Commentary

3 challenges in user key management

Singapore, as an international city and the regional business and financial hub of Asia Pacific, has been inextricably in line with international standards of excellence. While the adoption of the PCI-DSS and Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) SOX standards began among North American organizations, multinational companies with global presence are adopting the standards and compliance efforts centred on them are increasing. For example, companies that need to be compliant with PCI-DSS also require their partners that exchange and co-process credit card data, to maintain the compliance.

3 challenges in user key management

Singapore, as an international city and the regional business and financial hub of Asia Pacific, has been inextricably in line with international standards of excellence. While the adoption of the PCI-DSS and Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) SOX standards began among North American organizations, multinational companies with global presence are adopting the standards and compliance efforts centred on them are increasing. For example, companies that need to be compliant with PCI-DSS also require their partners that exchange and co-process credit card data, to maintain the compliance.

Heartlands are alive with the sound of music

From an operational perspective, the home computer had a profound effect on the local music and recording industry. We had computers and other equipment in the 70s and 80s that did similar things to what we have today, but these were large, expensive installations. A recording studio at this time could easily cost S$1,000,000 in the currency of the time. By the 90s this had dropped to S$100,000 and now you can accomplish the same results for S$1,000, and with much better equipment. This has had many impacts on our industry. People often ask me "whatever did you do in the old days?” Well, we settled for less and had to get it right, first time, with ‘real time’ crafting skills. We only created one version of a given project and that took all day or all week. Today, we are able to make as many versions or permutations of the project that we or our clients desire. We didn't have non-destructive editing back then, so we hired a person who was trained to speak a block of text and who could deliver it in 30 seconds without making a mistake. But we only had a handful of such skilled people, fewer still in a small market like Singapore. People like this are still around but are by no means required. Now, I can get almost anyone I want to read for broadcast television voice over or radio and knit all the pieces together, time squeeze, process and do all manner of things to make them sound huge. I can even use someone who can't hold a tune and knock them into shape to the point where it sounds like they can sing a complex song with all the backing vocals, or I can turn someone speaking conversationally, who never sang at all, into a singing performance, disturbing to hear as that is! I can play an orchestra on my music keyboard that sounds increasingly more like the real thing. I can fix bad playing from a performer and make use of what would have previously been unusable, or replicate a group of players, or use a kit set of prepared flexible recordings that I can augment instead of hiring a group of people to do this job. Now, anyone with an idea about how to do something creative with music or audio can get quite far in their HDB bedroom, even to the point where they could record, mix, produce and distribute a final product if they had enough knowledge. So, this evolution has given us an opportunity for wider range of creative talent and more opportunity for those people. Talent that might not otherwise have been encouraged, because that million dollar equipment previously required would only have been offered to that one person that showed an outstanding talent in that area. Those interested in educating themselves in our industry also have a big advantage. Singaporeans who are very tech-savvy and can ride the many benefits of online Media resources. There's free audio software, free extensive video tutorials on any subject, and 24 hour access to professionals online to get your efforts heard and your questions answered. You can get feedback and support from potential fans or pay a small amount of money for professional feedback from an array of social networks, and create a global fan base for your work if you are doing well, how’s that for encouragement? Singapore Students entering the job market now would have been able to buy "Reason" at the age of 10 for well under $$1,000 in the year 2000, and have that million dollar equipment sitting on their PC at home to play with, when I was 10 the only computer available had 16 k of memory and would struggle to produce a word document. I would not have been allowed access to the equivalent of Reason at that time. No one would have risked me damaging it! School leavers today also have had access to iMovie or adobe Premier and a camcorder from an early age and could have trained themselves to edit, direct and produce video. There's an emerging class of talent trained to produce audio and video together. A person like this does the job of 10 or more people from the last millennium. For example, my job entails recording, editing, directing, producing music, playing musical instruments, singing, designing sounds, mixing, programming, and voice over. The complexity and flexibility of the clever people that designed my computer software means I can even set up my computer to do much of the work required automatically, freeing me up to also offer creative input including writing or to be involved in helping with executing the concept. The downside of access to this wide range of equipment means that some of these emerging multi skilled people have massive gaps in their craft knowledge. Some have surface knowledge of software but no deep knowledge of the subject - Jacks of all trades but masters of none. For example, many of us can knock something up in Photoshop but have no idea what half of the features do, or the reasons behind why they are features. From a work perspective, globalisation and the rapid increase in the size of large companies with the decline of television's central role as an advertising platform has affected some of the work we get nowadays. In the 80s and 90s, television was king in Singapore. This meant the TV advertising work we were asked to do was plentiful and diverse with quite a bit of money invested in these productions. Some TV ads were very entertaining and unusual. As advertising moves towards the online platform, we have seen smaller budgets for television projects and fewer of them; this is to be expected and the sound and music industry needs to roll with it. Larger companies still make TV ads for their products. I'm told by staff from these companies that they aren't able to quickly track the effectiveness of their TV advertising due to the increased reach of the companies and scale of markets. This means they need to know in advance whether the TV ad is going to work, because the consequences are increasingly greater than they used to be. This means that these large companies want to put their TV ads in front of test audiences first. We have not seen so much of a decline in audience testing projects that we call ‘animatics’. This is a demo of a TV ad played to a test audience. Market testing weeds out the things that an audience doesn't like or understand and in a conservative with a small ‘c’ market such as Singapore this filtration can be important. Unfortunately these are also the things that are quirky, fun, clever and unusual. So when you collate these opinions and take away the things that various audiences object to or don't understand, you get very bland results, which in turn produce bland local TV ads. You see this is large scale movie projects as well nowadays, all of which are audience-tested. The rise of the internet has also changed and increased options for any emerging local artist wanting to do music professionally. If you're a musician who has a band or music project today, the move towards online is both a blessing and a curse. The Blessing is that Marketing and Distribution was previously something handled by record companies when there were only CD and record shops. Now you can hire an aggregator who you can work with directly, so you can be your own record company. You can pay your aggregator who deals with a distributor as little as 10 dollars, and your music will end up in a large professional music distribution site like Amazon, Beatport or iTunes. You keep 60 percent or more of your sales, versus 5 percent with a record company. You have to do your own marketing, but this is quite easy with social networking tools like Bandcamp and Twitter. When you perform live, you display your Twitter account on your flyers and at your performances. Wherever you perform publicly anyone who sees and likes you can subscribe to your service and track your act. This is a fan database that builds itself that you control and own. As you do more projects, you can immediately communicate with this resource for targeted advertising and promotion. If you do any kind of performing in a public arena and want to build a client base, you should be capitalising on this advantage. The Curse is that a whole generation of Singaporean music lovers have grown up with free music courtesy of napster, limewire, and more recently the various torrent providers. If you are a musician and spend money and time promoting your product, you increase the likelihood that your music will end up in a torrent compilation. The more famous you become, the more likely your music will be distributed free without your consent. Also, Twitter is a marvelous marketing tool but it is possible to end your career with a few badly chosen words. It has already severely damaged the careers of various artists and actors who didn't understand the potential of these very powerful social networking tools. But the bottom line is that the new Media have certainly created a situation in which you don’t have to have made it through to the finals of Singapore Idol just in order to get noticed! With online resources and affordable software the Heartlands Are Alive with the Sound of Music!

