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    Career Talk: A Day In The Life Of A Lawyer
    A lawyer is a person who is authorized by the state or country to practice law, give advice to his or her clients and represent their legal matters in the courts. According to classes or ranks of jurists lawyers can be designated as advocate, attorney, barrister, counselor and solicitor. A lawyer has to study law and new laws on a regular basis to stay up to date in order to protect their clients. This is the basics of a career in law, protecting your client’s freedoms and rights.A Day In The Life Of A Lawyer.1. Get ready to travel: Lawyers spend most of their time in offices and courtrooms. They travel to meet their clients wherever they are and homes, business places, even emergency rooms in hospitals and state or federal prisons can be a fairly reg
    y. Actually, he is about half right. The real reason why Chad Hurley can get backers is because he has leverage of the market. Even if all the companies will sue him, the investors in Silicon Valley or the web 2.0 market will not ignore the amount of customers his website has generated. If you want to be in the internet business, you either have the top class technology or have the most customers. You can attack the niche market but be prepared that I will ask, “Are the people buying your product make up the top 20% of the income group in Singapore?”

    3. Half hearted Efforts and Risk Adversity

    If you want to do something, go all the way for it. If you want to take money from someone, be prepared to subject yourself to control from the investor. If you want to do both, you better go with full efforts. A lot of people talks about their ideas, but I have seen no prototypes. Believe it or not, even for a blog like SG Entrepreneurs, we wrote a business plan before getting the blog started. We even knew when we must get r

    Brand is About Performance
    A brand needs to be backed up by performance or the brand is worthless. When you purchase a large ticket item such as a vehicle, you have some expectation about the performance. The big car names all guarantee performance and backup their words with a service warranty for a certain period of time. It is not that they only backup the performance for that period of time; they are saying that if anything goes wrong, they will stand behind their product. As with any brand, this does not always hold true. You can end up buying a lemon and never getting the performance you thought you were buying. I have yet to see a car replaced by a new one when there is so much trouble fixing the original purchase but other companies such as those selling appliances have been known to
    Recently, we have been receiving a lot of applications for the funding commissioned by MDA. There are good and bad ideas. Of course, some of them will be getting “No, I am sorry to inform you that….” from us. it should not mean to you that it is the end of the road if we don’t fund you. If you believe in your idea so much, you should continue the search for funding. Even better, try to do a startup without funding, like some of our resident contributors, Cobalt Paladin, Design Sojourn, Weichang, Der Shing and myself have done. Through a few correspondences and meeting some self-proclaimed and crappy “entrepreneurs”, I have set up a list of reasons why they don’t make the mark. I have also placed some notes in this post to tell people what kind of entries will end up in our rubbish bin. Here are three reasons why we are ready to reject them.

    1. One man show is bound to fail.

    Despite how much we tell everyone that a team is important, some Singaporeans are still doing that. Usually when an entrepreneur tells me that he runs a one man show, three possibilities come to my mind: (i) he cannot inspire people to work with him, (ii) he cannot scale his business and hence his profit margins will be extremely low or (iii) he does not know how to grow his business. Good businesses require tight-knitted small teams and great business demands a vast number of good and strong teams. This is one problem I see with single inventors. If I keep trying to help them and gather people around them and they still do nothing, this demonstrates that they just cannot handle people. If you are still not convinced by my reasoning, here is a story which I can share with you.

    Years back when I was in Cambridge, a brilliant German inventor I know approached a friend of mine from the United States to do business development. They formed a startup and I thought that the technology was fantastic to make the next Google. This is what exactly happened. One day, the inventor came to me and asked me about business models in my area of specialisation. I was baffled and told him that I was no expert of his industry. Then he continued to ask me what book to read about this. I told him to look up a few references. In the end, I realized that he did not trust my friend at all about business models. For every subject from financials to writing business plans, he had read every book. However, in the end, the business failed horribly. Luckily, my American friend did not suffer badly from the experience. Within seconds he quit the venture, a well-respected serial entrepreneur (and business angel who have done numerous technology startups and sold them to high bidders) in the Cambridge cluster called him and offered him a CEO job for the new startup. The moral of the story is trust which is cardinal to some of our Asian cultures. Remember, you cannot be the CEO, the accountant, the business development director, the public relations and the inventor all at one time. It’s impossible to work like that.

