tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-23542733470447903102024-02-07T16:22:52.910-08:00FLINTSTONE"Public servants must understand what's like walking in other people's shoes"RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.comBlogger32125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-7015279596101356142010-11-20T16:01:00.000-08:002010-11-20T16:04:58.050-08:00May Ron rest in peace...Ron/Eik Hoe has peacefully passed away today.<br />The funeral will be on the 25th Nov (Thursday).<br />Anything do contact his handphone number.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-84217201378576709542010-10-01T01:56:00.000-07:002010-10-01T03:31:34.033-07:00Book review - - - THE SECRET<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8PDhOm2EGP4Hgjtkxw8vIjGswSS3KowD5DlsAEhgevmWPhvBWc67879-HPeZRKpRWct_s07mztGQIKhT1YXDoPxQDjKONUhn31I8BU-yrpk1KdI13RXhopefRE49G6d9Y7Z-LIru1TII/s1600/DSC_0001.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8PDhOm2EGP4Hgjtkxw8vIjGswSS3KowD5DlsAEhgevmWPhvBWc67879-HPeZRKpRWct_s07mztGQIKhT1YXDoPxQDjKONUhn31I8BU-yrpk1KdI13RXhopefRE49G6d9Y7Z-LIru1TII/s320/DSC_0001.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5523021823244240386" /></a><br />Name of Book : THE SECRET, by Rhonda Byrne<br />First published in Nov 2006.<br /><br /><br /><br />This book is not for the sceptics. Neither is it for those who expect to find the secrets to be unravelled. It is for those who believe in the secret that The Secret secretes.<br /><br />I did not stumble upon The Secret,after all it has been in the bookshops since 2006,but rather went to search for it after a recommendation by a friend.A friend whom I have not met for 1 year;he has a noble intention to egg me to see the world in another prospective, not to give up on life easily & be positive in future outlook.Everything can be achieved- If You Think You Can, You Can.<br /><br />The Secret tells us there are secrets to six areas, Money, Relationships, Health, The World, You & Life. The secrets to each area are revealed, made simple,taught the usage & shown the powerful processes.<br /><br />The Secret wants you to believe in the Law of Attraction, to achieve what you want to achieve. <span style="font-style:italic;">It's what you are thinking</span> that matters; you attract what you think & you will achieve what you think.<br />Because the legendary existence of famous poets, musicians, artists & thinkers has survived for centuries, their names are quoted that they believe in The Secret. William Shakespeare, Beethoven, Socrates, Plato,etc. It's a wonder the author didn't mention a longer list.The author even mentioned that this law of attraction was recorded in stone in 3000BC.<br /><br />There are some logical simplified secrets. For example,the author quoted that .."The principle of feeling good applies to your family pets, for instance.Animals are wonderful because they put you in a great emotional state. When you feel love for your pet, that great state of love will bring goodness into your life."<br />-<span style="font-style:italic;">It is this combination of though & love which forms the irresistible force of the law of attraction.</span>.<br /><br />I disagree with the author in many of her Secret.<br />Most of The Secret are inspirational but downright ridiculous & lack convincing support & evidence. It's only talk, talk & talk. Of course, it's motivation book which suits salespeople. I am sure most insurance managers have read The Secret. It suits religious people to a tee.<br /><br />In one chapter, The Secret brought up a case of a personal story by one Cathy Goodman who, through one reason or another, declined medical treatment of radiotherapy and chemotherapy :" <span style="font-style:italic;">I was diagnosed with breast cancer.....I truly believed that I was already healed. Each day, I would say 'Thank you for my healing'.I believe in my heart that I was healed. I saw myself as if cancer was never in my body. "</span>. <br />Cathy Goodman watched very funny movies & all she would do was just laugh, laugh & laugh. She was healed within three months after diagnosis.<br /><br />In another case,a person(no name mentioned) had been wearing glasses for three years before he discovered The Secret and now his eyesight had been restored & did not need glasses for reading because he could <span style="font-style:italic;">see clearly.</span>. What he did was simply, in a three-day period, "..imagined myself in dark restaurants, on planes, and at my computer, reading clearly & effortlessly. And said over & over,'I can see clearly, I can see clearly.'<br />Just like in the Cantonese drama serial by Charmaine Shek,where she kept chanting 'If I Think I Can, I Can.' & proceeded to do everything that came her way.<br /><br />The Secret is meant not only for the feeble-minded who wants achievement the easy way, it is also meant for the money-spinners who are in the direct sales business, motivation speakers, et al.<br /><br />Normally, I finished a reading a book within a week. The Secret took me more than three months because I have expected the same stero-typed secrets to be revealed all the way. The book costs RM79.90.I normally scan the book before buying it but in this case,it was plastic-wrapped & didn't gave me the chance to do a quick review on the spot. Not worth my money.This one will remain in the same location in my shelf for a long time.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-37884562287014750832010-09-04T23:09:00.000-07:002010-09-05T00:48:51.360-07:00Still Working Overtime........?It's 7.30pm on a nice Monday evening, no rain, clear sky,no traffic jam. And yet Steve Beh was alone at the office,churning out some reports, occasionally stopping & ingrained in deep thoughts.<br />Yes, Steve Beh was working overtime again tonight, and tomorrow night...until Friday night.<br />To him, the world around the company he was in would stop soon if he did not complete the overtime for tonight."What would my wife say if I return home now?". "What would the boss say if I don't submit the reports tomorrow?"."What would...?".<br />This may not be a typical scenario of an executive working overtime daily in a typical company in Malaysia but it does strike an accord with me, and resembles what many of my colleagues have been doing for the last 30 years,20 years,5 years, 2 years and some who have just barely been working for a year.<br /><br />Theories that I have gathered from friends have it that the main reasons for an executive working overtime ( which means, unpaid overtime!)are:<br />1. Workload<br />2. Avoiding family problems<br />3. Avoiding traffic jams<br />4. Short of manpower<br />5. Less interruptions in work when most others are not present<br />6. Requested by supervisor,due to abnormal or seasonal demands<br />7. Perceived financial rewards<br />8. Perceived promotion prospects<br />9. Fear of losing job<br />10. Job satisfaction (this reason is my input, which unfortunately, only two colleagues concurred).<br /><br />After retirement,I found out that reasons no.(8) may be valid for long serving employees but the rest of the reasons are applicable for the relatively newer employees.<br /><br />Time management is definitely the main culprit for most of the reasons above and I would advise everybody to look into this aspect seriously.Most of the time, we procrastinate during normal office time...well,sometime fighting fires (I see smokes!) or building new toilets(cannot stand already!)when required!A good boss should understand his subordinate's predicament. There is so much a person can do.All that may have been planned may have been thrown down the drain if the boss frequently, out of the blue,instructed for an immediate job instruction change or new job instruction to be completed.Yes,there are still such bosses around in this millenium.<br /><br />There is no point in trying to impress upon your boss if you frequently worked overtime. Your boss is not a stupid person. Financial rewards or promotions are not gotten these ways. Your boss will just think that you are inefficient...remember sometime your boss may have asked you before,"Why are you still working so late?". Is this your boss's concern for you or is it a rhetoric question?<br />Financial rewards and promotions are gotten from your performance results,sometime irrespective of your working attitudes!<br /><br /><em><strong>A case of exemption for thoughts:</strong></em><br />Previously a multi-national company I know of,has such a good management and human relationship system that the employees worked overtime voluntarily to achieve higher productivity & efficiently and achieved consistently higher and higher profit for the company. Fianancial rewards and promotions were abundant as a result.<br />Later, the company was taken over by another owner and there were almost zero human relationship among the new management and the employees, the former with the system of "I boss, you slave". From thence,almost all employees stopped work at 5pm and the work attitude became <em>laissez-faire (tidak apa)</em>. Of course, there were still one or two who stayed behind due to financial rewards or promotion prospects.....<br /><br />I have learned that working overtime frequently caused unnecessary stress and fatigue when it deny you the chance for other healthy activities, like staying or going out more often with your loved ones or like exercising and playing games. Devoting less time to such health promoting activities may lead to other health problems in later lives!<br /><br />So, what is the time now? 8.30pm. And still in the office??RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-35711891317447236112010-08-25T21:37:00.000-07:002010-08-25T22:17:29.733-07:00Check Your Perodua Car WarrantyJust completed the warranty replacements on Perodua ALZA.