Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Business Travel - Turin, Rotterdam & Dubai

My last post for this year, looking back it has been a productive year for me. Happy new year everyone!

Turin is just beautiful with Alps in the background.


Dubai again, this time I brought my mom along since she's never been to Dubai before.


Also while working in Rotterdam, my wife joined me to explore Amsterdam.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

SAP Conference in Singapore

Attended SAP conference in Singapore last week. It was pretty informative and encouraging to see the future direction of SAP. Also took some time to bring the family to Universal Studios at Sentosa Island. It was really a fun day.



Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Dubai 2nd Visit & Knee Surgery

A very busy time indeed for me. Before my scheduled knee surgery, need to oversee first my project in Dubai. Took this opportunity to bring my family over especially for Ramadhan experiences. As for my knee surgery, I decided to go ahead to fix my knee permanently. I got my ACL in 2005 and compounded the injury recently with bucket handle. So it's better to fix this while I'm still young. The surgery went smoothly albeit the recovery process will take some time. But looking forward to be normal again :).

At Dubai Marina

Nice Burj Al Arab view from Souk Medinat Jumeirah

Recovering....

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Business Trip to Dubai

My first assignment and a maiden visit to Dubai. A very modern city and a little bit expensive overall. But it was great to see Dubai diversifying their economy beyond oil. PLI Middle East operation is based in Dubai but the entity is reporting to South Africa office. I am responsible to setup and evaluate ERP system to support Middle East operation. Definitely need to be here again to oversee the implementation stage later.

View from Burj Khalifa park

Burj Khalifa - It's really tall!

Burj Al Arab - The sixth star hotel

View from PLI office

Friday, April 3, 2015

A New Journey


I’m on the move again (hoping to settle down). And I'm back to my ‘root’ (sort of). I knew one day I’ll be serving back Petronas as I am truly grateful for the opportunity given to me previously. After more than 10 years exploring in my career development with different companies and role, travelling around the world to earn more experiences, becoming a husband and a father of two kids, I think it’s about the time to look for more stability and challenging experiences in my career. And Petronas is the most suitable candidate I can think of. For sentiment reason, challenging career development and of course contribution to nation development while having job stability and security (well, midlife priority is changing). The job is no easy task and would be the most challenging. Petronas Lubricants International (PLI) is about to embark a quantum leap of business transformation and I’ll be responsible to oversee this transformation from system (SAP) perspective. This completely change my role from ‘delivery’ mode to ‘architect’ mode. It will be long journey and it just started. But I love my new role, I can see everything from above and I have 360 degrees view of all – from technology perspective, design & architecture perspective, business process perspective to conversation with different kind of professionals such as management consultants, PMO consultants, SI Consultants, respective Head of Business functions and many more. It will be interesting journey ahead….

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Happy New Year 2015!

Been really busy lately. Anyway, Aqeel has started his journey on primary school chapter and he looked happy and anxious at the same time on his first day. But he was steady, not crying lol.


Also, I just launched InviteApp - my own personal pet project for Android app. Just started my own ad as below in facebook. It's pretty encouraging with the 'likes' the ad earned, but conversion to install is still low. My app can be found in the google play in the link below. I will share the progress of my pet project later :).
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.inviteapp.inviteapp 


Monday, October 13, 2014

HP to split

I have mixed feeling on this. The company will be divided into two separate companies each with almost same revenue and profit. On one hand, I thought bigger is better since HP could provide end to end solution. But managing mammoth organization is complex. The idea of the split is to ensure each company could focus more on the respective business, HP Enterprise will provide consulting services while HP Inc could focus on hardware business. At the moment, all employees are eagerly waiting the management next action on how to split this and what their fate are. My personal preference would be to stay in HP Enterprise, that's the future especially for SAP Consultant like myself. I like the idea HP could diversify their services to external clients rather than internal alone as we have been equipped with niche skills and knowledge implementing solution for HP internal process. The good thing working with HP as SAP Consultant, we have access to all SAP latest products and expertise from SAP. Anyway, it will take a year until the split can be finalized, until then finger crossed is all I can say...

Monday, August 4, 2014

Business Workshop at Houston

It is my first visit to Texas State and Houston is my destination. There is a big HP campus here in Houston and my meeting will be held here for a week. It was long flight and I took Korean Air with 1 transit at Seoul. I spent the weekend by visiting downtown Houston, here are some pics taken:

HP Houston Campus


Houston Center

USA & Texas Flag

Green Initiative in Downtown

Islamic Da'wah Center

Old Market Square

Selfie with Houston Skyscrapers in background

Houston Downton

Friday, February 28, 2014

SAP BPC at HP



Currently assigned to SAP BPC development. Always exciting to learn new stuffs. Since HP business is very much complex covering all across the globe, the planning which involves complex calculations are so challenging. But a very good exercise for my mind.






