June 2025

The manager’s single most powerful tool

The performance appraisal is the manager’s single most powerful tool, but sadly it is also the least recognised one in his/her toolkit.  To many, the performance appraisal is a waste of time required by HR, to be gotten over with as quickly as possible so ‘we can go do more important work’. This attitude shows a lack of understanding of what the performance appraisal (PA) can do for the incumbent. Any manager can do this. When I was a young engineer of 26, I was promoted to be in charge of the HDD manufacturing engineering department when HP started up operations in Bristol. It would have been a steep learning curve to learn about hard disk drives in managing the 8 new people under my charge. I decided I needed to be the best manager for them instead.  This required understanding three non-technical areas: First is the business and what overall key performance metrics are. That is the reason for the business’s existence and continued survival. As a new factory, we needed to come online as soon as possible and generate revenue quickly. Second is responsibility of my department, how this fits in the overall whole, and its contribution to the key performance metrics of the division. Bringing up the production line smoothly and smoothly running afterwards is paramount. We need to work with production well and put processes in place quickly. Third, involves my direct reports. They already know what they are doing as they were there before me. What I had to do was to understand their roles, capabilities and ensure that all 8 of them cover everything my department is responsible for. Thereafter, I set monthly objectives for each of them and sat with each of them every two weeks to ensure we are on track and on schedule. We also used the meetings to realign responsibilities should there be unexpected issues to ensure they are covered in a timely manner. Feedback was provided there and then. As manager, my job is to coordinate that start-up problems are properly resolved. It allowed my team to do their job with ease and in so doing, achieve goals of the department and contribute to the business. When time came to do their performance appraisal it was a simple matter of pulling out our monthly achievements and formalizing them into the template provided by HR. Together, we made the annual PA into a continuous process and incorporated time to provide guidance, give feedback and allow individual growth. Performance appraisal is the fundamental method that we as leaders recognize that people are our most important resource.  Rewarding them properly is a consequence of this activity.

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Do you feel guilty using AI?

Do you feel guilty using AI? Some weeks back, I asked AI to generate a profile picture for my cooking channel. Chat Gpt generated the image based on this prompt: “Using this photo of me, can you help me create a profile photo for Instagram and YouTube along the lines of “Genie in a Kitchen” – I.e. use my real head and replace my body with a genie in the bottle kind of concept? I am holding a kitchen knife (to show that this is a cooking channel).” Shortly after I uploaded the image, a writer friend warned me it might spark backlash. Her friends pointed out it looked like stolen Studio Ghibli art and I would risk getting hate comments or lose subscribers. I told her the truth. Yes, I DID create it using AI, channelling Ghibli’s whimsical style. After my chat with my writer friend, the moral dilemma nagged at me. Should I reject AI, or harness its potential without guilt? As a writer, I admit I initially resented tools like ChatGPT for threatening my livelihood. But as someone who has always sucked at art, AI was liberating. It actualised my imagination with professional-grade execution in just a few minutes! After 3 days, I changed the profile pic to my real photo. AI can mimic style, but not soul. My followers connected with me – the human cook, not the fantasy genie. As my friend said: “We like the real you … Not the cartoon one.” Innovation has always disrupted art. From photography to digital brushes. You can’t stop the AI juggernaut. Like it or not, AI is penetrating every aspect of life. Every creator must choose to fear the wave, or ride it. I stand by my belief that AI is transformative. So yes, we should AI. But never at the cost of who we really are.

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Connecting the dots backwards

Technology may look like it can solve the problem, but transformation is not driven by tech alone.  Let me share about the product that never made it out the door because of that. Even before we heard about IR4.0, the researchers at Hewlett Packard Labs already created the concept of an electronic clipboard to capture what was on forms for processing online. The year was 1998. The thinking was how much easier it would be if data entry which was then handwritten on duplicate forms (sometimes triplicate) did not need to be retyped to be entered into computers. Recognition software would convert the handwriting on the clipboard captured directly as the service advisor was writing on the form. Data entry would be immediate. Service time will improve. Doctors can still write the way they like and retraining on clumsy computers was not needed. The industry will be revolutionised. With full support of then HP CEO Lew Platt, a division in HP absorbed the HPLabs team led by Polly Siegel to pivot to this new business plan, codenamed ‘PaperClip’ [pix]. The plan was not to replace paper forms, but to augment them. We will allow users to continue to do what they do best: focus on their trade and continue to capture the data on the clipboard such as personal details, service data, payment info and so on. Except this new clipboard will also be battery powered. Extreme care was taken to ensure it was intuitive to use and carry in rugged conditions, and could capture handwriting through a stack of forms placed on it. The industrial design for the product even won acclaim for IDEO, the design house engaged for the project. We partnered with the country’s largest forms producer and distributor, The Reynolds and Reynolds Company, to identify early adopters to pilot the product. Their forms are used everywhere in the USA, and will be our launch partner. It was potentially a billion dollar business, or perhaps more. But alas, technology alone is not enough. It is really hard to compete against a $2 clipboard you can buy from any stationery store. The irony today is the devices replacing the $2 clipboard are electronic handheld devices not unlike the smartphone costing many times that of PaperClip. And companies buy them without hesitation. Flatscreens are everywhere, and at doctor’s offices many struggle to do data entry as it is still their job to do so. The Reynolds and Reynolds company today is also providing retail software management systems, along with the forms that they are known for. The lesson from all this: technology alone cannot drive transformation. Users and ecosystems have to align. And the timing has to be right. We can’t connect the dots looking forward. We just have to be smarter going forward.