<br /><br />Both Proton & Perodua have this habit of not doing recalls on car defects which they have detected. True, there have been one or two recalls, e.g Waja's rim in 2005 but on the whole, there are still many other defects which were omitted.<br />I remember in the beginning,many Waja cars have defects in central locking system, the power window system, easily broken door handles,torn engine mountings(cushions),etc but they were never recalled. Most of the owners have to fork out their money to repair and change those items.<br /><br />Coming back to the ALZA.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiIdRsG_AbiXZadQCB9AVUk5YTpn-H6b8EbdsL3kdTyYtn3wa8XrO2xWK-_Nhj2W4iPTU96pXxF-oxaFeV0V_dUbMKeZ0CgAp-yj0MlPdHn2IYgUh3Gmy3Sex4TMaxYpCbBDX7dlpO4PbU/s1600/perodua-mpv-interior-front.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 226px; height: 169px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiIdRsG_AbiXZadQCB9AVUk5YTpn-H6b8EbdsL3kdTyYtn3wa8XrO2xWK-_Nhj2W4iPTU96pXxF-oxaFeV0V_dUbMKeZ0CgAp-yj0MlPdHn2IYgUh3Gmy3Sex4TMaxYpCbBDX7dlpO4PbU/s320/perodua-mpv-interior-front.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5509583242733874834" /></a><br /><br />*I have changed the hatchback's two backstays:you know, the two superthin shock-absorbers supporting the hatchback door when it is open. There is a funny squeaking sound and the hatchback is very tight (& slow) when it is opening: it should be smooth & consistent.<br />Come to think of it,ALZA never have this feature mentioned in their brochures.<br /><br />*And then, the RH side window: when you are driving, there is an air hissing sound, like air coming in from outside. Actually, it's the outside air leaking through the small triangular glass window and flowing inside the door itself...it does not escape into the car compartment though, but a nuisance to hear the air hissing sound.<br />I heard it happened either to the RH or LH side of the front glass window.<br />To rectify it, the plastic sealing strips of the triangular window have to be changed and it took nearly 4 hours to do it!<br /><br />There!If your ALZA's still under warranty, go to the nearest Perodua workshop now & report it but be prepared to have a long wait:they have a habit of procrastination.<br />The first time I reported it a few months ago at the Sg Choh's branch near Perodua's factory, the workshop assistant said if you want to know the problem, you ask the Japanese in the factory! Until to date, this branch never communicated the result of my claim to me. My current claim was directed to the Prai branch.<br /><br />So what are you waiting for?RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-13358690302745193782010-08-14T23:52:00.000-07:002010-08-15T00:23:20.417-07:00WHOSE BABY IS THIS?I have always wanted to write about this type of scenario, chicken or egg first?<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWipG4b-sDFHAZXOm93EgU8hhLJM0NL-9T3tnL2LraHtt37MLOTwC-7ptzK9ccPbdV1VFIQsGTd0iKOgUxd2PWyeOIuRBce7wOlLGoFcfqiXrvAUqvD9N31L3bCNHWZiUZ658T2LPKPy8/s1600/Sewage+leak+2..W100716003..16072010.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWipG4b-sDFHAZXOm93EgU8hhLJM0NL-9T3tnL2LraHtt37MLOTwC-7ptzK9ccPbdV1VFIQsGTd0iKOgUxd2PWyeOIuRBce7wOlLGoFcfqiXrvAUqvD9N31L3bCNHWZiUZ658T2LPKPy8/s320/Sewage+leak+2..W100716003..16072010.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5505532756645167698" /></a><br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDJQL1i2RW5oo27kXs3BBAb8ZhWw2YG4vcOc4J6DHYniPdZWr97mx3oyM1SBmVqJelI-klmyQbJ9JYQnIN-1sKx-uaBQZK-Svq4LG0A7_0sRxmjp7_hZxOsEDqsWrk6u1XSwQEMZtAaG8/s1600/sewage+leak1..%23W100716003..16072010.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDJQL1i2RW5oo27kXs3BBAb8ZhWw2YG4vcOc4J6DHYniPdZWr97mx3oyM1SBmVqJelI-klmyQbJ9JYQnIN-1sKx-uaBQZK-Svq4LG0A7_0sRxmjp7_hZxOsEDqsWrk6u1XSwQEMZtAaG8/s320/sewage+leak1..%23W100716003..16072010.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5505533269210011394" /></a><br /><br />Anyway, there seems to be some sewerage leaking under the ground. See pics. The situation has been ongoing for the last few years and it is getting more serious now. When it rains, the whole adjoining roads will be overflowed with the dirty septic water. <br /><br />Of course, when the complaint first went to MPSP, they replied <strong>,"LUAR KUASA MPSP"! </strong>And that without checking the actual condition at the location. I think, MPSP saw the word 'sewerage' and automatically flunk the complaint out, probably to the sewerage people? The thing is, how did they know it was out of their jurisdiction if they have not studied together with other related departments or bodies, e.g. IWK, JKR, etc? How do they know whether JKR's or MPSP's contractor have damaged the underlying ground due to the contractor's excavation work? Wouldn't it be part of MPSP's responsibility towards the people too?<br /><br />The complaint has now been directed to IWK (sewerage body)and waiting their feedback. I have a forewarning that the reply may not be responsive but let's not jump the gun.<br /><br />One of the last resorts is to highlight the complaint to the local newspaper, which would be very effective, as I have found out a few years ago when the local contractor did a haphazard job and cut corners when building the monsoon drain's railings......RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-90650043982762615102010-06-23T01:36:00.000-07:002010-06-23T02:39:45.134-07:00Respect the non-Muslims (sic..non-Bumi).They have rights too.I read with amusement the recent remarks by a few Ministers who were literary fighting for the rights of the non-Muslims which also,in this country, refers to the rights of the non-Bumiputras (Prince of the Earth).<br /><br />With regards to sports betting which the Govt intends to introduce (via a monopoly licence to a crony),the reason being the non-Muslims',esp the Chinese,culture to gamble. What a sweeping statement. The Minister in the PM's dept even babbled on that the Govt can always introduce and enforce regulations to prevent the Muslims from being involved in the sports bettings and other form of gamblings. I wonder why didn't the Govt enforce it now for the existing 4-D,Da Ma Cai & Toto gamblings? <br /><br />Even today, read what the Star reported,"Sports betting and gambling should be legalised and governed by proper laws and regulations, Information, Communications and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim said on Wednesday. He added that tax collected from sports betting could be used for the welfare of non-Muslims under a Government escrow fund". What a nobel idea. How i wish there were more Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim.<br /><br /><br />In the light of the year in & year out complaints that many bright students were deprived the chance for the JPA scholarship (and the promise that all deserving students will get it),instead of solving the problem, the Govt thought it would be better if there were NO JPA scholarship...and presto, there will be NO complaints! I shudder to think what would Kepner-Tregoe do for a living if their Problem Solving and Decision Making strategy were so easily replaced just by eliminating the problem directly,as what our smart-alec Minister in the PM's Dept in the same breath, suddenly decided not to respect the rights of the non-Bumi apropos the PSD(or commonly known as JPA)scholarship issue & intended to do :<br />" The Govt had earlier announced that 1200 of the 1500 PSD scholarships would gradually be phased off from next year onwards. Minister in the PM's Dept Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz said this was because the Govt could no longer afford to fund the studies of the growing population of bright students pursuing undergraduate studies abroad."<br /><br />Deputy Education Minister, Wee Ka Siong would do better to see Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz about the MARA scholarships.<br /><br />Is our dear Minister in the PM's Dept implying that there are no more growing bright students applying for the MARA scholarships?RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-29999672112045058462010-06-05T21:45:00.000-07:002010-06-05T22:17:05.126-07:00I DIDN'T DO IT ON PURPOSE!Two recent events really stumped me that there are still such uncouth people around the block.<br /><br />A month ago,a 4-W drive parked beside my brand new car & two doors open simultaneously by the driver & the passenger. Bang! I quickly went back to look at my side of door & sure enough, there was a deep dent & paint peeling off. Told the she passenger beside the driver why she was so careless. She replied," Accident ma! i didn't purposely bang want! What to do ar!" <br />No apology, no nothing. And the driver husband just nonchalantly walked away as if nothing happened too!<br />I walked to the outside of the 4-W drive & the other car, a Mercedes Benz, had its rear view mirrow dented too! And the owner is nowhere in sight.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-0QaRN_GPgu2DqGIa_JDd48Q6L9vk4WcAjj_5qwqMXHhb5zPNDZTCCOfke3md8DVdZoAal3iSI_GQAxda_H8PnEWmsPNjsPtIlLbBox0I9lqRFnY36WM8AGSS9loTKgi0i76z8zrCzZI/s1600/Broken_pot%5B1%5D.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-0QaRN_GPgu2DqGIa_JDd48Q6L9vk4WcAjj_5qwqMXHhb5zPNDZTCCOfke3md8DVdZoAal3iSI_GQAxda_H8PnEWmsPNjsPtIlLbBox0I9lqRFnY36WM8AGSS9loTKgi0i76z8zrCzZI/s320/Broken_pot%5B1%5D.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5479522422719823682" /></a><br /><br />Then last evening, I heard a crash sound outside the house & rushing out saw a fat Form 2 boy bicycling away with her mother beside her scurrying away. And one of my flower pots outside the gate has been broken!<br />Told my missus & pointed to the boy still outside his house, about 6-neighbour houses away,"That fat boy did it".<br />The mother replied," Accident ma! he didn't purposely bang want! What to do ar!"<br /><br />Deja vu. I rest my case. Period.