Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Using AIESEC as a platform to even out disparity among nations

How is Cameroon like?
Cameroon is a relatively stable and safe country among all African nations. They do not have people dying of hunger, they do not have civil unrest or political uprise. The country is trying to develop itself, and the youths are trying to strive to fulfill their life goals.

The little huge problem called computer inavailability
Through observation and discussion with the locals, I feel that the main hindrance to their advancement is lack of infrastructure. The roads are not well paved, power and water supply are inconsistent, internet has been around since 1996 but till now they are running at a speed of 215kb/s still. Most importantly, computer is still a rare thing here. And this is depriving the people the very important tool in this information era, be it to manage and create information using the computer or to get connected to the world wide web.

How is it like in AIESEC Cameroon?
In AIESEC Cameroon, only the MC office has computers. Two computers excluding two MCs’ personal laptops. The LC members work on cyber cafés, which isn’t just expensive, but filled with viruses. The rate is around 1.5SGD per hour. If this seems little to you, consider the living cost here of 2SGD for a decent meal, and the unstable 215kb/s internet connection speed which inevitably lengthens the usage. Think about the high dependence on myaiesec.net nowadays among AIESECers, and think the impact of having no easy computer access. Furthermore, having no computer means that it is impossible for them to create any handouts, write and store any meeting minutes, or design marketing materials.

Being moved to action
Apart from feeling fortunate when I witness this situation, I have been thinking about how we can utilize the AIESEC platform to even out this inequality. In Singapore, people change their laptop every 3-5 years, or once it goes slower. Here, the computers are still having floppy disk slots.

How about if we organize a PBOX on Information Technology, focusing on the collection of computers and to contribute to the Cameroonian society, and send members here to educate people on computer and internet skills? We may perhaps have members from AIESEC Cameroon here also to experience how helpful internet usage can be, and at the same time contribute their insights to ensure that the PBOX is effective? There are some international organizations working on this issue already, such as Microsoft, and we can partner with them. National Youth Council has grants that financially supports overseas project. In AIESEC Cameroon, they are running a PBOX called swITch too, which is focusing on Information Technology. I have discussed this with the MC and we feel that there is a huge opportunity for partnership between a developed nation and a developing nation.

Our role in the world
AIESEC is one international organization which we can bring about changes across nations. Given the precious opportunity for me to be here to see the reality in a land so far away and so unknown to many, I feel that we can do this something to have the positive impact in society. What do you think?

If anyone, after reading this, is motivated and moved to take some action, I am available by email for discussion, or to introduce you to the relevant AIESEC members here. Apart from this issue, I am keen to share any insights I can gather in my exchange here too. My email is wanxin86@hotmail.com.

We have the capacity to change for the better. We should not wait anymore for anyone. The power lies in us.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

To chair is to adapt

Oolala thank you so much Cheryl for sharing my news with everyone! It is really helpful for me when internet is so scarce here! I stole time from my working today, and pasted this entry I wrote on my own laptop before posting it here. Enjoy!

I am truly grateful for the rare opportunity to chair the national conference before the start of my internship. It was perhaps the best positive pressure for me to adapt.

I arrived in Douala on 9th May 1120pm. Conference pre-meeting started on 10th May 9am, which was supposed to be hosted by the chair. Diana helped me to do the first session. That moment onwards, I knew I have to get out of my protective shell, and get out faster than normal people because I have a role to play. So from lunch onwards, I started proactively making conversations with people, learning more about people, the society and AIESEC Cameroon. The facilitators were really helpful for preparing me. The moment when I feel truly integrated was perhaps during the AIESEC dance time at night. Dancing in unison always makes one feel a part of the community. From that moment onwards, I am really feeling like I am the chair of the conference!

Being a chair was an interesting experience. I have to manage different groups of people without really knowing what the situation is like, and even better, without really knowing if what you are saying is right. People expect a lot from the chair to take the lead. Thus, after finding out from everyone that we more or less share the same expectation, I started assuming more that it is somewhat like a conference in Singapore. I am glad these assumptions held true.

There is always this very big task for the chair apart from all the formal responsibilities – to manage the time. It was an ever bigger challenge for me here, because Cameroonians do not have too much concept about time. When people said ‘I am coming’, it means 20 more minutes. When they said 15 minutes more, it means an hour more. I had to fight against all these to ensure that the conference run according to the agenda. So the OC and faci heard a lot from me asking ‘How much exact time will you take to come?’, ‘What do you mean by “I’m coming”?’.After the first day, everyone would giggle if someone else dare to say ‘I am coming’. Haha.