Saturday, January 25, 2014

HP Way Now....

At crossroad of my career, new venture and challenges perhaps at largest IT company in the world....




Friday, August 23, 2013

SAP Forum 2013

Attended SAP Forum yesterday. It was good, SAP has done really tremendous job catching up with latest technology revolution such as mobile, social and analytic. Just wondering whether customers are ready to invest in these technologies considering their existing system is working, if it ain't broke, why fix it?







Monday, June 3, 2013

QUARTERLY ANALYSIS FOR BIG 4 (PLANTATION COMPANIES)

For quarter end of March 2013, following is analysis of net profit margin of Big 4 plantation companies in Malaysia. IOI again leading in net profit margin % with 17.65% followed by KLK with 10.09%, Sime Darby 6.60% and Felda 6.23%.



Saturday, May 18, 2013

Data Scientist: The Sexiest Job of the 21st Century

It's not what I preach, it's taken from Harvard Business Review which I quote below Link. The article below however focusing on consumer data perspective. The other aspect should be considered as well is business data perspective. My earlier posts here and here discussed on the same issue but from business perspective. I concur with the writer that this field will be huge in 21st century. Glad I could be part of it :).


When Jonathan Goldman arrived for work in June 2006 at LinkedIn, the business networking site, the place still felt like a start-up. The company had just under 8 million accounts, and the number was growing quickly as existing members invited their friends and colleagues to join. But users weren’t seeking out connections with the people who were already on the site at the rate executives had expected. Something was apparently missing in the social experience. As one LinkedIn manager put it, “It was like arriving at a conference reception and realizing you don’t know anyone. So you just stand in the corner sipping your drink—and you probably leave early.”
Goldman, a PhD in physics from Stanford, was intrigued by the linking he did see going on and by the richness of the user profiles. It all made for messy data and unwieldy analysis, but as he began exploring people’s connections, he started to see possibilities. He began forming theories, testing hunches, and finding patterns that allowed him to predict whose networks a given profile would land in. He could imagine that new features capitalizing on the heuristics he was developing might provide value to users. But LinkedIn’s engineering team, caught up in the challenges of scaling up the site, seemed uninterested. Some colleagues were openly dismissive of Goldman’s ideas. Why would users need LinkedIn to figure out their networks for them? The site already had an address book importer that could pull in all a member’s connections.
Luckily, Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn’s cofounder and CEO at the time (now its executive chairman), had faith in the power of analytics because of his experiences at PayPal, and he had granted Goldman a high degree of autonomy. For one thing, he had given Goldman a way to circumvent the traditional product release cycle by publishing small modules in the form of ads on the site’s most popular pages.
Through one such module, Goldman started to test what would happen if you presented users with names of people they hadn’t yet connected with but seemed likely to know—for example, people who had shared their tenures at schools and workplaces. He did this by ginning up a custom ad that displayed the three best new matches for each user based on the background entered in his or her LinkedIn profile. Within days it was obvious that something remarkable was taking place. The click-through rate on those ads was the highest ever seen. Goldman continued to refine how the suggestions were generated, incorporating networking ideas such as “triangle closing”—the notion that if you know Larry and Sue, there’s a good chance that Larry and Sue know each other. Goldman and his team also got the action required to respond to a suggestion down to one click.
It didn’t take long for LinkedIn’s top managers to recognize a good idea and make it a standard feature. That’s when things really took off. “People You May Know” ads achieved a click-through rate 30% higher than the rate obtained by other prompts to visit more pages on the site. They generated millions of new page views. Thanks to this one feature, LinkedIn’s growth trajectory shifted significantly upward.
A New Breed
Goldman is a good example of a new key player in organizations: the “data scientist.” It’s a high-ranking professional with the training and curiosity to make discoveries in the world of big data. The title has been around for only a few years. (It was coined in 2008 by one of us, D.J. Patil, and Jeff Hammerbacher, then the respective leads of data and analytics efforts at LinkedIn and Facebook.) But thousands of data scientists are already working at both start-ups and well-established companies. Their sudden appearance on the business scene reflects the fact that companies are now wrestling with information that comes in varieties and volumes never encountered before. If your organization stores multiple petabytes of data, if the information most critical to your business resides in forms other than rows and columns of numbers, or if answering your biggest question would involve a “mashup” of several analytical efforts, you’ve got a big data opportunity.
Much of the current enthusiasm for big data focuses on technologies that make taming it possible, including Hadoop (the most widely used framework for distributed file system processing) and related open-source tools, cloud computing, and data visualization. While those are important breakthroughs, at least as important are the people with the skill set (and the mind-set) to put them to good use. On this front, demand has raced ahead of supply. Indeed, the shortage of data scientists is becoming a serious constraint in some sectors. Greylock Partners, an early-stage venture firm that has backed companies such as Facebook, LinkedIn, Palo Alto Networks, and Workday, is worried enough about the tight labor pool that it has built its own specialized recruiting team to channel talent to businesses in its portfolio. “Once they have data,” says Dan Portillo, who leads that team, “they really need people who can manage it and find insights in it.”
Who Are These People?
If capitalizing on big data depends on hiring scarce data scientists, then the challenge for managers is to learn how to identify that talent, attract it to an enterprise, and make it productive. None of those tasks is as straightforward as it is with other, established organizational roles. Start with the fact that there are no university programs offering degrees in data science. There is also little consensus on where the role fits in an organization, how data scientists can add the most value, and how their performance should be measured.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