<br /><br />IN these two cases above, any sane person would have apologised & offer to compensate eventhough it would not be accepted & just forgiven because of the small amount involved.It would be left at that. It would be civil enough then. Don't you think so?RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-2822346353349069762010-05-28T23:26:00.000-07:002010-05-29T00:27:47.598-07:00ABOLISH SUBSIDIES TO REDUCE WASTE & INEFFICIENCIES!So everybody would have known by now that the Malaysian Govt is going to gradually reduce & eventually abolish subsidies to a range of products & services.<br />Do not hit the panick button yet because there are some Mitigation Plans for low income rakyat to reclaim yet some money!(See table below;source:PEMANDU).<br />(CLICK image to magnify)<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIUq5i8ZJ1J6Gg8LC5S4CdJiI62vo2Ua3LJq1sRqJ7UVMwvaOpeb_EmRTYPKkQQSKVy23eeGTcTTuO8Imnjrxmsvz2or6u1KdFxaqQbVD7YmpZ8fFTIXBLJuwa84DVHW6mzycIOnLAKfA/s1600/Subsidy+1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 315px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIUq5i8ZJ1J6Gg8LC5S4CdJiI62vo2Ua3LJq1sRqJ7UVMwvaOpeb_EmRTYPKkQQSKVy23eeGTcTTuO8Imnjrxmsvz2or6u1KdFxaqQbVD7YmpZ8fFTIXBLJuwa84DVHW6mzycIOnLAKfA/s400/Subsidy+1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5476575552010867426" /></a><br /><br />For the Mitigation Plan under Fuel & LPG,I am not sure what 'Single Vehicle Owner' means but if you are owning two vehicles now, you might want to transfer one to your wife or children now?<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDeCGAAD3UziHhj9UHuefF5eBK8RCuAIzEMiWn-4poiEqX1vX203i0mxdiBiY-FW8wTVsAJjDa-fVZI9ArV4ToV3efklhKSBHFoREmXYICzB5CFrhqbBBMb8PzwroH6-7H37R6myf7aVs/s1600/Subsidy+2.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 309px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDeCGAAD3UziHhj9UHuefF5eBK8RCuAIzEMiWn-4poiEqX1vX203i0mxdiBiY-FW8wTVsAJjDa-fVZI9ArV4ToV3efklhKSBHFoREmXYICzB5CFrhqbBBMb8PzwroH6-7H37R6myf7aVs/s400/Subsidy+2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5476585143773596402" /></a><br /><br />Mitigation Plans for these four items affect mainly the more than 60% of the rakyat of one race where their main livelihoods & services are dependable on. These mitigation plans will again need some braincracking and I think it will be back to square one as the definitions for the medical poor, low income household,fisherman & farmer remain as you thought it would be!<br /><br />In Economics, a subsidy is a type of financial government assistance, such as a grant, tax break, or trade barrier, in order to encourage the production or purchase of a good. I thought this was I learned during my Economics lessons many donkey years ago, whereby subsidies will affect & assist in the Supply & Demand of certain essential goods & services, especially for those basic neccesities, like sugar,flour & rice. The problem actually lies in the control mechanism to prevent abuse of the subsidies, which the Govt said 'I have enough too'!<br /><br />Apparently, the Govt thought they have had enough of these subsidies thing which are causing the loss of billions from the Govt coffer, stopping short of the subsidies given to other products/services,like the highway toll concessionaires and the independent power producers(IPPs). Of course, subsidies to cronies will continue because they are the ones who can manage the jobs well, as what one of our famous PM insisted.<br /><br />At least the present PM is daring enough to push this subsidy thing though eventhough it is going to affect the BN in the next GE.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-52669019618447365322010-04-26T06:36:00.000-07:002010-04-26T19:11:01.598-07:00KAIZEN- what the Japs didn't tell you.KAIZEN - as what most of you may know, is the Japanese management system of Continuous Improvement.<br /><br />As contrast to the American system where there is quantum leap in improvement & the Chinese where the improvement is reformative (kai ge), the Japanese continuous improvement is a series of slow, slow improvement over a long period of time. That's why if you work in a Japanese company, you must improve (it is compulsory; in fact you need to churn out a Kaizen report every month without fail)but as long as you have a small result reported, it suffices. It keep you on your toes....that's where creativity comes in.<br /><br />However, having worked in Japanese factories all my live until I retired, Kaizen results are very misleading indeed.That's why in world productivity reports by manufacturing companies over the world, Japanese companies,like Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Suzuki, etc always lead in the productivity figures & subsequently by countries, Japanese always lead the pack whenever the data are released by the Americans or by the Japanese productivity centre.<br /><br />I could not get the latest figures published (something is wrong..anybody have the data?) but the 2002 figures may suffice as a guideline:<br />The Jap Productivity Centre reported that Japan ranked 18th among 30 OECD countries in productivity in terms of <em>GDP(using dollars & PPP) over the Labour Force Employed.</em>. Japan at USD54,264 was LAST among 7 major industries by countries. Among the non-OECD countries,Hong Kong & Israel were ranked high at USD50,000. China was ranked 51 out of 58 countries...which is a lot for everyone to ponder,seeing that for the last 10 years, China has consistently raked up more than 8.5 productivity growth rate,e.g. between 1990-2002, China was ranked 1st out of 81 countries in terms of growth rate at average of 8.5% while Japan was ranked at 37th at average of 3.7%.<br />However, in terms of Physical Labour Productivity, Japan was ranked 3rd out of 37 countries!With Ireland at No.1. In terms of productivity in Manufacturing Industries, Japan ranked 3rd out of 22 countries. This Physical Labour Productivity is measured by using Output over Amt of Invested Labour Hrs,i.e. man-hrs, NOT over Headcount.<br /><br />Now for my scepticsm at the labour productivity data reported by the Japs:<br />owing to the immense pressure from top mgmt to churn out an impressive Kaizen results, and hence a high productivity figure,local mgmt have no choice but with the close-one-eye explicit approval from the Jap mgmt, the input man-hrs are mostly manipulated to denote a lower number. So,instead of man-hrs, headcounts are used! Of course, using Headcounts as input is allowed in productivity calculation but the unit of measurement differed & have to be specified instead of misleading the overall figures as XXX/man-hrs. What actually happened was that Japanese companies almost invariably depend on overtimes for their daily output. This is also the pressure on local mgmt to reduce labour intake & hence, a lower headcount reported in Japanese countries.In fact, when I was in Japan on numerous occasions since 1975 up to 1991, I have personally experienced the daily 3 hrs overtime which the supervisor will go around taking names 10 minutes before time-out. Most workers have to comply or else....That's another reasons why most Japanese never return home to their wives & families before 8pm. Either they are at work, or they are at other outlets (Pachinko,entertainment outlets,etc)or they will feel ashamed if neigbours see them home early.<br /><br />Coming back to my experience,sometime overtime working hours are not computed into the overall productivity calculations but nevertheless, the units employed are still "per man-hr" (which should have been "per person"!)<br /><br />The one other factor which the Jap mgmt would like to mislead the world at large is out-sourced labour,which directly affected the productivity calaculation:<br />Almost all Jap factories whether in Japan or overseas out-sourced their labour by about 40%. These out-sourced labour (in Malaysia,we called them 'contract labour')usually worked in the manufacturing factories concerned;they sometime wear the same uniforms as the factories employees but some out-sourced labour have their own separate uniforms. There are reasons to the choices.<br />These out-sourced labour are paid a flat rate (to their bosses).Their bosses in return may pay their employees overtime rate as necessary. However,note that the Jap manufacturing factories compute their labour productivity based on the flat rate which are normally lower than the standard rate paid to their own employees (less the compulsory employees fund, insurance, etc).<br />One important factor to note is that invariably, not all the out-sourced labour work time are taken into consideration when computing the labour productivity results;in fact, they are not reported at all...they are reported as overhead expenses! Of course, these out-sourced labour work tome calculation are selective & may vary each month; e.g.the main assembly line workers may be considered as direct labour & their work time taken into consideraion but the sub-assembly work labour may be discarded completely.<br />Out-sourced labour may also be equal to out-sourced work, whereby most of the components purchased are supplied in sub-assembled forms, thus reducing the number of direct labours required in the plant. Ingenious!<br /><br />So now you know what I meant. In the past, the Americans & the World have been throwing accolades at the Japanese for their strict work ethics & high productivity figures..but I say, don't be misled; what you see is not what you get.<br /><br />This is not to say that the Japanese Kaizen mgmt system is no good..in fact I love the system because it makes everybody on their toes & really comes out with monthly improvements, no matter how small they are. There are no chances for lazy bones if their intentions are just to come to the factories & just perform their daily chores.<br /><br />Anyone....Japanese factories? You may also use these methods to improve your company's productivity rate too.