBurgerLab for 2 years but MyBurgerLab is a business, so we talked about:The scary drop that hit MyBurgerLab when their virality tapered out;Ā How Renyi came out with unicorn products to boost sales;How they created MyBurgerLabās signature level-up company culture;Why MyBurgerlabās staff consists mainly of university students;Ā The secret to MyBurgerLabās patty;How Renyi came up with some of their most innovative flavours including the Nasi Lemak Burger & Jamminā with Elvis Burger (aka peanut butter and jelly fillings!);Ā How MyBurgerLab responded to COVID with kindness; andSo much more.Ā If you love burgers, or want to know how MyBurgerLab creates the culture theyāre so known for, then this is definitely the episode for you!Show notes: www.sothisismywhy.com/16
9/20/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 19 minutes, 31 seconds
Ep 15: Yi Jun Loh - Malaysian Food Blogger, Writer & Podcaster
Yi Jun Loh is a Malaysian food blogger at Jun & Tonic (nominated for the Saveur Blog Award 2018), a food writer for TASTE, Saveur & Food52 & podcaster for Malaysianās national radio channel BFM (Baking Bread) & his own podcast, Take a Bao.Ā If youāve ever wondered how you can break into the Malaysian food industry, then this is the podcast episode for you!Who is Yi Jun Loh?Now you wouldāve expected for one in the creative industry, that Yi Jun always had a deep love of food & pushing the boundaries of what he can do. But that was not the case.While completing his engineering degree at Cambridge University, he ended up rooming with a friend, Andrew, who brought him into the world of food. Cooking elaborate dishes in their shared kitchen awakened the chef in him. An awakening that led him to consider breaking the convention upon graduation.Ā Rather than taking on an engineering or consulting job, why not give Le Cordon Bleu a go?Le Cordon Bleu & Blue Hill at Stone BarnsIn this STIMY episode, Yi Jun shares his experiences:Studying at Le Cordon Bleu & whether he thinks every food aspirant should attend the school;Why he chose to starge at Dan Barberās Blue Hill at Stone Barns restaurant at New York; andWhat he learned from working in a professional kitchen & alongside farmers growing unique strains of crops.Returning home to MalaysiaAfter his working stint in the US, Yi Jun returned to Malaysia and worked to establish himself in the Malaysian food scene. He sharesHow he first started writing for Food52 & the process of pitching to such publications;How he ended up hosting BFMās food channel, Breaking Bread;His favourite episodes & why that stood out for him;How he comes up with the quirky recipes found on his blog, Jun and Tonic; andHow he eventually started his own podcast, Take a Bao, and the challenges behind producing investigative food episodes.Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhycom/15
9/13/2020 ā¢ 57 minutes, 29 seconds
Ep 14: Joey Law - Former Senior Inspector of the Hong Kong Police Force & Mother to 15-Year-Old CEO, Hillary Yip
Joey Law is the mother of 15-year-old Founder & CEO of MinorMynas, Hillary Yip, who was our STIMY Episode 13 guest!Joey & Hillary are STIMYās very first mother-daughter pairing and Iām so honoured to have them on board. This episode is particularly dear to my heart because even before Iād launched STIMY, I knew that I wanted to feature inspiring mothers like Joey on the podcast.Ā I really want STIMY to be a place that features the amazing, life-changing, self-sacrificing work that mothers are doing every day, behind-the-scenes, and put them on the exact same platform as people society would typically consider to be āsuccessfulā. Because while they might not be featured on the front page of The Economist, their work is no less important and amazing.Ā Ā Who is Joey Law?Joey came from a humble background. A time where her parents were busy with work and she had to fend for herself.But she was also adventurous and brave, and we talked about what it was like selecting her own school for her education (despite a gruelling 1.5 hour ride to school every day!), and her motivation for eventually joining the Hong Kong police force!Ā Senior Inspector of Police, Hong Kong Police ForceSome of the things we discussed about her career with the Hong Kong police force included:The different ranks within the Hong Kong police force;What it was like working in the force, and rising to become a Senior Inspector of Police as a woman;Her biggest lesson from being a bomb disposal officer (which can be applied to our own lives!); andWhy she quit the force after 12 years.Life After the ForceJoey is not a person to raise on her laurels.Ā Soon after she quit the force, she started an online childrenās bookstore & she shared her WHY behind that move, and also some of the big challenges she faced with this new online endeavour.Ā Being a MotherBut running her childrenās online bookstore and blog was ancillary to being a mother, and we dive deep into her experiences.Ā Something you might not know (and probably wonāt have detected from Hillaryās episode) - which we discussed at length - is the intense bullying that Hillary faced in school at the age of 8. Joey shared how she discovered what was happening, her advice to other young parents on detecting potential bullying in school and things she mightāve done differently if she was to face the same issue again.