double trouble


Not sure a bigger screen helps much, as I see it, a double trouble :). 


Friday, March 15, 2013

SAP - Most Valuable German Company

Quoting from one article I read earlier:

"SAP has vaulted past Siemens AG and Volkswagen AG to become Germany’s most valuable company despite revenue that’s 10 percent of Volkswagen’s and one-fifth that of Siemens. With a market capitalization of $102 billion, SAP is the world’s ninth-most-valuable technology company and the only European in the top 10. SAP’s price-to-earnings ratio, a gauge of how much investors are willing pay for the stock relative to profit, is the highest of the top 10. At 27 times earnings, SAP’s P/E exceeds Google Inc.’s 24.5 and 16.7 for archrival Oracle Corp., according to data compiled by Bloomberg."



SAP from user's perspective, either most hated or loved software. It's incredibly complex, over-engineered and not too user friendly. But it's a necessarily evil from management's perspective. As one analyst described below..

“It’s become like an octopus,” said Heinz Steffen, an analyst with Fairesearch GmbH in Kronberg, Germany. “If you’re trying to make your processes more productive, you’ll have a tough time avoiding SAP.”

And I agree with him.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Quarterly Analysis for Big 4 (Plantation Companies)

For quarter end of Dec 2012, following is analysis of net profit margin of Big 4 plantation companies in Malaysia.


IOI again leading in net profit margin % with 15.03% followed by KLK with 11.73%, Sime Darby 6.49% and Felda 6.14%. IOI has done quite well so far. Congrats!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

IOI's financial year 2012 brief analysis


I’ve been digging up details on IOI’s Annual Report for financial year 2012 recently. What I concerned most are anything relevant to me thus the figures presented would relate to that.

Let see, the revenue was RM 15 billion but what important to me is the revenue contribution from Loders Croklaan. From the ‘Sales of Specialty Oils and Fats and related products’, I can see that the revenue was RM 3.5 Billion so it’s about 23% from total revenue. It underscores the importance of Loders Croklaan’s business to IOI.


This is interesting to me as well. The cost of salaries/wages was RM 700 million, roughly 4.6% of revenue and up 7% from previous year (could be due to annual increment, business expansion etc).



Generally, profitability will determine how much bonus can be awarded to employee. But shareholders must be rewarded first before employees, thus after deduction of dividends we can see how much left for employee. Of course company can retain earning as capital for business expansion (as what Apple did, they retain all earning (no dividends or bonus) and it has reached USD 100 Billion). Net Income for IOI after tax was RM 1.8 Billion and shareholders were rewarded with 16 sen per share totaling RM 1 Billion. So what’s left still significantly huge amount, RM 800 Million!  


Ever wonder why IOI is called cash rich company, so here it is. As of 2012, total available cash was RM4.3 Billion!


  Last but not least, I’m interested to know the revenue by geographical location. Both Europe and Asia (exclude Malaysia) share almost equivalent sales followed by Malaysia and North America. But Europe and North America combined present almost half of group revenue, given the economic volatility from this region, it has some significance risk to IOI. Hopefully demand from Asia would be able to offset this risk.


Saturday, December 1, 2012

Quarterly Analysis for Big 4 (Plantation Companies)

For quarter end of Sept 2012, following is analysis of net profit margin of Big 4 plantation companies in Malaysia.