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The scariest thing in my career helped me grow the most

Like most things, it is fear of the unknown. As a leader, many of us have a natural tendency to feel we need to know the answers, correction, ALL the answers. That is actually our biggest weakness. We are fundamentally all managers: managers of expectations, of time, and of effort. As managers and leaders, it is about how we work with others and bring the best out of them. My big break came when I was appointed R&D Project Manager to lead a new project at HP Bristol. Until then, my experience had been in production systems (telecoms test equipment) and manufacturing engineering (disk drives). These areas, although advanced in their own right, are well understood and already developed by others. New product development is what every engineer dreams of doing. So when I was told I was to lead the (then) next generation storage system for HP, I was over the moon. Then reality hit home: err.. how? The immediate reaction was: can I pick another project and start with a less challenging project instead? Fortunately I didn’t. Leading the project means identifying what will be that next generation backup solution, selecting the right vendor and defining what the product would look like. This is not only about the external look of the box, but also what it does and how it is supposed to function. Initially it exposed me to the world of market research, meeting with the largest computer companies of the time like IBM, DEC, Wang and their customers to understand their needs. From there, we selected Sony’s Digital Audio Tape (DAT) technology to be adapted for computer applications. Along the way I also learnt Japanese, and led our US and US teams to work with Sony engineers in their Shibaura plant in Tokyo and how to eat my first sushi. The best part was everyone on the team participated and contributed to the best of their abilities and happy pushing the boundaries in the areas that they excel in – only with stress on how to do their very best. We worked hard and played hard. To cut a long story short, we introduced the DDS/DAT Storage System in 1989 and HP in Bristol generated over US$600 million revenue p.a. after 3 years; the second most successful industry-wide peripheral solution from HP (after printers). There had since been 7 generations of the technology, and still shipping today. I was worried I could not invent a new category of products from my background, but the team managed to. Together with Sony, we generated 26 patents from the project. And I got my name in one too. The lesson I want to share to the reader is to fully embrace your areas of weakness and fears. Managers do not have to have answers for everything. The leader is one who can identify the capabilities of the team. After that, just let each member do their best. 

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What’s the current version of yourself?

If we’ve crossed paths at any point in the last two decades, you’ve probably met at least one version of me. When I was still in the corporate world, a colleague called me a hippie because I loved quirky colourful clothes. I constantly wondered: Was I the problem? Or was the system just never built for creative minds like mine? When I left to freelance seven years later, I thought: Finally! I can be fully myself. That was Alex V1. Alex V2 came along just 8 years ago. I thought I needed an “upgrade”. As somebody’s life partner, in-law, and caregiver, I tried very hard to fit the “responsible adult” mould. I tried so hard that at some point, I lost sight of who I truly was. And paid the price of pretending to be someone I am not (I’ve written about anxiety and depression in other posts). Which brings me to Alex V3. The one I’m building now. These days – I wear what I want to meetings, even the colourful stuff. Because being “professional” doesn’t require erasing your creativity. – I say “no” respectfully and kindly, instead of saying yes to please others. Because being “respectful” doesn’t mean silencing your truth. – I try to be more open in voicing my thoughts even when they are not popular opinion. Because authenticity should be celebrated, not suppressed. If you’re reading this while twisting yourself out of shape to fit in, stop. The right people will adjust, accept, and love the real you. When did you realize you were trying to shrink yourself—and what helped you stop?

