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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Business is about meeting your needs


Business is about meeting your needs

A friend mentioned about a place where mothers in confinement could go to, instead of each mother employing one 'pui yit' (Cantonese for someone who keeps a mother in confinement company) in their own house. Apparently, because of more expectant mothers in the year of the Dragon, wages of pui yit are said to be higher than before!

Well, like everything else, there are advantages and disadvantages of having a pui yit or the novelty of going to a special care centre. For those more independent and hands-on mothers, like my wife during her time, having a pui yit is not only unnecessary, but a hassle because of having to look after her needs as well! When she had her first baby in Leeds, by caesarian, she was already taking the baby to the market just after two weeks of confinement! In case, anyone says she did that because it was more difficult and expensive in UK to have a pui yit, it was partially true, because when in Malaysia, she did not have pui yit too!


As for meeting a need, now there is even a day care centre for husbands while wives do their shopping!

It has yet to catch on in Malaysia, probably husbands here are likely to put up with the hours of shopping with their wives!

Simple Rules For Becoming A Billionaire


Simple Rules For Becoming A Billionaire

Eike Batista's 10 Simple Rules For Becoming A Billionaire

Eike Batista's new book: tips to become just as rich as he is.
Eike Batista's new book: tips to become just as rich as he is.

For someone who claims to have achieved multimillionaire status by the age 23, billionaireEike Batista probably knows a thing or two about getting rich. Currently listed by Forbes as the 8th richest person in the world, with a net worth estimated at $30 billion, Batista makes no ceremony about his biggest aim in life: to become the richest individual on the planet, a title that’s currently held by Mexico’s Carlos Slim, who’s worth $74 billion as of our latest count from early March.

In the meantime, while the Brazilian billionaire’s crusade to outrun Slim continues (due to market uncertainty, both men have lost considerable amounts of money over the past few months), Batista decided to share some of his Midas touch knowledge by publishing a book, “Eike Batista’s X Factor — The Path of Brazil’s Biggest Entrepreneur” (“Eike Batista, O X Da Questão – A Trajetória Do Maior Empreendedor Do Brasil,” in its original title in Portuguese).

Although the book is not an autobiography — in its introduction, Batista explains that his official biography is already being written by the New York Times’ Alan Riding — he shares a lot of his personal views on business and money, beginning with the title’s use of the “X” letter, his favorite from the alphabet, in all of his companies’ names. It’s meant to suggest the multiplication of wealth.
Most of his business savvy, he explains, was learned under pressure, sometimes from deeper issues dating back to his childhood. During his early teens, Batista used to suffer from asthma. That’s when his mother, who was German, decided to enroll him in swimming lessons, making sure he would complete his training every day in a heated pool. “That made me really anxious, but in less than a year I was cured. And then I learned one simple lesson: you grow as a person when you face your own challenges.”

Batista also acknowledges that there are a lot of self-help books out there promising to make its readers into multimillionaires in the blink of an eye, but, in most cases, these books were written by people who never really made a million dollars themselves. “People know what I’ve done. I’m the world’s most versatile business man. I’ve built 20 different multi-billion businesses in different areas, beginning from scratch. That’s a huge incentive for people to buy my book,” Batista says.
He certainly has a point.

Check out Eike Batista’s 10 simple rules on how to become, well, Eike Batista:

1. “Nobody is happy alone. To share experiences is always a good thing.”
2. “You grown as a person when you face your own challenges, or stressful moments, as I like to say. A good entrepreneur must be prepared to evolve in adversity.”
3. “The good seller is the one who is also a good listener.”
4.“Believe in yourself. If you doubt in yourself, you won’t be able to face your co-workers. Or the market, for that matter.”

5. “Don’t quit on the first adversity. Believe in your intuition, but try to be down to earth as well, paying attention to research and polls.”
6. “Don’t think you are unstoppable or foolproof. Don’t think that the only way your business will work is through perfection. Don’t aim for perfection. Aim for success.”
7. “To have a dream is one step closer to achieving something in life. The difference between the dreamer and the maker, though, is that the latter actually makes it happen.”
8. “Look forward; focus on what people don’t see at first sight.”
9. “Look at a business in all its depth and think of every detail with maximum accuracy and minimum risk.”
10. “Luck is important, as it is part of any project. But luck will only be present when the project is well designed.”