Ā While bullying isnāt something typically covered on STIMY, I felt that it was important to do so here because these things do happen. And perhaps a little awareness can go a long way in preventing the same situation from arising in another childās life.Apart from bullying, we also discussed:The realities of schooling in Hong Kong (for certain schools, you have to start filling out application forms before your child is even born!);Ā Why Joey opted for homeschooling for both Hillary and Alexis (her second child);Ā How she ensures that her children have a well-balanced education covering not just the academics but also socially and physically;What itās like being the mother to a teenager CEO - quite a different perspective to the one Hillary gave!; andSo much more.Ā This is a very different and special STIMY episode and I hope you love it as much as I did!Show notes: http://www.sothisismywhy.com/14Ā
9/6/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 7 minutes, 55 seconds
Ep 13: Hillary Yip - 15-Year-Old Founder of MinorMynas
Hillary Yip is the CEO of MinorMynas, a startup that creates fun, immersive, online products for children worldwide in a safe environment. And as at the time of this interview being recorded, she is a mere 15 years old!Ā She founded MinorMynas at the age of 10 - which makes her one of the youngest CEOs in the World, and has been featured in places such as the BBC, CCTV, Yitiao, Yeti and the South China Morning Post. She is also a popular keynote speaker and has appeared on TEDx stages, events by HSBC and Microsoft and most recently, at the Global Women Forum 2020 in Dubai.Ā Who is Hillary YipHillary was born & raised in Hong Kong and her amazing entrepreneurial journey began with a summer camp for Mandarin in Taiwan. Upon her return, she soon came across the AIA Emerging Entrepreneur Challenge 2016 in Hong Kong and decided to participate.Ā Despite having teammates that dropped out at the last minute, she came up with a proposal within the final 3 hours and went on to win the First Prize and Business Prize! She also met with a number of business leaders who gave her advice and encouragement, and proceeded with the steps needed to bring MinorMynas from being a mere idea to an actual startup!Building MinorMynasIn this STIMY podcast, we discussed:How Hillary found her first customers;Her first MVP & the main findings she obtained;How she scaled from a mere 4 users (2 of them consisted of herself and her brother, Alexis!) to around 4,000 downloads from over 20 countries in the 9th month!MinorMynasā approach to privacy;How MinorMynas differs from other similar apps;Ā The role of parents on MinorMynas;The behind-the-scenes of launching the 2nd iteration of MinorMynas;Financing & why she chose crowdfunding; andAnd the future of MinorMynas.Apart from MinorMynasā¦But lest we forget, Hillary is only 15 years old! So we also talk about:Her homeschooling life;Ā Her favourite things to learn about; andWhy Gary Vaynerchuk is her idol.Hillary is a true testament that age is no barrier to the extraordinary things you can already achieve. And I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did!Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/13
8/30/2020 ā¢ 40 minutes, 7 seconds
Ep 12: Danielle Kettlewell - Olympian (Australian Synchronised Swimmer)
Danielle Merlyn Kettlewell is an Australian synchronised swimmer who competed in the team synchronised swimming event in the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics. She was vice-captain of the Australian team which placed eighth overall with 75.4333 in the free routine and 74.0667 in the technical. She was also selected as Australiaās first Mixed Duet in the sport of artistic swimming for the 2019 FINA World Aquatic Championships. She is now a coach and motivational speaker.Ā Who is Danielle Merlyn Kettlewell?Danielle was born and raised in Vancouver, Canada to Australian parents, the youngest of 5 siblings (2 brothers and 2 sisters). Since young, she was exposed to the world of swimming and gymnastics and at the age of 8, entered the world of synchronised swimming (now known as āartistic swimmingā).Now, you might think that she is a ātypicalā elite athlete who has always topped her year, had a natural affinity for her sport and ended up, inevitably, on the Olympic world stage.Ā You couldnāt be further from the truth.The Unlikely OlympianDanielle is the first to point out that she is an āunlikely Olympianā.She didnāt have the right body type. Was never flexible enough. Was the āchubby oneā on the team. The reserved at Nationals and didnāt even rank in the top 100 in Canada!To top all that in October 2013, she was involved in a horrifying incident at training that resulted in her having a major concussion and needing to drop out of university to recover. A situation that resulted in her feeling extremely depressed.