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Panel Discussion: Intelligent Manufacturing KL 2025

What an inspiring panel discussion @Intelligent Manufacturing KL!  We all know leadership is critical in talent development – but after moderating this panel, I realized there’s someone even more important: you. Yes, YOU. While organizations play a role, your growth – your talent development – is ultimately your responsibility. This hit home after witnessing another powerful discussion in Penang recently, brilliantly articulated by Masliza Mansor. [read it here https://lnkd.in/g_HPUEpf] It is universally recognised that we are now finding it harder to get talent, not just good talent. The reasons: 1️⃣ The world is changing faster than ever. 2️⃣ Talent isn’t just scarce – it’s evolving. Companies everywhere are struggling to attract and retain their best people. Why? Three seismic shifts: ⚡TECHNOLOGY: AI, automation, and robotics aren’t just tools – they’re redefining what it means to be competitive. ⚡GEO-POLITICS: New alliances, tariffs, and trade dynamics force businesses to adapt just to stay competitive. ⚡WORKFORCE EXPECTATIONS: Gen Z and Alpha aren’t just looking for jobs – they’re demanding purpose, culture, and growth. A good salary? That’s just a start. BIG NAME companies – especially well-known multinationals – can easily get the best talent. Every graduate has heard of them, their successes.  And of course, their salaries. MNCs have long leveraged their reputation to attract top talent. So what’s the answer? COMPANIES need to let potential employees know what the company – especially local ones – represent.  What the company does, what’s the company culture, and (then) how their salaries are competitive. Don’t just rely on AI. Or your marketing department – that’s to reach out to customers about your products. You want to attract talent to work for you. Use human intelligence – listen, inspire, and create workplaces where people feel valued. Culture, vision, and growth opportunities matter more than ever. FOR INDIVIDUALS: The panel flipped the script. YOU are your own leader. YOUR  communication, curiosity, and adaptability determine your success, your next job. 👍 Speak up with clarity and respect.👍 Keep learning – the world won’t wait for you.👍 Own your development like your career depends on it (because it does). The best talent isn’t just found – it’s built. IT STARTS WITH YOU. Intelligent manufacturing isn’t just about machines – it’s about people. Thank you to the incredible panelists SookLing Teh, Jaszmine K.B., Oscar Low, WANG Xin, Pratibha Kurnool.  What an enlightening discussion. A big thank you also to Fiona Chiew for the invitation to Intelligent Manufacturing – IMKL Let’s bring this conversation to Penang next!

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Does your Linkedin profile need to be perfect before launching?

Does your LinkedIn profile need to be perfect before you start engaging? Take it from someone who has changed her Linkedin profile 289780 times. NO. My last tagline was “Change the world, one story at a time”. I loved it. After all, it’s authentic and reflects what I want to do. 𝖠̲𝗇̲𝖽̲ ̲𝗍̲𝗁̲𝖺̲𝗍̲ ̲𝗐̲𝖺̲𝗌̲ ̲𝗍̲𝗁̲𝖾̲ ̲𝗍̲𝗋̲𝗈̲𝗎̲𝖻̲𝗅̲𝖾̲ ̲𝗐̲𝗂̲𝗍̲𝗁̲ ̲𝗆̲𝗒̲ ̲𝗍̲𝖺̲𝗀̲𝗅̲𝗂̲𝗇̲𝖾̲ It was what *I* wanted. 𝘕𝘰𝘵 𝘸𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘮𝘺 𝘱𝘰𝘵𝘦𝘯𝘵𝘪𝘢𝘭 𝘤𝘭𝘪𝘦𝘯𝘵𝘴 𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘵𝘦𝘥. Still, I was very attached to it and refused to change it. Until Linette Heng triggered me. On one of her trips to Penang, we were hanging out for ice-cream when I finally plucked up the courage to ask her. “𝗪𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗰𝗮𝗻 𝗜 𝗱𝗼 𝘁𝗼 𝗯𝗼𝗼𝘀𝘁 𝗺𝘆 𝗟𝗶𝗻𝗸𝗲𝗱𝗶𝗻 𝗳𝗼𝗹𝗹𝗼𝘄𝗲𝗿𝘀? 𝗜𝘁’𝘀 𝗯𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝘀𝘁𝗮𝗴𝗻𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗮 𝘆𝗲𝗮𝗿?” She was kind, but she didn’t mince her words. It took only 5 minutes for me to get the message. (She’s just that sharp as a people reader. Hire her as a life coach, folks. Although I can only afford home-cooked meals for now). In a nutshell, she told me to see how other Linkedinfluencers did it. My ego took a bit of a knock. After all, I’m supposed to be a writer. But I really wanted to improve, so I swallowed my pride and spent the evening stalking other Linkedinfluencers. It was eye-opening. The answer came to me in the shower. “𝗥𝗮𝘄 𝘀𝘁𝗼𝗿𝗶𝗲𝘀 𝗮𝗯𝗼𝘂𝘁 𝘀𝘁𝗮𝘆𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗵𝘂𝗺𝗮𝗻 𝗶𝗻 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝗔𝗜.” Did it work? Well, in the last one month, I’ve gained more connections than the last two years combined. And even received some direct compliments about my new tagline. Oh and one other tip from Linette? Change my photo. I did, from one with eyes looking down, to one where I smile directly into the camera. So that I look less fierce and more approachable lah. So, back to my question: should you show up on Linkedin when your profile isn’t perfect? Absolutely. Go ahead and “beautify” your Linkedin profile a little if it’s too raw. But don’t take too long and overthink. Because perfectionism doesn’t deliver results. Progress does.