IOI again leading in net profit margin % with 18.21% followed closely by KLK with 17.79%, Sime Darby 8.78% and Felda 5.95%.

Monday, November 5, 2012

SAP Warehouse Management (WM)

Adding to my new portfolio now is SAP WM. So I'm officially a SAP Techno-Functional Consultant now. We have kicked off SAP WM project last week at our plant in Pasir Gudang. To understand better the current warehouse management process, we did some site visit and it was beneficial. The purpose of this project is to automate the process of warehouse management so productivity and efficiency can be improved significantly.In addition, SAP WM will be better integrate with our existing SD/MM module. Besides SAP WM, the other two projects (SAP Plant Maintenance (PM) & SAP Material Requirement Planning (MRP))  also will be implemented concurrently. Next year will be busy for me....

Our key user from WM and project lead from Netherlands

 Pallet of Products by Racks

 Loading Area

Monday, October 22, 2012

IOI - 13th Place

Banking and Telecoms dominate the top, IOI is ranked no 13th which is very encouraging. 


Thursday, September 13, 2012

SAP Economy Ecosystem



The other day I stumbled upon one article regarding SAP Economy Ecosystem (well it's from 2007 research). Here are interesting facts:

- More than 41,000 customers
- Average deal of each SAP implementation -> USD 1.6 Million
- More than 800,000 service partners and developers (notable service partners include IBM, HP, Accenture)
- Estimated around USD 425 Billion (Roughly around Saudi Arabia & Norway GDP)

That's 2007 estimation by the way. In 2007, SAP's revenue stands at USD 13 Billion and in 2011, it's USD 18 Billion. That's a 8.5% average increases for the past 4 years. Based on this trend, perhaps we could estimate the overall SAP's economy has increased close to USD 600 Billion. That's between Switzerland and Indonesia economy right there. And only 16 other countries have bigger economy than SAP ecosystem.

But nobody can beat Microsoft's Economy. It's the biggest which I think could be more than a trillion dollar economy. To put thing into perspective, only 15 countries reach a trillion dollar economy.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Quarterly Analysis for Big 4 (Plantation Companies)


The financial report for the latest quarter (period ended on 30.06.2012) has been announced. Below is some analysis I’ve done to compare the performance of IOI with the other big plantation companies in Malaysia. In this analysis, I used net profit margin as a basis of comparison in performance. In this regard, IOI is doing well as compared to others with 11% net profit margin versus 9.3% for KLK, 8.2% for Sime Darby & 6.2% for Felda. Generally, the performance for all these companies are declining as compared to same quarter 2011 due to lower CPO price and challenging economic environment. But I would say plantation based companies are doing well and resilient in challenging environment as they remain recording healthy profitability quarter after quarter. I would conclude that plantation industry (and generally agriculture industry) is recession proof industry as demand for the product remain the same due to necessity factor. Overall, I'm very happy with IOI performance as compared to the competitors.

Source: Bursa Malaysia

Felda
Sime Darby
KLK
IOI
Revenue
3,536,387 billion
14,122,102 billion
2,603,179 billion
3,747,510 billion
Profit before Taxation
301,503 million
1,439,744 billion
312,859 million
528,707 million
Profit after Taxation
220,157 million
1,162,840 billion
241,303 million
414,440 million
Net Profit Margin
0.06225
0.082342
0.092696
0.110591
Net Profit Margin %
6.22548
8.234185
9.269551
11.05908


Felda
Sime Darby
KLK
IOI
Revenue
3.5 Billion
14.1 Billion
2.6 Billion
3.7 Billion
Profit before Taxation
302 Million
1.4 Billion
313 Million
529 Million
Profit after Taxation
220 Million
1.2 Billion
241 Million
414 Million
Net Profit Margin
0.06
0.08
0.09
0.11
Net Profit Margin %
6.2%
8.2%
9.3%
11%

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

SAP Netweaver Portal

The other day I attended the SAP Portal training. I'm very impressed on how far SAP has made the technology looking very attractive and functional. The idea is to centralize portal access (be it SAP or not) with single sign on. Moving forward, it's ideal to have Portal access in every organisation due to easy access (no GUI installation, only browser required). Now it's my job to convince the management to adopt the portal, the idea is to introduce the technology gradually. I'm no sales guru but I'll try to present a high level idea with some case scenario combining with technical overview (this is my strength). Hopefully my dream to embark upon new portal project will come true...fingers crossed :)




Wednesday, May 2, 2012