Ā 2013/14But in the worst of times, something quite unexpected happened. She had the chance to compete for a spot on the Australian national team seeking to qualify for the Rio Olympics!Rio Olympics 2016And in this STIMY interview, we dived deep into:The process of being qualifying to be a part of the Olympic synchronised swimming team;Ā What she did to go from No.16 out of 16 to No.4 in the team rankings;Ā How synchronised swimming teams were selected to participate in the Rio Olympics 2016 (p/s: itās not really about being the best in the world!);What it was like to participate in the opening ceremony of the Rio Olympics;What it was like training and participating in the Rio Olympics; andTransitioning back to the āreal worldā after the Olympics.Olympic Myth BustersWe do a lot of myth busters in this episode when it comes to the world of Olympics, and also the fact that men are discriminated against in the artistic swimming sport!Ā Some things we discussed include:Do all Olympians end up becoming rich and famous? (spoiler: she finished the Rio Olympics with $300 in her bank account!!);What it is like to train to be a synchronised swimmer (now known as artistic swimming);Why she decided to retire a second time & not try for her second Olympics;The inherent sexism against men in the sport; andWhy the mixed duet was rejected from the 2020 Olympics (and why there is hope that this might change for the 2024 Olympics).The FutureDanielle has now retired for the second time for the sport and is passionate about coaching people to pursue their dreams. Some advice she shares include:What are the 3 questions you should ask yourself every day to transform yourself just like the Olympians do?Her CLARITY CodeFor more details, visit the show notes at https://www.sothisismywhy.com/12
8/23/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 8 minutes, 35 seconds
Ep 11: Morgan Then - Electronic Music Artist (Slumberjack)
Morgan Then is the Sarawakian half of the popular Australian electronic duo, Slumberjack. Since launching their career with a No. 1 track on Triple Jās influential sister station, Unearthed, SLUMBERJACK have released four EPsāincluding their newest effort, Black & Blueāand over 10 singles. Theyāve received 2 ARIA Gold Records (for their 2014 self-titled debut and their 2017 single, āFractureā), while their second EP, Fracture, debuted at No. 1 on iTunes Australiaās electronic chart.ChildhoodWe talked about Morgan's childhood: what it was like growing up in our hometown of Kuching, Sarawak, and that moment where he was first determined to learn the piano. Something that he had to enter into an āagreementā with his dad on.Moving to Perth, AustraliaMorgan eventually moved to Perth, Australia where he triple majored in economics, finance and commerce. And at the time, he was even determined to become the best accountant there was! But he had amazing friends who lent him instruments - including a Taylor guitar! - and that kept the fire going.Entering the Music WorldHaving spent time playing at weddings & music gigs, there came a point where Morgan graduated and he was faced with the choice of taking on a full-time graduate role, or pursuing the world of music.Ā And we talked about:How he ended up participating in the Limelight DJ Competition in 2012, when he didnāt even know what DJing was about!Meeting Fletcher & how they first got together to make music and form Slumberjack;Ā andWhat it means to have synesthesia & what the Slumberjack sound ātastesā like to Morgan.In addition, we talked about:What it was like when Fracture came out & started going viral;How Morgan first found & channeled his inner Freddie Mercury when performing on stage to crowds of up to 15,000.Meeting real skulls kept in rucksacks when in Sarawak;Getting a hand tapped tattoo; What it was like meeting real Hollywood stardom aka Jason Day (Lifehouse) and collaborating with Corey Enemy (producer and songwriter for Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, will.i.am, David Guetta etc.);How Slumberjack has been staying connecting with their fans during the COVID-19 season;His biggest advice for those seeking to follow in their footsteps;Ā andKnowing when to quitShow notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/11To chat further with past STIMY guests & be a part of the exclusive STIMY community, visit: https://www.facebook.com/groups/523851861591311Ā
8/16/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 9 minutes, 42 seconds
Ep 10: Benjamin Von Wong - Social Artivist Who's Generated 100+ Million Views
Benjamin Von Wong is Canadian mining engineer turned social artivist/photographer who designs campaigns around social impact and has succeeded in raising over 100 million views for different causes including plastics, fast fashion and electronic waste. He has a Guinness Book Record, a community of over 500,000 followers and tries to change the world through amplifying positive impact.Who is Benjamin Von Wong?Von was born in Canada and his parents are first-generation Chinese Malaysian immigrants. With something of a āchaoticā childhood - he went to 13 different schools in 3 different countries - there was nothing in his background that suggested that he would end up with an artistic career.Ā Instead, he became a mining engineer in Nevada.Ā Until one day, driven by a breakup, he purchased his first $100 camera from Walmart. A purchase that set him down the crazy, artistic trajectory he is currently on.