    So, if you want to convince us, show us if you have a team of two at least, where the other person possess complementary skills to what you don’t have.

    2. Derivatives vs Imitations

    Some companies successfully did it through imitating what a successful big company do. For example, Baidu, the Chinese search engine took wholesale from Google. However, that can work if you can harness a domestic market as big as China, India or Brazil. Some founders try to do this in Singapore and find that their markets are so limited that it amounts nothing at all. As a matter of fact, Baidu is not really an imitation, but a derivative of Google operating in a niche market, namely the customers all write and read the Chinese language.

    Of course, if you make a derivative from an existing product, you have a problem. The problem is not just your technology being challenged on the intellectual property front. The real problem is actually the market share that you are getting. Recently, Justin mentioned that if Chad Young did YouTube in Singapore, the company would not have flourished because of all the laws and regulations in the country. Actually, he is about half right. The real reason why Chad Hurley can get backers is because he has leverage of the market. Even if all the companies will sue him, the investors in Silicon Valley or the web 2.0 market will not ignore the amount of customers his website has generated. If you want to be in the internet business, you either have the top class technology or have the most customers. You can attack the niche market but be prepared that I will ask, “Are the people buying your product make up the top 20% of the income group in Singapore?”

    3. Half hearted Efforts and Risk Adversity

    If you want to do something, go all the way for it. If you want to take money from someone, be prepared to subject yourself to control from the investor. If you want to do both, you better go with full efforts. A lot of people talks about their ideas, but I have seen no prototypes. Believe it or not, even for a blog like SG Entrepreneurs, we wrote a business plan before getting the blog started. We even knew when we must get r

    Managing Customer Contacts
    You work extremely hard to attract customers for your business. Once you have them, managing your customer contacts can help you keep them from jumping to competitors.Customers – The KeyToday’s market is cutthroat. Retaining customers and finding new ones is a tough job. Every company should analyze the available data to recognize its profitable customers and their needs, and also to manage marketing campaigns and to expand effectiveness. In order to serve these ends, most smart business leaders are using customer relationship management (CRM) solutions.Customer relationship management is a process for businesses to approach customer relations in a systematic and effectual way. A CRM system helps business to manage customer relations in a well
    he runs a one man show, three possibilities come to my mind: (i) he cannot inspire people to work with him, (ii) he cannot scale his business and hence his profit margins will be extremely low or (iii) he does not know how to grow his business. Good businesses require tight-knitted small teams and great business demands a vast number of good and strong teams. This is one problem I see with single inventors. If I keep trying to help them and gather people around them and they still do nothing, this demonstrates that they just cannot handle people. If you are still not convinced by my reasoning, here is a story which I can share with you.

    Years back when I was in Cambridge, a brilliant German inventor I know approached a friend of mine from the United States to do business development. They formed a startup and I thought that the technology was fantastic to make the next Google. This is what exactly happened. One day, the inventor came to me and asked me about business models in my area of specialisation. I was baffled and told him that I was no expert of his industry. Then he continued to ask me what book to read about this. I told him to look up a few references. In the end, I realized that he did not trust my friend at all about business models. For every subject from financials to writing business plans, he had read every book. However, in the end, the business failed horribly. Luckily, my American friend did not suffer badly from the experience. Within seconds he quit the venture, a well-respected serial entrepreneur (and business angel who have done numerous technology startups and sold them to high bidders) in the Cambridge cluster called him and offered him a CEO job for the new startup. The moral of the story is trust which is cardinal to some of our Asian cultures. Remember, you cannot be the CEO, the accountant, the business development director, the public relations and the inventor all at one time. It’s impossible to work like that.

    So, if you want to convince us, show us if you have a team of two at least, where the other person possess complementary skills to what you don’t have.

    2. Derivatives vs Imitations

    Some companies successfully did it through imitating what a successful big company do. For example, Baidu, the Chinese search engine took wholesale from Google. However, that can work if you can harness a domestic market as big as China, India or Brazil. Some founders try to do this in Singapore and find that their markets are so limited that it amounts nothing at all. As a matter of fact, Baidu is not really an imitation, but a derivative of Google operating in a niche market, namely the customers all write and read the Chinese language.