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-30037798169953603422010-04-19T02:48:00.001-07:002010-04-19T03:17:32.252-07:00Who invented the Pen Drive?I happened to see a programme in Astro AEC today which highlighted the inventor of the pen drive was a young engineer from Sekinchan in the State of Selangor in Malaysia!<br /><br />His name is Khein-Seng Pua. However, he migrated to Taiwan & the pen drive invention is accredited to the company he worked in.<br /><br />Now this is very interesting indeed. There were a lot of contradiction as to the invention of the pen drive & nobody wants to be left out, Samsung, IBM, etc<br /><br />See link here <strong>http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/macri-group/message/3978?threaded=1&var=1&p=13.</strong> to read some interesting correspondence from another Malaysian inventor Robest Yong who hails from the Methodist Secondary School, Nibong Tebal, Penang, Malaysia.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-63126365712146001992010-04-18T22:36:00.000-07:002010-04-18T23:36:38.822-07:00HULU SELANGOR BY ELECTION ON 25/4/10Clear cut winner - Zaid.<br /><br />Many of the Indian votes will undoubtably go to Zaid. BN's Kamalanathan candidacy was decided by the UMM..NO warlords as usual...it's my say or we opt for an UMM..NO guy.<br />Look how confident was this Semi Value right from the beginning when he declared,' Hulu Selangor candidate will be Palanivel from MIC!' You see, right from the beginning on April 2, <a href="http://http//rockybru.com.my/2010/04/new-face-of-mic.html">Rocky</a> <a href="http://rockybru.com.my/2010/04/new-face-of-mic.html">http://rockybru.com.my/2010/04/new-face-of-mic.html</a>. has leaked out the news that Kamalanathan will be BN's choice & when Semi Value knew that he has no clout over the EM..IC, he timidly backed off & announced,'We will abide by BN's choice.' Since when has Semi Value being so accomodating? Now that his tail has nowhere to be hidden, he self-consoled that Palanivel will be the next president of EM..IC when he retires in 2 years time!! Come on, does he thinks that the members will abide by his command to have no-contest for the next Presidency? What, another non-MP & Minister for the Presidency?<br /><br />Latest is that Palanivel may be offered a Senator's post to placate him...& he seems happy at it, why not?<br /><br />I have personally seen how the folks of Hulu Selangor suffered at the hand of the 6 Million Dollar Man MTM when he was disgraced by MM many years ago....all hell broke loose and the properties at Bukit Beruntung & Bukit Sentosa plummeted like 9 pins. Bkt Beruntung & Bkt Sentosa never regain their heydays & great master plans & if you were to cruise the hollow sleepy towns now, you will see rows & rows of abandon housing projects everywhere. People remember. If the Govt is serious about developing the areas, it should not depend only on the MP of the constituency. Of course, the people were taught a lesson but once bitten is twice shy.<br /><br />The 3 State Assemblies under the Hulu Selangor's constituency are all under BN, so it doesn't make sense for the voters to vot in a BN candidate again. I think to prevent the comeback of the BN 2/3 majority in Parliament & maintain a proper check & balance in the Govt, PR will win thumb-up with improved majority.<br /><br />Come Apr 25 & cast your polls here.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-9809392941719904102010-04-01T01:47:00.000-07:002010-04-01T02:29:49.921-07:001Malaysia....race is still first?I read with disgust our DPM's announcement that he is a Malay first & Malaysian second.<br /><br />Malaysian DPM says he is a Malay first but that does not mean that he is not a Malaysian at heart.<br />He said he would be shunned by all the Malays if he were to say that he is a Malaysian first & a Malay second.<br />And the next day our PM was caught in the trap when he ran to support the DPM that what the DPM said was not wrong.<br /><br />There goes our 1Malaysia concept. Might as well throw it down the drain.<br />I have always believed that our new PM is treading a middle path & avoiding stepping on the toes of the other ethnic minorities in the country. The latest NEM unveiled shows a lot of promises but they are all yet to be seen whether they will be implemented, what with all these over zealous civil servants around, including some VVIPs.<br /><br />Our DPM hails from Johore. Recently, a Minister admitted that there were only 11 Chinese & 109 Indians working in the civil services in Johore! Of course, the usual remark is ' there were very few non-Malay applicants' which most of us do not deny. Non-Malays will never be promoted by merit in the civil services & it is now to be seen whether the new NEM will rectify this bias.<br /><br />Coming back to 'I am Malay first', the DPM also says that the Indians will aslo say they are Indians first.....how odd? How sure was the DPM? He proceeded to chide Lim Kit Siang that the latter will not tell him he does not struggle for the Chinese community? Now this is a very odd comparison indeed. Does the DPM meant that because he struggled for the Malays, then he is Malay first? Period.<br /><br />I will always say that I am Malaysian first & Chinese second, so do a lot of my other Chinese & Indian friends. I have been to a few countries, Japan, China, Singapore, Thailand, Hong Kong; when people asked me who am I, it is an automatic ' I am a Malaysian'. Try saying ' I am a Chinese, Indian or Malay' & see what response you get from your overseas friends. Saying that you are a Chinese, Indian or Malay will simply connote a racist or racial intonation. Your overseas friend will immediately conjure a picture of Malaysia being full of racial sentiments & problems. Therefore, if one says ' I am a Malay first', then enough said. I would not be surprised if this is blurted from Ahmaid Ismail or Ibrahin Ali but not from any high ranking Ministers in the country.<br /><br />Everywhere in the world, the citizens are so proud to be associated with their countries. " I am an America", "I am an African", "I am a Singaporean", " I am an Indonesian", etc. Make it clear, you are always a Malaysian first, then your stocks come next, be it a Chinese, Indian , Malay, Kadazan, Iban, etc.<br /><br />Hidup 1Malaysia !RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-43481894126971716662009-12-27T07:22:00.000-08:002009-12-27T07:53:03.981-08:00GST in Malaysia - Consumer woeMalaysia's decision to implement the GST (Goods & Service Tax), come 2011 is a bit too hasty.<br /><br />For some of the 143 countries who has implemented it, I say well done. Most countries started straight from the GST, unlike Malaysia who has the existing Sales Tax & Service Tax at 10% & 5% to be morphed into the single GST at 4%.<br /><br />For the current 10% Sales Tax, the Ring-system is usually applied whereby in the ring of sellers to buyers, only one seller is entitled to collect the 10% Sales Tax on behalf of the Govt. while the rest are exempted.<br />For the GST system, at every stage of the seller-buyer transaction, a flat 4% will be collected without fail. Invariably, at the end of the line, the consumers will feel the pinch of the prices of goods to be borned.<br />In case most of you do not know, in the GST system, manufacturers will have no worry at all because they are allowed to 'offset' the 4% paid which they will be paying by the 4% they will be collecting when they sell.<br /><br />In theory, the net selling price at the consumer end would be lower than the existing price because at each end of the selling-buying stage, the 4% would translate into a lower selling price for the next stage, in fact by about 15.6%.<br />However, in reality, especially in the short term, most sellers would want to maintain their absolute profit margin rather than to their profit margin rate. ( e.g. an absolute profit of RM10 calculated from 10% of selling price of RM100, would be better than a profit of 10% of the new reduced selling price of RM99).<br /><br />It is hope that the short term immediate gain by the sellers ( retailers, especially) would be tapered off in the long term when new product pricings are recalculated by the manufacturers according the 4% GST rate.<br /><br />After all, wouldn't a lower selling price translate into an increase of sales?<br /><br />Hopefully so.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-45823227966426563902009-12-21T07:09:00.000-08:002009-12-21T07:39:45.300-08:00HONEY, I shrunk the Chinese!The sharp reduction of Chinese as a population ratio is contrary to natural growth patterns and an anomaly due to institutionalized discrimination. The present Chinese condition requires them to speak better BM to fit in.<br /><br />No greater love hath man and moms than they lay down their life savings for their children to study overseas and emigrate.<br /><br />Between March 2008 and August 2009, some 50,000 students sailed from our shores, Deputy Foreign Minister A. Kohilan Pillay told Parliament last week. The Star speculates that many will not return. Star editor Wong Sai Wan wrote: “… some even admitted that they had already applied for their PR visas”.<br /><br />They are among 304,358 persons registered with Malaysia’s representative offices abroad over the past 18 months. A review of statistics will help us to interpret this unique Made-in-Malaysia export of roughly 17,000 units of human capital on average a month.<br /><br />Among the ethnic groups in Malaysia, the Chinese are the largest outflow and also experiencing the biggest change in demography.<br /><br /><span style="color:#ff6666;">Proportion of Chinese in Malaysia total population</span><br />Year Percent<br /> <span style="color:#ff0000;">1957 45+<br /></span>1970 35.6<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;">1980 32.1<br /></span>1991 26.9<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;">2000 24.5<br /></span>2010 22.6*<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;">2035 18.6**</span> <br /><span style="font-size:78%;"> </span><span style="font-family:georgia;font-size:78%;">+ Decimal point is approximate<br />* Projection by Department of Statistics<br />** Projection in The Population of Malaysia (ISEAS)<br /></span><br />In the 80s decade, the Chinese had a negative net migration rate of -10.6 percent. “Between 1980 and 1991, the [Chinese] migration deficit was estimated at 391,801 persons as against a national increase of 777,339 persons,” statistician Tey Nai Peng found in his study.