Ā I just woke up one day and realized that I didn't want to be an engineer for the rest of my life.Becoming a PhotographerThe transition into being a full-time creative wasnāt immediate, and some of the things we discussed included:Why quitting his engineering job was less a question of courage, and more out of āfearāWhy photography ended up being the thing that drew him in for the long term;How he first got his start in the industry, and the most popular platforms to use at the time;How he ran a Kickstarter to fund his Von Wong Does Europe Tour;Ā Some of his projects including the 365 day project; andVonās 3 most impactful work prior to entering the social impact space.Within 3 years, Von obtained the highly sought after global campaign with Huawei where he had to create an angel with fire wings.Ā Entering the Social ImpactAfter the Huawei campaign, he felt empty. And this signified another pivotal point in his life, only this time it was into the social impact space:Ā Why was it so hard to enter the social impact space?Why was the mermaid with 10,000 plastic bottles project so successful?How does he measure the impact of art?Does he worry about alienating potential clients after entering the social impact space?What is his metric of success?To learn more, visit: www.sothisismywhy.com/10
8/8/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 12 minutes, 28 seconds
Ep 9: Rabi Malla - Social Entrepreneur & Founder of KOLPA
Rabi Chandra Malla is the founder of KOLPA - a social enterprise based in Kathmandu, Nepal that aims to promote sustainable & exclusive handmade goods produced by various indigenous communities from across the country (including the nomadic Raute tribe!).Who is Rabi Chandra Malla?Rabi was born in Bhaktapur and grew up in Kathmandu, Nepal.Ā Having spent his formative years in a boarding school for the children of ex-police officers, Rabi became aware of the growing mental health issues in Nepal. With that in mind, he applied to study psychology in the US in 1998.Ā Living in the USAĀ In the 12-13 years he spent in the US, Rabi would read news about Nepal being an underdeveloped country and felt that Nepal needed to have its own self-sustainable economy or they would always be dependent on foreign countries and donations.Ā It was 1998. The time of Yahoo, Netscape, and Lycos with Alta Vista as a search engine. Google was in its primitive form and no one had heard of Amazon.Ā Due to the influences of other Nepalis in his university, he switched to the field of IT and ended up with a Bachelors in IT.Ā Returning to NepalThe first time he returned to Nepal, there was political turmoil in the country where businesses were ordered to be shut.Ā He therefore returned to the USA to pursue a Masters in IT and returned again to Nepal in 2011 with his wife and two daughters.Ā For the next 3 years, he would look after his daughters at home while his wife pursued her career. But during that time, he did an extensive amount of research. Met local craftsmen and attended fairs, understanding the local artisan landscape.Ā Starting KOLPAThe beginnings of KOLPA were difficult. People didnāt know him and he had to build trust with each and every person from the ground up.Ā And in STIMY Episode 8, we dig deep into how Rabi faced & overcame each of these challenges. From working in his basement to moving to his first physical store at Lazimpat (and why that was important!) and how he ended up in his current location at Jhamsikhel.Ā Other things we talked about:The lives of the various indigenous tribes scattered across Nepal;how he first gained the trust of the communities;How he gained attention from perspective buyers both locally and internationally;Ā The challenges of running his business (hint: transporting local products on the backs of humans through some of the worldās highest mountainous regions down to Kathmandu!);How he determined a fair price for producers and customers alike;Ā The changes that have been introduced to the communities;How COVID-19 has impacted KOLPA & the local communities; andKOLPAās future.Ā Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/9
8/1/2020 ā¢ 50 minutes, 54 seconds
Ep 8: Barbara Woolsey - Canadian Freelance Journalist (Reuters, Guardian, Telegraph, Lonely Planet Guidebooks)
Ep 7: Jan Wong - Malaysian Serial Entrepreneur & Founder of OpenMinds Resources
Jan Wong is a Forbes 30 Under 30, Malaysian serial entrepreneur, youth advocate & founder of OpenMinds - a data-driven martech company he bootstrapped for 8 years & generates millions in revenue with offices in Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Hong Kong and at one point, Kazakhstan!Janās entrepreneurial spirit was present from a very young age.Ā He pursued an IT course at University College of Technology & Innovation.At the age of 17, he spotted a gap in the market & established his first company while still in college: Genesis IT Solutions & Services. Genesis started off with him reformatting computers for his friends - given that he had no prior knowledge in this area, his services didnāt always bear fruit!And yet he preserved. And when he spotted a gap (again) for data recovery services, he pivoted. And grew a business so successful, it attracted the attention and partnership of conglomerates like Seagate, Microsoft, Fujitsu and Samsung.The Entrepreneurial JourneyJanās story is full of tremendous highs but also tremendous lows. Some of them include overcoming a teacherās āpredictionā when he was 10 years old that he would never amount to anything. Of facing the lack of support and confidence from those around him when he first established Genesis. And how he had to confront the heavy consequences of allowing his pride to get in the way of his business.