The new world manager

The times they are a changing Let’s face it; the world we live in is a lot different from the one we grew up in. The science fiction that we grew up reading is becoming reality, Apple’s automated personal assistant, Siri being one such example. We are no longer just ‘consumers’ of information, media or entertainment; we are ‘creators’ or ‘collaborators’ now. Ownership of an asset or product is not the end goal anymore – we value instant, anywhere access to all our services. Devices in multiple form factors, ubiquitous connectivity and ingenious applications - all of them are making our lives, at home and at work more different than ever before.

7 recruitment trends to watch out for in 3Q12

As global and local economic events have a direct bearing on the employment market, it is always wise to pay close attention to major issues unfolding across the globe.

Here's why more Singaporeans are into yachting

Yachting is still a formative industry in Singapore, but is gradually gaining traction, especially among the younger generation here. Compared to New Zealand, where there are almost 500,000 boats, Singapore has only a few thousand yachts for a comparable sized population. As a result, the revenue currently generated by the local boating industry is negligible, whereas in a European country such as Italy, yachting brings in billions of dollars in direct income to the government in the form of taxes and tourism receipts.

Is your data costing you money?

The range of software solutions on offer to Singaporean companies to assist them in planning their operations continues to grow as vendors increasingly develop industry-tailored solutions, to match the increasing degree of specialisation required by each industry segment.