<br /><br />Chinese annual growth rate also showed a consistent drop, recording only 53 percent between 1990 and 2000 during a period when the national population grew 123 percent.<br />Tey said in his paper ‘Causes and consequences of demographic change in the Chinese community in Malaysia’ that “the fertility of the Chinese declined from 4.6 children to 2.5 children between 1970 and 1997”. Comparatively, total fertility rate for Malays in 1987 remained a high 4.51 when TFR for Chinese was 2.25. <br /><br /><span style="color:#009900;"><strong>Changes in the states</strong></span><br />It is no longer true that Penang is a Chinese majority state. In 2010, Malays in Penang are projected to be 670,128 persons – outnumbering Chinese at 658,661. Between 1991 and 2000, Penang had an average annual growth rate of 1.8 percent but Penang Chinese only 0.7 percent.<br />Perak has significant numbers of Chinese but still, Chinese registered a negative growth of -1.0 percent in 1991-2000 whereas the average annual rate of Perak population growth was a positive 0.4 percent.<br /><br />The Department of Statistics records that in the 1990s, Chinese fell in number in Kelantan, Terengganu and Perlis too. In Malacca, Negri Sembilan and Pahang, Chinese were practically stagnant.<br /><br />In Sabah, Chinese were 23 percent of the population in 1960 but shrunk to 10.1 percent in 2000. “In contrast, recent immigrants and refugees, with a population of 614,824 persons in 2000, form close to a quarter of the total population, or more than twice the size of the long-settled Chinese community,” writes Danny Wong Tze-Ken in his paper ‘The Chinese population in Sabah’.<br />The situation in Sabah is largely a result of ‘Project M’ giving Indonesians and Muslim Filipinos Malaysian ICs. Overall, the abnormality of a shrinking Chinese population ratio can be traced to government policies that actively discriminate against this community.<br />Small families, ageing parents<br /><br />By year 2000, Chinese were mainly concentrated in Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. The Klang Valley accounted for 38 percent of all Chinese in the Peninsula. Nine out of 10 Chinese today are found in urban areas, concentrated in the major cities.<br /><br />In the dozen years between 1980 and 1991 when the Malaysian population increase nationally was 4,634,500 persons, Chinese increase was only 530,400 persons. Or looking at it another way (as indicated in table below), the Chinese are merely doubling in absolute numbers when the population will have quadrupled.<br /><br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">Numbers of Chinese in Malaysia</span></strong><br />Year <span style="color:#3333ff;">Chinese (million)</span> Total population (million)<br />1970 <span style="color:#3333ff;">3.6</span> 10.5<br />1980 <span style="color:#3333ff;">4.4</span> 13.7<br />1991 <span style="color:#3333ff;">4.9</span> 18.4<br />2000 <span style="color:#3333ff;">5.7</span> 23.3<br />2010 <span style="color:#3333ff;">6.5</span> 28.9 *<br />2035 <span style="color:#3333ff;"> 7.7</span> 41.1 **<br /> <br /><span style="font-size:78%;"><em>* Projection by Department of Statistics<br />** Projection in The Population of Malaysia (ISEAS)<br /></em></span><br />It is conspicuous that among the younger age cohorts, Chinese are an even smaller proportion of the national average. On the other hand, among the elderly [60 years and above], Chinese constitute 5.4 percent of the population, as against the national average of 5 percent.<br /><br />Among the ethnic groups in Malaysia, Chinese have the highest proportion of the elderly. “It is found that most of the ‘clients’ in nursing homes are the Chinese,” observes researcher Philip Poi Jun Hua in his essay 'Ageing among the Chinese in Malaysia: Some trends and issues'.<br />This situation affecting the Chinese community, with parents either in nursing homes or ‘home alone’ in Malaysia whilst the children are abroad, has ironically come about due to education as a main contributory factor.<br /><br />“The Chinese community places great emphasis on education but the escalation in the cost of acquiring an education might have compelled young couples to limit their family size,” surmises Tey.<br />Because educated Chinese women are in the workforce as well as limiting themselves to only one or two children, Chinese couples have more money to spend on each child’s education.<br />This is in a way a lose-lose scenario because the couple would then tend to <a href="http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1940395,00.html" target="_blank">over-protect</a> the single offspring – do recall China’s one-child policy outcome of producing Little Emperors – and the well-educated child is more likely to emigrate.<br /><br /><span style="color:#ff6600;"><strong>Self-</strong></span><span style="color:#ff6600;"><strong>interest vs community concerns<br /></strong></span>“All my friends plan to leave Malaysia,” a private student in the offshore campus of a premier Australian university in KL declared to me just a couple of months ago.<br /><br />These youths have cogently articulated why they intend to vote with their feet. Aside from the various reasons we’re all familiar with, I’d like to introduce here the theory of ‘placelessness’ which Lee Boon Thong links to the Chinese condition.<br /><br />In his paper ‘Placelessness: A study of residential neighbourhood quality among Chinese communities in Malaysia’, Lee observes that Chinese in cities have subordinated neighbourliness and personal ties to the pursuit of personal advancement.<br /><br />The move to new urban and suburban residential neighbourhoods – where availability of Chinese food and access to shopping malls are often major considerations – is accompanied by other shifts, among them the increasing “technopolistic grip” [orientation towards digital entertainment] and losing some of their traditions [e.g. ancestral worship], especially if they convert to Christianity or Islam.<br /><br />Lee describes the new society resulting from intense urbanization as one breeding individuals who are more self-centred, more covetous, less considerate and kiasu to boot. “Self-interest overrides almost everything else that concerns the welfare of the community.”<br /><br />He also says that if the trend persists of residents in emerging neighbourhoods failing to develop ties that bind and a sufficient sense of commonness in community life, then “urban Chinese are at risk in producing a pseudo-progressive society that appears to be outwardly prosperous through its middle-class façade but in effect lacking social coherence and a sense of shared ‘placeness’ for the neighbourhood”.<br /><br /><span style="color:#6600cc;"><strong>Commonality as militating factor<br /></strong></span>Further aggravating this estrangement is a social milieu that is changed, parallel to the pronounced changes in demography. It is projected that while the annual growth of Bumiputera in the next decade (2011-2021) will be 1.98 percent, the corresponding growth of Chinese will be 0.73 percent.<br /><br />Saw Swee Hock in his 2007 ISEAS paper ‘The Population of Malaysia’ projects that by year 2035, Malaysia will have a population of 41 million, 72.1 percent of them Bumiputera. By then Islam would have stamped a thorough dominance on the physical and moral landscape of the country.<br /><br />Concomitant to this development is the fact that in the mainstream of all spheres of life and particularly official domains, the predominant speech community will be Malay.<br /><br />This fait accompli of demography dictates that the minorities have to be adept in the Malay/national language for any meaningful integration to occur. Otherwise, to borrow a turn of phrase from Lee, they will be living in “proximity without propinquity” or in other words, have trouble relating to the majority.<br /><br />It is thus necessary that next generation Chinese be effectively multilingual and able to ‘code switch’, i.e. use different varieties of language in different social settings. If Chinese are unable create a connectedness especially across ethnic lines, this shortcoming would just be adding another factor to the myriad push factors driving young Chinese away. The statistics tell a very sobering story.<br /><br /> In another short 25 years, Chinese will only be a mere 18.6 percent of the population. They will soon fall below the sustainable threshold for propagating their culture, and their diminishing numbers will only increase the pressure for assimilation – something Chinese are reluctant to do.<br /><br /><span style="font-family:times new roman;"><em>Written by Helen Ang <br />Wednesday, 09 December 2009 13:30 </em></span>RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-34155897118073627592009-10-18T02:39:00.000-07:002009-10-18T03:35:21.065-07:00Unemployed GraduatesAlmost all those who attended the interviews I conducted recently were University graduates, eventhough the advertisement didn't specifically mentioned so.<br /><br />What does this show?<br />It's an indication of the number of graduates our country is churning out yearly, unqualified to be blunt. Most of the interviewee (graduates) have just been in their current employment for about 6 months or so and most of them have been working in at least 3 companies prior to that.<br />This brings me to the subject of today- Unemployed Graduates: just how many are there & why are they there?