Ā We dig in deep into those low points. Of how Jan approached them and continued on his journey.Ā And how he was willing to go out of his comfort zone, even till this day!Founding OpenMindsIn 2009, Jan founded OpenMinds Resources.Ā Some of the things we discussed included:Why he decided to not pay himself a salary for the first year & a very low stipend for the next few years;Ā His priorities in the early startup days;OpenMindās unique selling point;Things Jan wouldāve done differently;How Jan created a people first work culture; andHow he led OpenMinds to tripling its revenue in 2015 and expanding to Singapore, Hong Kong and Kazakhstan!Other Things We DiscussedJanās drive of always seeking to āstand outā & doing something that no one else can easily copy;His biggest mistake behind starting his first company at the age of 17 in college;The role of faith in his life;Ā Why he continues to invest in other people;The impact that being Forbes 30 under 30 had on him;Ā The impact that COVID-19 has had on him and OpenMinds; andHis biggest piece of advice for those wanting to start a new venture in this day and age.Ā Janās story is truly one of great perseverance and a willingness to always learn & never let fear hold you back. I have nothing but admiration for him.Show notes: https://www.sothisismywhy.com/7
7/18/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 19 minutes, 21 seconds
Ep 6: Ashley Dean - First Artist of the Royal Ballet (UK)
Ashley Dean is a South African dancer and a First Artist at the Royal Ballet in London, which is the premier ballet company in the UK.Ā I was just blown away by her love & talent for dancing, her grit, her bravery in dropping out of school at the age of 15 in pursuit of that dream, her love of family and unwavering trust & faith in God no matter what came her way.Ā Ashley, Iām in awe of you & feel so privileged to be able to feature you on this podcast!Who is Ashley Dean?Ashley Dean grew up in Johannesburg, where all the little girls did ballet as a hobby. But it was an international competition she attended at the age of 15 that proved to be a turning point for her. She realised that if she was serious, she would need to put in a serious amount of hours practicing, and even dropping out of school with no guarantee of even entering a ballet company!Ā English National BalletWe talked about the experience of applying for ballet schools & also the experience of moving all the way to London to be with the English National Ballet.And thereafter, how she got into the Royal Ballet and being on the pilot scheme of the Aud Jebsen Dancers Program, which was a complete miracle!Ā Life at the Royal BalletThe life of a professional ballerina is quite unlike any other career I know of! And we talked in depth over:Dealing with perfection, when it is something expected from you every single day;Handling the injuries & constant pain that are part and parcel of a dancerās lifeThe way she manages her diet given her strenuous schedule;Ā Balancing said career with her family life;Ā How she got into the Aud Jebsen Young Dancers Program;The magical backstage world that the audience never sees;Her faith; andHow COVID-19 has impacted her & the ballet world.Ā BonusStick to the end of the interview to find out how you can get a free backstage pass to the Royal Opera House!Show noteshttps://www.sothisismywhy.com/6
7/9/2020 ā¢ 58 minutes, 53 seconds
Ep 5: Milena Pajaro-van de Stadt - Violist of the Dover Quartet
Ep 4: Sara Holden - How I Became A Hollywood Stunt Actress
Todayās guest is Sara Holden and she, well, has been shot, strangled, bludgeoned, suffocated & died in pretty much every imaginable way possible on the big & small screens!Ā Sounds crazy?Not at all. Sheās pretty used to it, given her career as a Hollywood stunt actress!A quick look at her IMDb profile will reveal an impressive CV with appearances in Iām Your Woman, Batwoman, General Hospital, Chicago Fire, Chicago PD, Veronica Mars, NCIS, American Horror Story, Venom, The Walking Dead, Transformers, Divergent, Man of Steel, Oz the Great and Powerful, Sons of Anarchyā¦ the list just goes on and on!!But who exactly is Sara Holden?Sara hails from Detroit, Michigan and she always had a love of theatre while growing up. And while she had no idea what stunts even were back then, retrospectively, it seems as though it was all meant to be.Ā She was a tomboy not afraid to get down and dirty. Played soccer, gymnast and also competitive cheerleading before joining the womenās rugby team in Western Michigan University. The story of how she even ended up in the rugby team is pretty hilarious and involves, surprisingly, the offer of beer! And being smashed into the ground at every match (which she seems to relish! ;)).Moving to Los AngelesUpon graduation, she did an 8-month advertising stint before deciding to quit to give acting a shot. Her reasoning?I've always wanted to do this acting thing... and if I don't do this now, I don't know that I'll ever do it. It was kind of like my time, let's just take the jump leap of faith, if you will, and just see what happens. And so I did, I just moved to Hollywood. And I packed whatever I had into my car and drove out there.But you know what makes that decision especially remarkable?I didn't know anybody. I did not have a job. I did have some money saved upā¦ and I remember I kind of told a little white lie to my parents and said that I had this job. I didn't really have a job at all... And yeah, I just drove out there and got a job as a hostess in Beverly Hills and just started networking.