Lee Kuan Yew, the world’s first country marketing director, built the Singapore country brand

Legendary former Singaporean PM Lee Kuan Yew was way ahead of his time. He was the world’s very first Marketing Director for a country brand. He believed in the power of country marketing long before the Mad Men of Madison Avenue even thought about it. I was reading the Hotel Association of Singapore’s book on the history of hospitality which has fascinating stories and pictures of old Singapore. An anecdote about Lee Kuan Yew stood out. The former PM spoke passionately in speeches in the 60’s and 70’s of his vision of seeing Singapore as being one of the most visited tourism destinations of the world. At one event he was asked by a journalist why anyone would want to come to Singapore, there was nothing to see said the inquisitor, no sites, no culture, no activities, no hotels and no infrastructure. Without missing a beat Lee Kuan Yew said “Perception. It’s not about what’s here it’s about what people think is here. It’s all about marketing.” The former PM then set about enabling the creation of a series of tourist friendly initiatives from the Night Safari to the Flyer, the Esplanade to Marina Bay Sands and marketed them and the country as a place a tourist should come. He even enabled the building of the country’s own airline which only much larger countries had ever tried to do before and he made them make it profitable from the start unlike other state funded airlines. With a global airline Lee Kuan Yew could not only bring people to Singapore on the route to other places (a trick that Emirates use many years later) but was able to use the airline to showcase why people should visit Singapore itself. He did this through global marketing campaigns and using visible and attractive icons such as the legendary Singapore Girl on airlines to market the country’s sexiness for example. Lee Kuan Yew believed in the power of tourisms long before economic studies the world over have proved his point. In a country with no natural resources Singapore has been amazingly creative and innovative in generating business and creating a tourism brand that pays off financially and commercially from both a consumer and a business perspective. Tourists bring jobs and money. Tourists stay at hotels and eat in restaurants. Tourists visit galleries and leisure attractions. Tourists spend in shops and buy things they would never do when they are not being tourists. Tourists bring word of mouth marketing and share memories with the world. Tourists are a country’s greatest brand ambassadors sharing the story of a country with the world. Tourism also markets a country and city as a business centre. Singapore is now one of the greatest financial hubs in the world. Much of the reason why businesses locate to Singapore is the attractiveness of the city to companies and their personnel. That is down to the positive tourism marketing effect. It works on business leaders as much as it does on consumers. In an interview with the New York Times Lew Kuan Yew said he seeks to make Singapore "a first world oasis in a third world region." "We built up the infrastructure," he said. "The difficult part was getting the people to change their habits so that they behaved more like first world citizens, not like third world citizens spitting and littering all over the place."

Communication before strategy

Generally, Singaporeans are poor communicators. Most of us, born and bred in Singapore, cannot claim that we have a native tongue. What is our native language? For the ethnic Chinese, is it Mandarin? For the ethnic Malays, is it Bahasa Melayu? For the ethnic Indians, is it Tamil or Hindi? And, for the Eurasians, what is it? So, don’t blame us if we speak Singlish. Because we are not native English speakers, even though we may speak the language at home, at work and went through the whole education system in English. And, we are similarly not native in the other languages as well.

How to succeed in B2B public relations

A few years ago, I made the decision to jump into the more specialized and ‘boring’ world of B2B public relations. While I knew that this would probably mean no sexy clients or fun parties, I sought the opportunity to learn more about a client’s business and PR requirements. I wanted to challenge myself to drive quality content and strategy over just getting more pieces of coverage from endless product launches.

Are you capturing the right audience on Facebook?

MYTH: The more the number of fan likes, the better is your business.

3 signs of a nervous business negotiator

Body language reveals more of ourselves and then we sometimes wish to. Often, even the untrained person can pick up subtle signals from the gestures we display during a negotiation. Our actions are the personification of our emotions, and our emotions is the embodiment of our thoughts. When we get excited, the excitement actually starts from our thoughts. An emotion of excitement is displayed through what we call reflectors, or what many were call Body Language.

Instilling integrity in Singaporeans

Integrity is a little-understood feature of organisations and the individuals they employ. Yet it is much desired. The public, customers, clients – they all expect businesses, organisations and individuals to act with integrity.