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Made by Malaysia vs Made in Malaysia

“MADE BY MALAYSIA”. Why Not Just “Made In Malaysia”? And why is it a HUGE DEAL?  For 50+ years, Malaysia has been a manufacturing powerhouse – electronics, semiconductors, you name it. Thanks to MNCs setting up shop here, thousands of local suppliers have sprung up.  And thrived. The products? All “Made in Malaysia.” But design, development, and marketing? Mostly done elsewhere. By someone else. So what’s “Made BY Malaysia”? It means the whole shebang – design, development, and selling – is homegrown. And yes, that’s a BIG DEAL. Why? Because It’s HARD. It probably takes, at least, a few years to develop a product. So if it does not sell, you have lost a lot of time, money and effort. To reduce that kind of risk, you will need to ensure your product will sell. Let’s take a look at the overall product design cycle. 1️⃣ MARKET RESEARCH – You need to do market research. Survey customers. Buying preferences. Understand user needs. Compile user requirements. Translate them into product requirements. Really, will anyone even want this in 3 years when it comes out? (Better find out now!) 2️⃣ COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS – Is your product still going to be a winner by launch? (Or will rivals beat you to it?)  You need to do competitive analysis. Make sure your projections really show that your product is going to sell when it comes out. 3️⃣ R&D – Do the design and product development. (This is the part that will take 3 years!).  Build the prototype. Test it. Do focus groups. Redesign till it works.  You also need to qualify that it is reliable and do the regulatory hoops. 4️⃣ IC DESIGN – Perhaps your product also needs to have that special chip to incorporate that killer feature – cheaper or smaller or more functions for the same price, whatever. That also needs to be designed, fabricated and tested.  And may take 2+ years.  (Did we take that into account in the original schedule?) 5️⃣ MANUFACTURING – Finally it is ready for production. OK, this part we’re pros at, thanks to decades of supplying to multinational companies! 6️⃣ MARKETING & SALES – How to launch. How to market, how to sell (note the difference). Who to involve: retailers, distributors, etc. Support and service considerations,  and more. This is the real game-changer. Because if you build it… will they come? Only if you market it right. Made BY Malaysia means designing, developing AND manufacturing your own products – not just assembling for others.  Of course, include marketing it yourselves. 🚀 SCARY? Absolutely. 💰 RISKY? You bet. 🔥 WORTH IT? That’s where the big bucks live. Besides, if you don’t start, others like Vietnam, maybe India will soon be able to manufacture cheaper than you. Maybe even build & sell their own products. Then where will you be? Going up the value chain is the only way. That means developing new products. Are you ready to take the plunge?

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You don’t need to be an engineer or writer to leverage AI

The person who taught me to optimise AI was not an engineer or writer. 6 months ago, I stared at ChatGPT like a threat. After all, it could: * Write like a mid-level copywriter. * Do it 10x faster. * Never complain. For someone who had left corporate life to pursue writing, the advent of AI wasn’t just disruption. It was an identity crisis. What use am I in this world if my hard-earned skills become obsolete? But the world doesn’t stop for existential threats. So I did the only thing I could: I adapted. I went on Youtube, learned about AI and explored new tools. I had no idea if I’d catch up in time, but I knew doing nothing would be worse. 3 months later, I started using AI in unexpected ways. * When grief couldn’t wait: when I was asked to write a eulogy in under an hour, I panicked at the tight deadline. From my notes, AI helped me refine my final draft, but the family’s gratitude reminded me that the most impactful words come from a human, not a machine. * I can now draft copy for any format in half the time (or less) with AI doing the initial plan and research. But the strategy comes from human intuition. * For workshops and presentations, I generate slides using AI, but the real value comes from empathy – understanding the human pain points. Then there’s my friend Desonny Tuzan of Charlie’s Cafe in Taman Desa. When I first told him about AI, he hesitated. “Isn’t that for writers or engineers?” But he tried anyway. What happened next shocked me. With zero technical background, Sonny used his creativity and empathy to use AI to design marketing collaterals for his cafe. Two weeks later, he was teaching ME AI tricks! (Thanks Sonny!) Here’s what Sonny and I discovered: 💡AI mirrors our humanity. 💡It generates ideas, but can’t know which ones will resonate. 💡The magic happens at the intersection. When curious minds ask “What if we tried …?” instead of “What will we lose?” Your job title doesn’t matter. Writer, engineer, or entrepreneur. Your greatest asset isn’t your skill set – it’s your curiosity. So stay hungry. Keep asking questions. The future belongs to those who never stop learning.

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