Ā One of the many pieces of evidence of her āwhat is the worst that can happen?ā go-getter attitude.Ā Establishing A Presence In HollywoodEstablishing herself in Hollywood with no contacts, no job and more importantly, no SAG card, was difficult. And we explore:The art of networking in LA/Hollywood;The realities of being one of the many faceless āextrasā;How she first discovered the world of stunts;How she got into the exclusive invite-only stunt training facility run by circus-trained Bob Yerkes;What it was like doubling for Pamela Anderson & executing her first professional stunt on a 80mph speed boat;Ā The turning point where she knew she could āmake itā in Hollywood; andThe Realities of Life as a Stunt ActressWe also get real on some of the challenges, includingHow she got booked onto stunt jobs;How much stunt person make & the realities of the Hollywood freelance life;Ā The competitive nature of the stunt industry;Ā How she handles the injuries & risks taken on every day;Ā The difference in career opportunities between men and female stunt workers;Ā Why Sara is self-funding a car flip gag;The role of social media in as a stunt person;Ā Managing life at home with young children during the COVID-19;Ā What the future could hold for stunt work in a social distancing era; andWhat you should do if you want to be a stunt actress in Hollywood.Ā Ā For more details, check out https://www.sothisismywhy.comĀ And donāt forget - if youāre looking to flip your own cars, make sure you give Sara a holler first!!
7/2/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 23 minutes, 29 seconds
Ep 3: Dr Julian Tan - From Subang to Becoming the Head of Digital Business Initiatives & Esports, Formula One
Dr Julian Tan is the Head of Digital Business Initiatives & Esports in Formula 1 (London), and someone I got to meet while studying in the UK.Perhaps a little selfishly, Iāve loved how this podcast gives me the āexcuseā to reconnect with old friends and Julian is definitely one of them. Youāll find out soon enough because my goodness, there is just soo much to unpack from our conversation! We recorded this way back in May 2020 & Iām still blown away by everything Iāve learned and Iām sure you will too. :)So buckle up & get ready for this ride!Ā Who is Julian Tan?Julian spent some of his earliest years in Hong Kong but moved back to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia for primary school in Sri Subang, and were some of his happiest years. But unfortunately, all that changed when he moved to secondary school (around the age of 13) because:In Standard Six, I got along with everybody. Everybody was my friend. and then suddenly you come into high school and then you immediately get picked on because at the time, I was a little bit overweight.Ā Weight, a natural inclination towards rule keeping & always doing academically well meant that Julian stood out. And not, at least to his peers, in a good way. But you know what I was blown away? It was the way in which Julian handled that challenge:And it was, I would say, at the age of 13, 14. I remember writing it down on a note, like, don't care what other people think. Just keep doing what's important to you and also surround yourself with people who can support you because at that age, I felt like the more time that you spend with people, you either morph into them or they'll morph into you.So make sure you pick your company very wisely.Ā Wow. I do not know if I would have had the wisdom to do that in his shoes!The Oxbridge ExperienceJulian ended up going to Oxford University to do a Bachelors & Masters in Engineering Science. And in the process, graduating in the top 3rd percentile with First class Honours, being the top engineering student & scholar of Jesus College & the recipient of numerous department and collection prizes.Ā But soon after graduating, he wrote a viral Huffington Post entitled: A First Class Degree from Oxbridge - So What?. And we explore that article in the podcast and why looking back, he would have wanted to have handled his time in Oxford differently. Which is not to say he āregrettedā doing what he did!Cambridge University was his second chance to get the university experience he wanted, which is where he went to next for his PhD in composites engineering. And we talk about his experiences there as a PhD student and also the age-ago debate of Oxford v Cambridge: are they really all that different?Ā But all good things must come to an end & as with any āadultingā process, there comes the need to find a job.Ā Boston Consulting Group, LondonLetās be real. Julian has an academic CV that anyone would kill for. But reality is a bitter pill and as Julian puts it in his May 2012 Huffington Post article, āpeople rely too much on education being the silver bullet to every conceivable problem.ā Even with the grades he had, the rejections kept coming. And we talk about that: the emphasis on education & false myth that the world is your oyster when you have the grades.