Everyone had a conception that Asians are very reserved people. Belinda described Asians as ‘talk and die’. So when they saw me hosting the opening plenary speaking a lot and fluently, they were very surprised. The fact that I am speaking already made my performance surpassed their expectation. Having people viewing you positively makes a lot of things easier. And somehow my way of speaking, my intonation, my pronounciation, my ‘cool?’ gesture, the way I run around, the way I dance intrigued them a lot too, perhaps it was all because it was different from their preconception.

The delegates were really nice, friendly and mature. They would pay full attention to me when I was speaking, responding to me in unison every time I asked ‘Cool?’, coming to me just to say ‘bon apetite’ when I am having my meals, and even cooperating with me to keep quiet after I told them my throat is sore. They love photo-taking. Everyday, every break, as long as I walked about in the plenary, I would be caught to take pictures with them. And one request would usually lead to 10 other requests. The delegates would grab me, hold my hands, hold my shoulders, or attempt to hug or kiss me. But they had respect for the chair. So after one delegate stunned me by kissing on my cheeks to bid good night, and another delegate found out that I am not alright with these French culture, the next day onwards, no one dares to do so again.

Because the people I was interacting with were AIESECers, it means that they are a lot more open to sharing, and I could ask interesting questions that I would not dare to ask otherwise, for example, "Are all Cameroonians sexually active?", "Why do you guys not use fans?", "How is the HIV/AIDS situation here?", "What do you think is the root of problems here in Africa?" etc. Of course, all due respect is given. I enquired for this information for intellectual curiosity. =P

The delegates have also surprised me with their vision. And they surprised me more with the determination in them to achieve their vision. Many of them want to improve various aspect of Africa. Berlin wanted to solve the food shortage problem, Arnaud wanted to be the richest young man so that he could inspire the others, another wanted to set up many enterprises, another wanted to manage Africa properly. It is truly noble of them to have realised these problems, and remained determined to stay and improve the situation, instead of going away in search of a better land. And the speech from CEO of Standard Chartered Bank has helped nailed in their vision. He said, ‘Many people, when they face problems, abandon the problems and go to a better place. The great people like Nelson Mandela and Lee Kuan Yew (he mentioned him because I was there) stayed with the problems and perfect them.’ I really wish that these youths can stay with their vision, and work on them for a better Africa. And I really wish that we from the better world can work with them to make things come true. Watch out for my next posts on possible collaboration!

Apart from the people that are so refreshing, the conference organisation was an eye opener too. Air-conditioning is not at all common here, so we had our plenary in a little hall in a hotel with fans. And the hotel is nothing to compare with any hotel in Singapore. During the opening plenary on the first night, the electricity went off when the delegates were setting their goals. No one complained. We stayed with the dark until the managers started their generators. Such power cut situation was plentiful for the rest of the days. The delegates made do without fans, the facilitators made do without powerpoint presentations. Budget problem was a huge problem for the OC this year. On the second day of the conference, the facilitators had to move out from our apartment to another hotel because it saved them some money. The OC didn’t have money to print handouts, and the MCP eventually took out his own money for the printing. We cut down on flipcharts, and even replaced lunch with coffee break. No one complained, even though that was not normal even here. The maturity level is amazing. Think about bringing this spirit back to Singapore.

For myself, I feel really fortunate to have such loving people to be the delegates for the first conference that I chaired. Their positive response kept me motivated throughout, even when I had 1 hour sleep or when I eventually fell sick. I didn’t need to resort to recall previous conferences to boost my energy. I have also opened my eyes to more things that can happen in a conference, some of which may not be pleasant, but definitely eye-opening. After the facilitators were downgraded to another hotel, that hotel has no shower head. Instead, there is a bucket of water, and I had to scoop water out using my palms to pour that little water on my body to clean it. The first time I saw that bucket, I was totally clueless. I thought this was bad enough. The third evening before the official dinner, there was power cut when I was taking that bucket bath! I was caught in absolute darkness, still having soap on my body, and I couldn’t see a thing. The other facilitators were completely at ease, but I was totally driven mad. I struggled to find my towel, put on my dress and 4-inch heels, walked on them on a pitch dark uneven mud road filled with rocks and stones, cursing and swearing in my heart. I couldn’t put on any make-up, and I considered that as totally unacceptable! It maddened me more when I saw all other facilitators still staying calm and happy. Seeing others like that made me know that I had to ease myself. I started comforting myself that it is alright to not make up, it is alright to not look too good, it is just a cultural experience. I got better when I reached the official dinner place, because I borrowed a delegate’s room to do some final touch up. Haha.