    Of course, if you make a derivative from an existing product, you have a problem. The problem is not just your technology being challenged on the intellectual property front. The real problem is actually the market share that you are getting. Recently, Justin mentioned that if Chad Young did YouTube in Singapore, the company would not have flourished because of all the laws and regulations in the country. Actually, he is about half right. The real reason why Chad Hurley can get backers is because he has leverage of the market. Even if all the companies will sue him, the investors in Silicon Valley or the web 2.0 market will not ignore the amount of customers his website has generated. If you want to be in the internet business, you either have the top class technology or have the most customers. You can attack the niche market but be prepared that I will ask, “Are the people buying your product make up the top 20% of the income group in Singapore?”

    3. Half hearted Efforts and Risk Adversity

    If you want to do something, go all the way for it. If you want to take money from someone, be prepared to subject yourself to control from the investor. If you want to do both, you better go with full efforts. A lot of people talks about their ideas, but I have seen no prototypes. Believe it or not, even for a blog like SG Entrepreneurs, we wrote a business plan before getting the blog started. We even knew when we must get r

    Businesses Need to 'Rehumanise'
    Big companies and corporations have lost the human touch. The question is, when will humanity catch on, or like robotic sheep will we do whatever the business shepherds tell us, no matter how bad we are treated? I am talking from firsthand interaction here. Aren’t you tired of having to talk to machines and sit waiting in queues that may not even really exist, while horrible music repeats itself over and over for eternity? How about having to talk to person after person as they try to find someone else who ‘can’ do the task that you need done? What about the machine that tells you to speak into the phone but can never properly interpret what you are saying? Or pushing buttons, how many numbers have you had to push before finally being told that the section you are
    im that I was no expert of his industry. Then he continued to ask me what book to read about this. I told him to look up a few references. In the end, I realized that he did not trust my friend at all about business models. For every subject from financials to writing business plans, he had read every book. However, in the end, the business failed horribly. Luckily, my American friend did not suffer badly from the experience. Within seconds he quit the venture, a well-respected serial entrepreneur (and business angel who have done numerous technology startups and sold them to high bidders) in the Cambridge cluster called him and offered him a CEO job for the new startup. The moral of the story is trust which is cardinal to some of our Asian cultures. Remember, you cannot be the CEO, the accountant, the business development director, the public relations and the inventor all at one time. It’s impossible to work like that.

    So, if you want to convince us, show us if you have a team of two at least, where the other person possess complementary skills to what you don’t have.

    2. Derivatives vs Imitations

    Some companies successfully did it through imitating what a successful big company do. For example, Baidu, the Chinese search engine took wholesale from Google. However, that can work if you can harness a domestic market as big as China, India or Brazil. Some founders try to do this in Singapore and find that their markets are so limited that it amounts nothing at all. As a matter of fact, Baidu is not really an imitation, but a derivative of Google operating in a niche market, namely the customers all write and read the Chinese language.

    Of course, if you make a derivative from an existing product, you have a problem. The problem is not just your technology being challenged on the intellectual property front. The real problem is actually the market share that you are getting. Recently, Justin mentioned that if Chad Young did YouTube in Singapore, the company would not have flourished because of all the laws and regulations in the country. Actually, he is about half right. The real reason why Chad Hurley can get backers is because he has leverage of the market. Even if all the companies will sue him, the investors in Silicon Valley or the web 2.0 market will not ignore the amount of customers his website has generated. If you want to be in the internet business, you either have the top class technology or have the most customers. You can attack the niche market but be prepared that I will ask, “Are the people buying your product make up the top 20% of the income group in Singapore?”