<br /><br /><br /><strong>UNEMPLOYED GRADUATES*</strong><br />In 2004, there were 4,594 unemployed graduates of which 163 were Chinese, 207 were Indians and 4,060 were Malays;<br />In 2005, there were 2,413 unemployed graduates of which 31 were Chinese, 70 were Indians and 2,186 were Malays;<br />In 2006, there were 56,750 unemployed graduates of which 1,110 were Chinese, 1,346 were Indians and 50,594 were Malays.<br />In 2007, there were 56,322 unemployed graduates of which 1,348 were Chinese, 1,401 were Indians and 49,075 were Malays.<br />In 2008 (as of June) there were 47,910 unemployed graduates of which 1,403 Chinese, 1,569 Indians and 44938 were Malays.<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;">University & Percentage of Graduates Unemployed<br /></span>Universiti Teknologi Mara 16.2%<br />Universiti Utara Malaysia 7.6%<br />Private Universities & Colleges 6.0%<br />University Teknologi Malaysia 5.7%<br />University Kebangsaan Malaysia 4.8%<br />University Pertanian Malaysia 4.5%<br />Other Public Universities 4.2%<br />Universiti Malaya 2.6%<br />Universiti Sains Malaysia 2.5%<br />Universiti Malaysia Sabah 1.8%<br />Universiti Islam Antarabangsa 1.8%<br />Foreign Graduates 1.7%<br />Universiti Malaysia Sarawak 0.9%<br />Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris 0.2%<br />Others 39.5%<br /><br />Out of the total unemployed graduates, 70% were from the Public Universities & 26% from Private Universities.<br /><br />Remember also that prior to 1969 (year of the May 13 incident), there were just 2 Public Universities. Between 1969 & 1999, nine Universities were set up & thereafter another nine.<br /><br />No wonder the friendly burgerman next door was a graduate.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-92186955846580352642009-10-08T08:25:00.000-07:002009-10-08T09:00:49.343-07:00University of Malaya inside Top 200!University of Malaya up to <a href="http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/Rankings2009-Top200.html">180</a> from 200 last year! What jubilations....but wait, National University of Singapore is ranked 30 and Nanyang Technological University at 77. Good try , maybe next year we may break the under 100 barrier.<br /><br />We hope the standards of our University graduates will improve in years to come but not right in the foreseeable future, what with the current entry selection criteria.<br /><br />I have interviewed countless candidates for job positions in the companies I worked with and most aspiring applicants never ceased to awe me. Poor spoken English, lack of knowledge in the fields whose jobs they were looking for. About 85% of them didn't know what jobs they were applying for!( You see, nowadays ready-made resume are available and these job aspirants just didn't know which positions they were looking for when the time came for them to be interviewed...and they just don't care. When asked for the positions they were looking for, a few answered " any positions available"!<br /><br />If the Government is just interested in churning out pre-packed graduates from our Universities, I say let them expire after their time out on the shelves.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-64418631102565037902009-10-06T07:28:00.000-07:002009-10-06T08:21:15.377-07:00Additional Costs of Exporting to VenezuelaRecently, I have the misfortune to witness the immense red tapes it took me to process the shipping documentations and procedures just to ship some products to Venezuela. Officially it is called the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and the people there speak Spanish. Population about the same as Malaysia ,26m.<br />Be ready to cover all hidden costs and set your selling price straight or you may end up a few thousand ringgit poorer.<br />Almost all shipping docs must be endorsed by various approving authorities before you may ship or unload your cargo at destination.<br />For a start,<br /><br /><strong>EXPORT TO VENEZUELA ---Legalisation of documents<br /></strong><strong><em>Docs required</em></strong>:<br />1. Registration of Co. cert (ROC).. Form 9<br />2. Memorandum of Article & Association<br />3. Particulars of Board of Directors ..Form 49<br />4. Company registered address..Form 44<br />5. Manufacturing license<br />6. General commercial letter<br />7. Certificate of Origin (CO)<br />8. Commercial Invoice<br />9. Packing List<br />10. Bill of Lading<br /><br />Most of these docs have to be notarised by a Notary Public, Authenticated by the Ministry of Foreign Affair and then legalised by the Venezuela Embassy.<br />Of course, the CO has to be issued by FMM or the Chamber of Commerce.<br /><br />Moneywise, it will cost RM50 to get each docs notarised and RM199 to get each doc(6~10) legalised by the Venezuela Embassy. We are grateful that Wisma Putra does not charge anything, I think. By the way, it costs RM266 to get the CO legalised by the Venezuela Embassy!<br />(Well, just a rubber stamped..)<br /><br />All in, minimum RM1542..it may be more.<br /><br />And mind you, we have not even touch on the port, forwarding, Custom, etc charges at destination yet.<br /><br />So for those of you who are thinking of exporting anything to this South American northern coastal country, compute your costing carefully to recoup your profit margin.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-26105018342238475812009-09-13T06:49:00.000-07:002009-09-13T07:54:07.786-07:00Mamula Moon -Terang Bulan - NegarakuYeap! The STAR reported that there's this group in Indonesia trying to sweep Malaysians in Central Jakarta. It's real scary what our not so friendly neigbour can do at the slightest opportunity available, right or wrong.<br /><br /><br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJqnVFzKWCWA69S3pLTP0GtuyqiMPctPQrfEaYQ8XHFQWANq1YGAg6xeFYlsCZeH6mVeH-nlDK_9Fwx-ub1qM74qjzUDSPnYNtb7GC9lW9IE0ijD_FCbM4w5eZiljcqvRvCWp7EUeUScA/s1600-h/Sweeping+Malaysia.JPG"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5380958183411758722" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 312px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 213px" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJqnVFzKWCWA69S3pLTP0GtuyqiMPctPQrfEaYQ8XHFQWANq1YGAg6xeFYlsCZeH6mVeH-nlDK_9Fwx-ub1qM74qjzUDSPnYNtb7GC9lW9IE0ijD_FCbM4w5eZiljcqvRvCWp7EUeUScA/s400/Sweeping+Malaysia.JPG" border="0" /></a>Pic shows the group checking suspected cars for Malaysians.<br /><br />The Indonesians also accused Malaysia for stealing their Balinese <em><strong>pendet</strong></em> dance after the Discovery Channel promotion clip, which was later admitted and apologised as an error by Discovery Channel.<br /><br />Actually, just as some Malaysians wanted to 'bully' the Singaporeans and act as the <em>taikor</em>, some Indonesians also wanted to 'bully' Malaysians and act as our <em>taikor</em> too!<br />So our Govt earlier policy of importing these Indonesians to Malaysia has backfired because the latter never appreciated the 1.5million job opportunities created for them. I say we should just reduce the dependence on them and get the Myanmars, Nepalese, Bangladeshis, Indians and why not ( sic), the PRC Chinese to replace them. Then it's Malaysia truly Asia la la.<br /><br />But the one thing I get pissed off is this their claiming the Negaraku was copied from their Terang Bulan. To get the matter straight, it was found out later that Terang Bulan was actually copied from an old Hawaiian song called Mamula Moon!<br /><br /><br />Hear the You Tube songs below and judge for yourself.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4o_kissLWU">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4o_kissLWU</a><br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPcNnHEsFM0">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPcNnHEsFM0</a><br /><br /><br /><br />But I still can't get it...if it was so obvious, why didn't anybody detect that our very own National Anthem was not the original for the last 50 over years ?<br />The recent upbeat edition...was it meant to be a ...?? Naw, couldn't be. Or maybe.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-72995869122331755652009-08-09T01:32:00.000-07:002009-08-09T02:12:58.491-07:00Drop PPSMI only at primary school level.The other day, a friend just lamented his son's plight when he will be in Form 4 in three years time. Yes, he's in Form 1 now and both Maths & Science are taught in English; come 2012 and presto!, it will be in Bahasa Malaysia again (or is it Bahasa Melayu? er...).<br />The Govt has been flip-flopping the PPSMI issue and the ultimate guinea pigs are our budding future leaders of the country. Of course, all these smack of political and racial undertones which could have been a win-win situation if PPSMI has been allowed to be continued at the secondary schools.<br />As it is, both the Malays and Chinese ( and to a certain extent, the Indians) wanted to retain their mother tongues and thought it would be better and easier for their kids to study in their mother tongues.<br />One thing though, the Govt went one step further and will drop PPSMI altogether all the way till Form Six. Then the Govt just announced that the Universities will carry on as usual in the English language.<br />My personal observation and experience tells me that the people who are going to suffer are the Malay students. Traditionally, most non-Malay students have propensities to do well in multi-languages, given their unique situation in a multi-racial Malaysia. They have to converse with their Malays friends in <em>Bahasa,</em> to their Indian friends in English and to their Chinese friends in Mandarin or the various Chinese dialects! I have interviewed scores of job applicants in the private sectors and sad to say, even with the current PPSMI policy, most of the Malay graduate (at tertiary level) applicants did not present themselves well in English ( in a score of 1 to 10, 10 being the most proficient in the English language, 98% of the Malay applicants marked 3~4 ). Of course, there is no problem in speaking in our Bahasa but the fact remains that in the private sector, most of the dealings and documentations are in English. We deal with the Japanese, Italians, Americans, British, Chinese, etc all in English ( and you wonder why these foreigners also deal with us in English, right?) and it would not benefit the employer and their business if it were not so. This is the real business world.