Ā Julian eventually ended up at Boston Consulting Group and it was there that he first became exposed to Formula One.Ā Head of Digital Business Initiatives & Esports, Formula OneJulian, alongside Frank Arthofer, helped to establish the digital & esports division in Formula One. Most prominently to date, Julianās team was responsible for the Virtual Grand Prixs that took place during the COVID-19 pandemic when no other races were being held!Ā At the end of the Virtual Grand Prix run, F1 Esports achieved a stunning 30 million in views, and up to 85 million when social media is thrown in the mix!In the podcast, we unravel the genesis of those results. Touching on topics such as:The process used to establish the corporate structure for a digital and esports department (F1 had never had a marketing campaign before)!What the esports field was like back in 2017;How the different F1 offerings were conceptualised e.g. the Pro series v the Virtual Grand Prix races;Ā Esport opportunities for gamers like Brendan Leigh (who is now signed on to Mercedes, a F1 team!), even though Brendan didnāt even have a driverās licence!What it was like putting the Virtual Grand Prix races together; andHow F1 intends to stay ahead of its competitors.Ā And if you havenāt already done so, go check out one of the F1 races! I did and kudos to Julian and his team, because I was hooked. This, from a girl who has never watched a race in her life. Because the races really were that thrilling! I even have a favourite F1 driver that I now follow - who wouldāve thought?Other Topics DiscussedThe question of identity: Who am I? If I have also been āspecialā because of my academic achievements, who am I when I enter an environment (like Oxford or Cambridge) where everyone is exactly the same as me with the same background and I find out that actually, Iām not that āspecialā?How pursuing a PhD differs from an undergraduate degree?Is consulting at one of the prestigious MBB firms really a ādreamā job?Ā What qualities someone should have to succeed as he has?For show notes & more, visit https://www.sothisismywhy.com/episode3
7/1/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 16 minutes, 50 seconds
Ep 2: Red Hong Yi - A Malaysian Artist Who Paints Without A Paintbrush
Todayās guest is Red Hong Yi ā a Malaysian architect turned full-time artist known for painting without a paintbrush! One of the sweetest, friendliest and most talented people I know and am privileged to call a friend. šĀ You might have heard of her or seen her work displayed somewhere, whether in publications like theĀ South China Morning Post,Ā Straits Time,Ā Prestige,Ā artventures withĀ Mitsubishi Motors Malaysia, or more recently onĀ MashableĀ about her āI Am Not A Virusā 2020 series.Ā Who is Red Hong Yi?Hong Yi grew up in Sabah, which is located on the East coast of Malaysia (yay, East Malaysians!). We discuss what her childhood was like, her influences, and the kind of art she did.Fun fact: In her pre-teen years, Red Hong Yi used to draw comics with her friends and ārentā them to her classmates for RM 0.10 until their teacher called them out for it because it was distracting everyone from UPSR exam preparations (a pivotal national exam in Malaysia that students take before entering secondary school)!Working as an ArchitectWhile she had a desire to go into art, and even once dreamt of working for PIXAR, she decided, in the end, to study architecture at the University of Melbourne.Ā Upon graduation, she moved over to Shanghai and we talked about what that was like. The people, the culture, and again, the entrepreneurial spirit that was so prevalent among the youth of Shanghai! And how those influences, including an important trip to Yiwu International Trade Market, resulted in her friend filming a timelapse video of her Yao Ming portrait.Ā Quite unexpectedly, her portrait of the famous Chinese NBA player went viral and was picked up by the likes of NBA and Gizmodo.com!Pivoting into ArtWhile this craziness was happening, Hong Yi was still working at her architecture firm, HASSELL.Ā Soon after, she received a call from Michael Hawley who invited her to the EG Conference (who wrote the commencement speeches for Larry Page & Steve Jobs amongst others!). This conference proved to be a huge turning point for her as she became exposed to people doing incredible things, including other artists, musicians, astronauts, and chefs.Ā Her parents also attend the EG Conference and as Hong Yi put it:"So they (Hong Yi's parents) came with me and that was when they realized that, Oh, my daughter is not that crazy after all. There is a room filled with crazy, you see?"The Artist Who Paints without a PaintbrushSoon after, Hong Yi decided to quit her job as an architect to give art a shot. And we discuss what those initial days were like, the financial considerations and how she decided on the kind of ābrandā she wanted to be.Ā Her trademark approach to art is painting without a paintbrush and she achieves this by creatingĀ mixed-media installations by reinterpreting everyday materials through the accumulation of objects. By combining traditional craftsmanship and digital technology, she creates work that considers perceptual habits and preconceptions on the chosen objects and subjects, expressing the themes of women and race.Achievements to DateNeedless to say, she has achieved extraordinary success!