    3. Half hearted Efforts and Risk Adversity

    If you want to do something, go all the way for it. If you want to take money from someone, be prepared to subject yourself to control from the investor. If you want to do both, you better go with full efforts. A lot of people talks about their ideas, but I have seen no prototypes. Believe it or not, even for a blog like SG Entrepreneurs, we wrote a business plan before getting the blog started. We even knew when we must get r

    Yellow Page Ads No-No's -- Part 2
    I’ll assume you have a Yellow Page ad and have been tracking the results. If you haven’t, then the next few sentences won’t mean much because I’m writing about the things that may be wrong with your ad. So, hopefully, you asked employees, friends, relatives and total strangers to rate your ad and tell you what they liked and didn’t like. So now you can read on. Let’s pretend the ad is basically fine, but not earth-shaking, The headline could use a little work (see Part 1 of this series) but the body is weak. Do you have a piece of artwork or photo? Does it support the tone, mood or headline? For example, if you clean carpets, is it a picture of your truck or a man with a vacuum? If so, you’ve just wasted value ad space. Why?Because, trust me, everyone knows
    omplementary skills to what you don’t have.

    2. Derivatives vs Imitations

    Some companies successfully did it through imitating what a successful big company do. For example, Baidu, the Chinese search engine took wholesale from Google. However, that can work if you can harness a domestic market as big as China, India or Brazil. Some founders try to do this in Singapore and find that their markets are so limited that it amounts nothing at all. As a matter of fact, Baidu is not really an imitation, but a derivative of Google operating in a niche market, namely the customers all write and read the Chinese language.

    Of course, if you make a derivative from an existing product, you have a problem. The problem is not just your technology being challenged on the intellectual property front. The real problem is actually the market share that you are getting. Recently, Justin mentioned that if Chad Young did YouTube in Singapore, the company would not have flourished because of all the laws and regulations in the country. Actually, he is about half right. The real reason why Chad Hurley can get backers is because he has leverage of the market. Even if all the companies will sue him, the investors in Silicon Valley or the web 2.0 market will not ignore the amount of customers his website has generated. If you want to be in the internet business, you either have the top class technology or have the most customers. You can attack the niche market but be prepared that I will ask, “Are the people buying your product make up the top 20% of the income group in Singapore?”

    3. Half hearted Efforts and Risk Adversity

    If you want to do something, go all the way for it. If you want to take money from someone, be prepared to subject yourself to control from the investor. If you want to do both, you better go with full efforts. A lot of people talks about their ideas, but I have seen no prototypes. Believe it or not, even for a blog like SG Entrepreneurs, we wrote a business plan before getting the blog started. We even knew when we must get r

    Negotiating a New Job's Salary
    Often when receiving a job offer, candidates are eager to sign on the dotted line. Maybe they've been with out work for awhile, maybe it is an increase in pay, or maybe it is simply a better commute.It is important to remember though, that the most important time in salary negotiations are those early meetings. Be prepared and act confident, it can mean a huge difference in your future lifestyle.Here is some advice to help you land not just the gig, but the salary that you dream of :)Give a RangeThe general rule of thumb in negotiations is that the first person to name a number loses. Unfortunately, most people know this and it can quickly lead to
    y. Actually, he is about half right. The real reason why Chad Hurley can get backers is because he has leverage of the market. Even if all the companies will sue him, the investors in Silicon Valley or the web 2.0 market will not ignore the amount of customers his website has generated. If you want to be in the internet business, you either have the top class technology or have the most customers. You can attack the niche market but be prepared that I will ask, “Are the people buying your product make up the top 20% of the income group in Singapore?”

    3. Half hearted Efforts and Risk Adversity

    If you want to do something, go all the way for it. If you want to take money from someone, be prepared to subject yourself to control from the investor. If you want to do both, you better go with full efforts. A lot of people talks about their ideas, but I have seen no prototypes. Believe it or not, even for a blog like SG Entrepreneurs, we wrote a business plan before getting the blog started. We even knew when we must get resident contributors to expand our base. It is quite easy to copy what we are doing in this blog, and I have seen copycats which have died along the way. We go all the way to get our system up and we try to implement everything possible. We never think that profits will come so quickly.

    Here is something that Singaporeans need to learn: you must be prepared to suffer as an entrepreneur, otherwise join a company and work as an employee. Recently, I was watching a documentary called “High Net Worth” where the interviewer talks to Donald Trump why he does not encourage people to be entrepreneurs. Paraphrasing Trump’s words, if you are not prepared to work 24-7 for your business or find people and ways to enhance your brand and product, don’t be an entrepreneur and go be an employee. Not everyone is suitable to be entrepreneurs. It is the kind of advice that I like to give to some one man shows, who after a few years, are still one man shows.

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