<br /><br />Unless one is looking for a Govt job.<br /><br />I say the Govt has erred in dropping PPSMI at the secondary and tertiary educational levels.<br />maybe there's still time to reverse the decision ,before 2012.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-18974069070654026382009-07-27T06:48:00.000-07:002009-07-27T07:26:16.663-07:00The Taking of the PELHAM123<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9BScRbGc5oK7BgbfLdkWhuQaGSGMCENkQoy4yVhpy8SNskeao4BWonaItuUBij-4Fd1pjiU_lVfESpzr9nQyanV9V61ZdZxSbvSOmpyptkD92OmPWJhHtZhvkk8ofH9Adw2JrORU8LZ0/s1600-h/PELHAM123.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5363141806169884690" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 170px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 130px" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9BScRbGc5oK7BgbfLdkWhuQaGSGMCENkQoy4yVhpy8SNskeao4BWonaItuUBij-4Fd1pjiU_lVfESpzr9nQyanV9V61ZdZxSbvSOmpyptkD92OmPWJhHtZhvkk8ofH9Adw2JrORU8LZ0/s400/PELHAM123.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><div>Aiyahhh!!!!!!Really have no time these days. Just reading those Malaysia Today, Rocky's Bru,Uncle Lim,Malaysian Insider,Nut Graph....is enough to make you slumber at 1am.</div><br /><br /><div></div><br /><div>Last Friday while waiting for my little ballerina, I crept off to check up on The Taking of the PELHAM 123. My, it was suspense all the way from start till the end. Didn't have time to pee eventhough the bladder was full to the brim. John Travolta was a real crazy bastard, but anyone knows why he wanted to die at Denzel Washington's hand?? Washington who? That guy was damn so bulky I nearly couldn't recognise him. Can't remember when was the last time i saw his movie. In reverse, Travolta looked fit to me. Couldn't see his stomach, which the director did a good job of hiding.</div><div></div><br /><div>Well PELHAM was about 3 psychos who wanted to blackmail the Mayor into parting 10m bucks or else they will kill off the subway hostages, 1 each for each minute delay after time's up. They meant it and i think about 2 poor innocent guys were killed in cold blood. Sic! Actually Travolta was planning on a more than 300m bucks taking from the gold commodity market due to the hostages-taking event.</div><div></div><br /><div>Why don't you go watch the movie? Save a lot of my time here.</div><br /><div>And make sure you pooh first 'coz it's not allowed inside !!!#$</div><br /><br /><div></div><div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7F-rB9WioQHj9mx9bEauL3G8JMOIBNbFv9Pbm33SlTKau_PYf7Es3tegcyFS7yiQ_zcPZugUrgnlign_XyzA1SX2vr36CYkcUvk33O0XHxcg7Eqw5Z44BDNPDIN9TFZIekWrZyDZCo7w/s1600-h/no+pooping.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5363142270651437650" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 149px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 162px" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7F-rB9WioQHj9mx9bEauL3G8JMOIBNbFv9Pbm33SlTKau_PYf7Es3tegcyFS7yiQ_zcPZugUrgnlign_XyzA1SX2vr36CYkcUvk33O0XHxcg7Eqw5Z44BDNPDIN9TFZIekWrZyDZCo7w/s400/no+pooping.jpg" border="0" /></a></div><br /><div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7F-rB9WioQHj9mx9bEauL3G8JMOIBNbFv9Pbm33SlTKau_PYf7Es3tegcyFS7yiQ_zcPZugUrgnlign_XyzA1SX2vr36CYkcUvk33O0XHxcg7Eqw5Z44BDNPDIN9TFZIekWrZyDZCo7w/s1600-h/no+pooping.jpg"></a></div><br /><div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7F-rB9WioQHj9mx9bEauL3G8JMOIBNbFv9Pbm33SlTKau_PYf7Es3tegcyFS7yiQ_zcPZugUrgnlign_XyzA1SX2vr36CYkcUvk33O0XHxcg7Eqw5Z44BDNPDIN9TFZIekWrZyDZCo7w/s1600-h/no+pooping.jpg"></a></div>RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-49046469088313426212008-08-22T21:24:00.000-07:002008-08-22T22:02:26.275-07:00Permatang Pauh - Battle of RealityI cannot see how BN can take away Permatang Pauh from PKR.<br /><br />There is no credibility in the BN people :<br /><br />The latest fiasco is today's petrol price reduction. How can the Minister says one thing on one day, and then hey presto, he contradicts himself the next day. "No, we will not reduce petrol price before the Permatang Pauh by-election just to get the rakyat's votes, it will still be on 1st Sep 08". Come on, this is not the first time, our dear Minister has contradicted himself.<br /><br />Then poor Lee Chong Wei has to be flown specially all the way down to Permatang Pauh from KL just to get the RM300,000 incentive promised for the Silver medal in the 08 Olympic. Why now? Why not in KL since he is staying there? I would not object if he has got it in Berapit, Bukit Mertajam, his kampong. At least, the Penang Government did the right thing by saying that Lee will get his Datukship after the by-election....hmm, not bad. Announce now & get it later.<br /><br />Then it's the 8.5% inflation rate just announced by the Statistical Dept, up from 1% in June 08 and by 7.5% since then. If our dear Minister has got his economics correct, he will know that this figure is not going to come down anytime sooner. I know for once, that a certain amount of subsidies must be required for some neccessity items ( I remember learning it in the Economic lessons during my schooldays 35 years ago). Doesn't the Minister know that the huge leap in petrol price increase has caused a knee-jerk reaction resulting in practically consumer goods price increases in practically everything? There's opportunity in these price increases and everybody were jumping into the band-wagon for free, like nobody's business. There's no way, consumer prices are going to come down...ask our friendly hawker friends la. We will have to live with it. Ever wonder why prices are so high in Japan, USA and the likes? At least, they are living in the first world.<br /><br /><br /><br />Permatang Pauh. My vote goes to PKR. It's a vote against the high inflation rate. It's also a vote against the credibility of the BN actions.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-1388273472695496672008-06-06T03:10:00.000-07:002008-06-06T03:41:44.789-07:00Come on Datuk, whose legs are you pulling?The latest petrol hike has been coming for a long time. With all the buzzing activities and buttering-up statements from the various ministers, one would have not been surprised at the price hike announcement. However, the timing is damn lousy and unprofessional-like!<br />One moment foreign cars at the borders were banned from filling up and then after a few days ( 2 days?), the ban was lifted. What a joke..one would only have to listen to what the Singaporeans have to say and you will get what I mean.<br />Then we got to hear our very own Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister, Datuk Shahrir Abd Samad saying there will be no price hike, at least until August 08. A few days later, after the hike, this is what the same guy has to say, "..I have confidence that it's not going to go up...". Come on, my dear Minister, whose legs are you pulling? At least tell us you were left out in the information stream by your boss, but then politicians seldom admit so. Where do they hide their faces then?<br />And then the Govt has the cheek to compare our price with neigbouring Singapore and Thailand! Why not compare with the Gulf States ( gas price from RM0.38 to RM1.19 per litre), Iran (RM0.35 per litre), Nigeria (RM0.32 per litre) or Venezuela (RM0.16 per litre)!! After all, we are a net oil exporting country too.<br />Come August, what's your bet?<br /><br />I wonder whether the friendly Hokkien mee guy down the corner will reduce the bowl of mee when petrol price goes down one day?RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-6028040947743002562008-05-21T09:48:00.000-07:002008-05-30T00:43:36.719-07:00Blinded to reduce expenses----Penny Wise Pound FoolishIn the mad craze to cut cost, it is never wise to reduce overhead expenses unnecesarrily. Have you ever heard of the maxim,'Penny Wise & Pound Foolish'? - Save on the minor & chicken feed expenses & spend extravagantly or waste on foolish and idiotic projects.<br /><em>Penny</em> <em>Wise</em><br />How much does saving on photstat papers, delaying intake of key personnels, switching off lightings, etc contribute to overall expenses reduction?<br /><em>Pound Foolish</em><br />And how much does re-doing of entire office due to faulty design or materials used, and how much does flying in a bunch of technicians from overseas to repair machineries , contribute to overall expenses reduction?<br /><br />Sometime increasing the expenses works the reverse-you actually increase your profit, which is why you wanted to reduce expenses in the first place!<br /><br />See this link.<br /><a href="http://www.globeinvestor.com/servlet/WireFeedRedirect?cf=GlobeInvestor/config&vg=BigAdVariableGenerator&date=20061214&archive=cnw&slug=C7264">http://www.globeinvestor.com/servlet/WireFeedRedirect?cf=GlobeInvestor/config&vg=BigAdVariableGenerator&date=20061214&archive=cnw&slug=C7264</a><br />Dectron announced a 3rd qtr increase of gross profit margin YOY despite a huge increase of administrative & selling expenses due to higher shipping / freight cost & rising depreciation / amortising deferred costs. Revenue for 1st 9 months up USD6.3million or 17.6% YOY, the growth attributed to doubling sales & cost reduction effort.<br /><br />Read my lips........reducing expenses is not the same as reducing costs, although you may need to reduce expenses to reduce costs. Huh? Forget about what I have just said. Some people never learn.<br />Increase productivity by all means. You will get more for the same, which means you don't reduce expenses but still get higher revenue ( & thus higher profit, hopefully.....unless the finance people have bungled in their costing!)