A US citizen's reflection on Singapore innovation

Heading to Singapore I didn’t know what to expect. Asia? I’d never even been out of my country (the US) but Asia? That seemed extensive. At least my mother thought so. But after my first morning I knew that I had come to the right place. In fact, I had determined pretty quickly that Singapore was easily the coolest place I’d ever been.There are multiple reasons I have come to this conclusion, but at the forefront is the fact that Singapore is beyond innovative, beyond progressive, beyond cool. For example, the architecture? There are new buildings everywhere, and they continue to get both more interesting looking as well as more efficient and innovative. The giant shopping malls, with multiple levels underground and many of them interconnected? Brilliant. Orchard Road is beautiful. It puts my hometown of Chicago’s equivalent, Michigan Avenue, nicknamed “The Magnificent Mile,” to shame. Not only this, but Singapore has undoubtedly become a HUB of technology start-ups. This might actually be the most obvious area in which Singapore has become increasingly forward- thinking and acknowledged for world-wide. John Bittleston, Singapore permanent resident for more than thirty years and British businessman who sold his company, Cerebos Pacific Ltd (CPL) in 1990 to Suntory of Japan concedes that Singapore is a remarkable phenomenon but also believes that the country didn’t really have a choice. “It was do or die,” Bittleston said. “Singapore had no option but to do something really dramatic or it wasn’t going to exist.” This is when I began to look for answers. What has Singapore been doing since its birth 47 years ago to be so progressive and forward-thinking? For one, there is the loud construction that I have woken up to every morning and have heard from every office building I have attended a meeting in while being here. The construction in Singapore seems to be endless. Old buildings are constantly getting torn down and new ones are being put in their place. Unlike Chicago however, almost every new architectural project here seems to be bigger, better, and more beautiful. In the states, developers are most often concerned with functionality; maximizing space and profit. This might get a good turn-around, but it doesn’t make for the same awe you experience when looking up at Singapore’s CBD at night. To put it into perspective, it was a big deal when the Trump Tower was built in Chicago and since then there have been intermittent projects of the same sort, but not at a constant rate as they are undertaken here. There is one ultimate goal here in Singapore that seems to be on everyone’s mind: progress. In US cities, progress and innovation are certainly valued, but they are not nearly as stressed as they are here in Singapore. If that were the case, there would be tons of brand new, architecturally creative and efficient buildings in cities across the US. When you look at New York City for example, you think of a history, as opposed to the future (as you do here in Singapore). Not only is progress heavily encouraged and aided by the government (through grants like those allotted by MDA), but Singapore has been noted as number one in the world for innovation, well ahead of the US. This is where the cyclical movement comes in. The numerous projects here and innovations that all seem to trump each other can be partially attributed to the cyclical movement of people that Singapore witnesses. Often times it seems that a person of interest will come to Singapore with plans for another architectural endeavor or to invest in the latest tech start-up, and will then move on and leave Singapore. This is just what happens when you become a world destination for business and technology. So why should any of this even matter to business in Singapore? To me, it seems important to be informed when you are doing something right. So this is me doing exactly that. Singapore business should only continue to do what it is already doing. It should push for the next best thing every single day because it will only attract more business and more excited participants as a result. As a student I am currently considering what I want to do in the world, and where I want to be doing it. Singapore has changed a lot for me. Coming here has made me excited about where our world is headed. It is refreshing to see a place so full of energy and forward momentum. Singapore should only hope to continue on its already innovative path as I can easily see an exodus of US students coming here. Singapore business can expect an influx of young people in the upcoming years coming to Singapore to participate in the next best thing. 

Just when you thought social networking is right for your business

These days, there are companies set up that uses social networking to market products and services online. It works especially in Singapore where almost everyone carries a smartphone. Smartphone users either have a social network account or a messaging service which allows advertisers / marketers to reach potential customers. Businesses want to get on this bandwagon because of its low cost and wide reach.

5 distinctive traits of a new world manager

Let’s face it; the world we live in is a lot different from the one we grew up in. The science fiction that we grew up reading is becoming reality, Apple’s recently launched personal assistant, Siri being one such example. We are no longer just ‘consumers’ of information, media or entertainment; we are ‘creators’ or ‘collaborators’ now. Ownership of an asset or product is not the end goal anymore – we value instant, anywhere access to all our services.

Singapore companies should revamp remote working programmes

Global businesses and modern technology are fuelling an increase in remote working across Singapore, which could lead to greater employee satisfaction and lower operating costs.