Ā And her work hasĀ been exhibited at H Queens in Hong Kong, the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, World Economic Forum in Davos (the Teh Tarik Man!), and Anchorage Museum in Alaska. Collectors of her work include JP Morgan Chase Bank and actor Jackie Chan.Her art has also been featured in publications includingĀ Wall Street Journal, TIME, and New York Times, as well as in JP Morgan ChaseāsĀ commercial campaign, āGift for Babaā, in 2018 where she performed the leading and critical role of artist. She created an artwork made of tea leaves and that commercial was aired throughout North America during some of the biggest sporting events of the year including Super Bowl LII, which was viewed by 103.4 million viewers, and the 2018 World Cup, which was seen by an average of 1.98 million viewers per game.Hong Yi has spoken in conferences around the world, including EG Conference in California, the ASEAN Young Entrepreneurās Conference in Beijing, TEDx in Kuala Lumpur, and in institutions such as Domus Academy in Italy, Shanghai Academy of Fine Arts in Shanghai, and the MIT Media Lab in Boston. She has been offered art residencies at 18thĀ Street Art Centre in Los Angeles and the Swatch Art Peace Hotel in Shanghai in 2020.Sothebyās Institute has named her one of the ā11 art world entrepreneurs you should knowā. Tatler Magazine has named her one of Asiaās most influential voices in 2020.How did she do it? Whatās next?Hong Yiās journey has been anything but conventional and I loved how we went deep into the behind-the-scenes of what it took to get to where she is, including:Ā How she put together some of her most popular work including theĀ Teh Tarik ManĀ and theĀ Jackie Chan bamboo stick collaboration;Where she gets her inspiration from;Who āgaveā her name āRedā;The role of social media in her work;How she charges clients for her work;The realities of being your own boss & why that might not be for everyone (and thatās ok!);Striking a balance behind taking on work for financial reasons versus artistic inclinations;Creating impact behind her work;How COVID-19 has affected her & how she stays connected with other creatives like Von Wong (another guest on the STIMY podcast);Ā Collaborating with other local artists back in her hometown of Sabah;Ā What it takes for someone to succeed as she has; andWhat the future holds for her.External LinksYou can reach Red Hong Yi via herĀ blog,Ā FacebookĀ andĀ InstagramĀ For the show notes for this episode, visit https://www.sothisismywhy.com/episode2/
6/30/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 56 seconds
Ep 1: Chloe Buiting - Vet & Wildlife Conservationist on Protecting the Natural World
WARNING: The content gets slightly graphic when discussing the realities of poaching in South Africa.Our guest for today is Chloe Buiting ā an Australian vet & wildlife conservationist who grew up in Lord Howe Island, Australia. She knew from a young age that she wanted to dedicate herself to protect wildlife and ended up going to veterinary school.One of her more interesting placements was in South Africa, where she was involved in things like capturing giraffes, dehorning rhinos (to try to protect them from poachers) & working with wild cats. We also learn of a unique men's Calvin Klein scent that draws in the wild cats - which you will learn about once you listen!We also talk about:Ā - Life as a veterinary student, including placements;- The realities of poaching in South Africa & the big debate over what to do with the horns of the rhinoceros;- What itās like to capture a giraffe in the wild (hint: you need a helicopter!);- The importance of ecotourism (including gorilla work in the DRC, Rwanda & Uganda), Thailandās firstĀ - Working with amputee elephants out of the worldās first prosthetic hospital for elephants in Chiang Mai;- Being on the front line in the 2020 Australian Wildlife (the fire went right up to her backyard in Kangaroo Island!);Ā - The future of veterinary medicine (hint: 3D printing beaks for toucan is already a reality!);- Whether you can make money as a vet; and- What WE can do to support wildlife conservation efforts.If you're interested in wildlife conservation or just want to know more about this fascinating world, this is the episode for you. The show notes can be found at https://www.sothisismywhy.com/episode1/Ā Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to get all the latest episodes and behind-the-scenes sneak preview!
6/29/2020 ā¢ 1 hour, 16 minutes, 44 seconds
Ep 0: What is the 'So This Is My Why" podcast about?
Hello everyone!I'm Ling Yah, the host & producer of the So This Is My Why podcast. A show featuring a range of inspiring people every week about their WHY journey.Ā This trailer episode gives a sneak preview of what to expect in the STIMW podcast and the questions asked including:their childhood;the decisions they madeĀ how they first got started;Ā their successes and failures;whether they think they've found their WHY at this point;the kind of legacy they want to leave behind; andhow others can do the same.New episodes will be released EVERY SUNDAY.For more information about STIMY, the latest episodes & guests (past & upcoming), visit https://www.sothisismywhy.com/