<br />Reduce direct materials cost. Localise your direct materials if cheaper. Or if you cannot ( 'cos materials cost keep rising these days!!), increase your selling price & sell more. More is more. More is more profit.<br /><br />So if you reduce expenses by RM10,000 per month and gross profit is still in the red, compared to you increase expenses by RM50,000 per month and revenue / gross profit increase two-fold, which is better? You don't need a seven-year-old to teach you simple arithmetic, do you?<br /><br />Increasing your profit in lieu of reducing your expenses, which seems convincing? Examples: if you don't have sufficient people to sell your products, or if don't have sufficient stocks to make your products, or if don't have sufficient products to sell (??) ........enough said.<br /><br />If you still don't get it, get your head check again!!RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-83691923630807917572008-03-31T08:41:00.000-07:002008-03-31T09:53:25.536-07:00Is P-D-C-A outmoded?I first heard of the PDCA cycle 25 years ago.<br /><br />I have not heard of it for at least 6 years, until recently when a funny thing happened & any grandfather would tell you they suck eggs better than you...for one thing, any grandfather would tell you they have lost their wisdom teeth a long time ago, while yours are just starting to grow.<br /><br />If anybody tells you the basis of the PDCA cycle is <em>continuous </em>improvement, i.e." improvement without interruption", then whatever you do now may have become outmoded if you have not changed recently.<br /><br />Has the PDCA cycle itself changed or improved since 25 years ago?<br /><br />Continuous improvement will create a "change fatigue"....you would become disillusioned, disenchanted & confused, you might even stop following the changes altogether.<br /><br />I think there are three factors to perform a mission:-<br />1. <strong> PEOPLE</strong><br />2. PROCESS<br />3. PRODUCT<br /><br />If people are not motivated, will change or improvement occur?<br /><br />Definitely, change requires people, process & product. If people are not a company's asset, then why PDCA? Why not CACES..Come Act Cheque Eat Sleep? If people are a company's asset, the company must ensure its appreciation , or else they will depreciate & eventually be writtten off as zero-value before the end of their life-cycles.<br /><br />What Shewart & Deming meant should be <em>continual</em> improvement, i.e. a cycle of improvements with pauses to consolidate the changes. It is then subject to Checking or Study that there is actually an improvement BEFORE the next change or improvement activity be started again.<br />That's why ISO recognises this & corrected ISO9000 to ISO9004-2000 mentioning specifically "continual improvement".<br /><br />Don't you think Do & Act are the same? Check your dictionary for their meanings....sometime its just for want of a term. I think ACT should really mean IMPROVE or CORRECT or RECTIFY when failing to achieve the desired results.<br /><br />Why didn't Deming or Shewart improve PDCA if they are so good?<br />Does PDCA cycle have to be circular? You were taught so? Is it possible ,just think for a moment, for you to DO something without a Plan but with just a "thought" or"idea"? Have you ever done something sucessfully without a Plan? Think hard...hard....hard...now you are sleeping..you are in slumberland....sleep,sleep,sleep...zzzzzzzzzzzz. SNAP!<br />I sometime just do the improvement straightaway when I see something different on the spot.<br /><br />PDCA works on the basis of the Japanese incremental continuous (small) changes. It is no good to make a sudden big change......but this is what the US advocates- a sudden big change to effect an impact on the overall improvement. REFORMASI ! What the Chinese ( PRC) always said ( I heard it a thousand time while in China) - "Kai Ge". <br /><br />In PDCA, no people are mentioned, people are not a company's asset. It is assumed that people will use and make it happen. What Shewart & Deming did not know was that most people are not motivated or interested in improvement if there are no benefits to be reaped.<br /><br />In ISO14000, the first three elements are actually the PLAN, followed by the DO until the "monitoring" element when the CHECK starts & ends at ACT at the last element (Mgmt Review). One cannot achieve the ISO14000 status if all elements are not strictly adhered to but can one achieve the desired results without performing the the first three elements?<br /><br />QCC circles? QCC circles work on the pillar of the PDCA cycle. If a company has active QCC activities 13 years ago, would the PDCA cycle be obsolete now?<br /><br />Quo vadis? Pension.RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2354273347044790310.post-8814457472530367432008-03-26T22:19:00.000-07:002008-03-27T06:59:20.702-07:00The Ring i SystemI first heard of this system more than 30 years ago during my 6-month stay at Suzukashi, Japan. At that time, I do not know the real meaning of the system.<br /><br /><br />This time around, the Ringi System was put into practice in a multi-national company I know of.<br /><br /><br />Basically it is a Japanese collective decision making system involving a large number of people.<br />There are 4 steps involved:<br /><br />1. *Nemawashi or setting the groundwork<br />2. The person in charge will first draw up the plan in a written form.<br />3. It is then send around to the superiors; if another dept is involved, then the consent from there will be needed. "Superiors" refer to all layers of mgmt people & some companies called them *<em>*"deliberators"</em><br />4. The final decision will be made by the authority of the company, in most cases, the CEO.<br /><br /><br /><br /><em><strong>** Deliberators :</strong></em><br />(i) people who think carefully, often slowly, about a choice to be made.<br />(ii) people who consults with another or others,usually with the same intellectual thoughts, in a process of reaching a decision, slowly.<br /><br /><br /><br />The System is supposed to be a bottom-up system ( as opposed to the US top-down system) with the bottom people having no say in the decision. The original Japanese bottom-up system is the method of appreciating the the ideas from the lower rung people who have hands-on experience on the job.<br /><br /><br />Of course, in Japan the approval is shown by the person's "hanko" - a personalised stamp, with some even registered legally.<br /><br /><br />Theoretically, if there are objections against the plan, there are two solutions to it:<br />1. Discussions and the plan is revised if necessary-sometime the <em>PDCA</em> chart is used (huh?)<br />2. If the revised plan is still not supported, it will be scrapped.<br /> <br /><br /><br />In actual practice, the users of the system in many companies have gone through hell a few time. There are seldom discussions but there are many queries & inquisitions.... heads have rolled under the guillotine since the Spanish have theirs in 1748. Oops! I have strayed too deep into history.<br /><br />...OK, in actual practice, deliberators try to outdo each others in a war of intellectual wits & wisdom, lest you are seen with lesser job to perform. Deliberators do not see eye to eye.<br />Try this tongue twister-Deliberators delibrately deliberate. Deliberators in Japanese companies in Japan are usually senior experienced people who have gone through the mills & know their mettles well but sometime deliberators in Malaysian companies are people without plant operational knowledge & answers to their queries often require supernatural use of individual resources from the occult.<br /><p><em><strong>* Nemawashi</strong></em> </p><p>....a <em>nihongo</em> gardening term meaning to prepare a tree for transplanting by digging around it & cutting some of the roots.</p><p>(i) Therefore the planner of the project need to do the groundwork so that a consensus may be reached BEFOREHAND. Groundwork to purchase A4 papers?</p><p>(ii) Nemawashi should be done before the plan is drawn up. Again, draw up a plan to purchase A4 papers?</p><p>(iii) Conducting "nemawashi" effectively through formal & informal meetings is the key to success. Maybe someone may want to suggest A5 papers for the printers or faxes.</p><p><strong>BENEFITS</strong></p><p>1. It's a safe way to make decision--people express their opinions & many people review the plan. </p><p>2. People have feelings of participation ( sounds familiar) -so that it is Plain Jane sailing to implement the plan</p><p>3. Gives younger employees an opportunity to be the originator of the plan - and thus make them more interested in the company ( why is it that the reverse seems to be happening in some companies?)</p><p><strong>DISADVANTAGES</strong></p><p>1. Takes a long long time to reach a decision. Wait till the cow comes home. </p><p>2. Responsibilities tend to be diffused because no one accept liability if the plan fail. </p><p>3. Vendors feel frustrated. Business partners feel frustrated. The originator feels frustrated(?).</p><p> </p><p>There, this is the Ringi System.</p><p>Hey, what plan are you talking about? Project plan? Business plan? Production plan? My friends have to use the Ringi forms to apply for simple<em> project plan</em> to re-purchase A4 papers, to purchase a key from the locksmith, to service the company vehicle....I wonder whether they actually sit down to discuss what, which, where,when, why and how ( hey, that's 5W & 1 H man)to buy the key?</p><p>Of course, using the Ringi System for big project plan like designing an office would work extremely well to cut off cronyism. Talking about cronyism, a funny thing happen on my way to work this morning.......................aw, that's another story.</p><p><br /> </p>RONhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17465878736988127038noreply@blogger.com0