That’s all for some of the plentiful conference experience I have had from my very first chairing experience of AIESEC Cameroon NLDS. Seen a lot, learnt a lot, and, adapted more into the community through making a lot of friends.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

email from Wan Xin in Cameroon!

this is an excerpt from wan xin's email. she just finished chairing the NLDS for AIESEC in Cameroon, and is about to embark on her Management Traineeship soon.

"I just arrived in my city after chairing the conference. The NLDS was great, and I have had a very rewarding chairing experience here, being able to inspire many to pursue their dreams in life, and being inspired by the delegates' HUGE vision! The delegates are mature and aspiring. We had power cut during the opening plenary, food cut due to OC budget constraint (there was one day we had no lunch!), and lots of delay as Cameroonians are not really time conscious. Nonetheless, the delegates continue to wait, to dream big, to keep thinking what they can do, and what is their future.

I am amazed by the high quality life they are having now, despite the almost incomparable material life here. The roads are not tarred, power cut happens all the time, water is yellow, no fan in the room, no shower head for bathing, 4 person on the same bed, no internet and no computer. Yet the members are so driven. There was one night during their national planning where it was raining so heavily and loudly and the power was cut for hours. The members simply continued in the dark with the help of one lamp, all the way till 11pm.

If it fits into the national plan, I would really wish to have a Singapore-Cameroon bridge programme, to equalize the material inequality. For example, if we can collect second hand laptops or computers in Singapore and send them here. The LCs have no computer at all, and it's really affecting their effectiveness. And the members are striving very hard and difficultly to attend conferences because they have no money. If there are members interested in this and if it fits our year plan, I guess having such projects will really let everyone visualise the positive impact we have in society.

Love from Cameroon,
Wan Xin"

Sunday, May 17, 2009

a brand new high - from cheryl

the 1st posting by rach was a lovely one! :)

honestly, this national planning is the best one i've ever attended. why?

i have...

a wonderful team.

i feel i'm surrounded by people who are on the same page as me, and we are running towards the same dream in AIESEC Singapore. thank you for giving me the chance to work with you :) i'm excited for the term to come!

a sense of unity.
ambition is not mine alone. every single person needs to believe in the value of the organization.. and during nat planning, i feel people do believe and that they want to work together to achieve. :) that makes me extremely proud to belong to AIESEC Singapore. i feel like shouting it out to the world.

personally learnt from each and every one of you...
i'm still new to this role, and i hope you are patient with me. i'm learning every single second, minute, hour.

i spent some time reflecting on my past 4 months since i've been elected. i really didn't have time to stop and think. i realized that while i was walking down this road, there were so many decisions to be made, they seemed like they were coming one after another. to me, i made the best decisions i could make at every single point in time.

if you knew me a couple of years back and compared me to where i am right now, you would know i've changed a lot as a person. i always found it hard to say 'no' to others, you would hardly ever hear me speak in a huge group. i figured it was always easier to keep my opinions to myself, so i would not offend anyone, or get into anyone's bad books. i wanted people to have a positive opinion of me, so i always agreed to people's requests when they needed help (or when they wanted to shirk responsibility). or the time when i was ostracized in sec sch, i kept quiet and let the misunderstandings around me go on - that was a miserable period of 4 years in sch i endured. back then, things were just so simple, my life was a small bubble, limited to me, myself and I. decisions i made were felt by my immediate family, maybe my close friends as well and not really anyone else.

coming into AIESEC, it gave me the depth to learn more about myself. it taught me that i could fail miserably, and it is crazy for me to take on every single responsibility as my own. i alone cannot fix any thing. in the end i only wear myself out.

in my following years as as MC VP and NST, i had many opportunities to learn about myself as a team player, and to grow professionally, to challenge myself further (trying for virtual teams).. i had many firsts - first NST together with William in 07/08. first @singapore rep on an AI virtual team. first MC VP Comms. first MCP from smu.

it's the last experience that i've found myself thinking so much more - and if you ever have the opportunity to go to IC, you will hear the MCPs/LCPs chant "it's great to be an LCP/MCP". it's an intense journey where you think so much more than usual, in terms of people and management.

over these past few months, i've made tough decisions which people might not concur with. these choices were extremely disconcerting, but they made me learn. from a cheryl who wanted to please as many people as possible, i had to face the idea that i could not please everyone with any decision i make. i knew some would be happy, others would be unhappy.

at the end of the day, i can't satisfy every single person... i only have to place the strongest faith in my decision, that they were made with the best intentions for the whole group of over 200 people. it is not only cheryl making the final decisions for herself, but that she is responsible for the entire organization in singapore.

i've always had this notion that to change the people around you, you have to first start from yourself. and this is where AIESEC for me, begins. :)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

AIESEC Singapore National Planning - Pre meet

Today was the prelude to AIESEC Singapore's National Planning, held at the Singapore Management University (SMU) School of Business. This event that brings together the incoming national and local teams of AIESC Singapore to set priorities and draw up our year plans for the new term, which for this year will be held over three days and two nights.

The day started off on a light note, with Esviyola, (our resident Indon tai-tai a.k.a outgoing Vice President Finance) getting everyone together for a morning briefing with expectations setting, as well as ice-breaker games. After clear expectations of the incoming Local Chapter Executive Boards (LC EBs) were set, getting to know each other and ice-breaker games followed suit.

Ice-Breaker games

First off was a game coined by Esvi, called "Catch the Marker". Essentially, it was as simple as to...catch the marker! 

# Rules:
  • Everyone is to gather round in a circle after which a round of introductions are done
  • After introducing markers into the circle, the holder of the marker is to throw it to someone across the circle, after calling his/her name
  • Thrower MUST call out the correct name before throwing the marker, or a forfeit is rendered.
  • Receiver MUST catch the marker and not let it fall to the ground, or a forfeit is rendered.
This was a pretty simple game, or so it seems, as Esvi always has something up her sleeves to turn things interesting. Look out for the videos to know what this means!

After catching the marker for sometime, another game was introduced, called "Superheroes"! This is one of AIESECer's favourite games of all time, with our incoming Member Committee (MC) Vice President of Exchange, Han Ling even suggesting to take it to the International Congress in August later this year. Check out the video to understand how its played. Basically it consists of four different actions, none of which should be called out at the same time when played.


Call from Nairobi

Following the games and a short briefing by outgoing MC President Mayas, we were fortunate enough to get on a skype call with our lovely outgoing LC President cum incoming MC VP Talent Management, Wan Xin, who flew off to Cameroon for her internship the evening before. She had landed in Nairobi, Kenya, and was awaiting her next flight to Douala, Cameroon, whcih was around 12 hours later. 

Through the wonderous means of Skype, we were able to hear her speak for awhile, as well as talk to her about her journey so far. Traveling across the world to an entirely new region certainly was something to be excited and anxious about, and more so doing that alone, and having planned to spend three whole months speaking a third language (Française), adapting to the living habits and lifestyle and working in a foreign environment certainly is challenging. Well, who knows what similarities we might find amidst the vast perceived differences in culture and environment, and we will have to await the lady herself to update us about it =D


No. 1 in Asia Pacific!

Next up, after lunch (and much chatting with Wan Xin), the MC and EB teams parted our ways to different training tracks which would last the rest of the afternoon. The MC team was fortunate to have with us our Asia Pacific Director from AIESEC International, Li Zhen, to conduct a session for us. It was a truly eye-opening session that put our minds into perspective, laid out our realities and changed the way we examined our organizational challenges and the magnitude of growth we believed we could achieve for the term.

The session was a simple want, with Li Zhen asking us only four series of questions:
  1. Should AIESEC Singapore aim to be the Number one country in Asia Pacific?
  2. Is it possible for AIESEC Singapore to be the Number one country in Asia Pacific?
  3. Do we have the right attitude in place to be the Number one country in Asia Pacific? and
  4. How can we be the Number one country in Asia Pacific?
After much analysis of what our current state is, what AIESEC as an organization stands for and wants to achieve, whether we are delivering on our promises and a round of competitive analysis and strategy formulation, our conclusion was, 

YES, AIESEC Singapore SHOULD aim to be the Number one country in Asia Pacific, because we HAVE the potential for growth, and as long as we HAVE the right attitude and mindset, adopt a STRATEGIC and FOCUSED long term plan to exponential growth and sustainability, it is not an IMPOSSIBLE target.

After a gruelling six hours of thinking and enlightenment, the MCs left the session feeling much more confident and perhaps psyched-up about the coming year, as well as the next crucial three days of intensive planning and strategizing. Well kudos to have our dear incoming MC President Cheryl make the first few bold changes to the whole structure of AIESEC Singapore and setting the stage right for real change to happen. If anything, i'm more than looking forward to see our output from this National Planning, and starting this promising 09/10 term!

Cheers all to hard work and results!