From the category archives:

Media & Communications

Since school days to agency days and finally to the client side, I have encountered countless challenging projects and events which I had been able to overcome, somehow. Once, I even survived a human stampede while giving away free T-shirts at a mega regional event. Each time I’m convinced that nothing could be worse, something else comes along to add a fresh new dimension. The latest is World Expo 2010.

It all started with an email. Before I knew it, I was assigned to the team that’s tasked to drive Datacraft’s participation in Cisco’s partnership programme for Expo – which our CEO, Bill Padfield, had just signed on. The original plan was for our China team to take ownership, while the regional office will support with additional resources and connections to other countries and regions. I took it up thinking that a supporting role can’t be too difficult. I was so wrong.

Everyone was clueless, to say the least. We were officially at Ground Zero. It didn’t matter who was to be the lead and who the followers, we just had to pick up from where we were and move on. The most difficult part for me has got to be my loneliness throughout this journey. Before I hired an assistant, my closest teammate was 2,500 miles away.

If you haven’t heard from the horses’ mouth why Cisco is investing millions of dollars to develop S+CC, it’s very hard for you to understand why we even bother to get involved. If you haven’t seen the solution showcase at the Cisco Pavilion, you’ll not know how powerful it can be to change mindsets.

How do I sell an experience?

Before I knew it, I had become a travel agency, PR agency, events company, production house, alliance manager and a Digital City solution marketing manager all rolled into one. Like everyone else on the Expo team, this doesn’t mean that our day job can stop.

Fast forward to event date

The Expo team was all dressed up for our first media briefing and client event, in coordinated dark coloured suits. We gathered at the hotel lobby. Everything was so surreal, I swear. But after seven months of hard work, it’s finally show time!

I assured my spokespeople and management team that “everything will be under control, so relax and have fun”. But in reality, I had my heart in my mouth.

  • It’s the first time I was holding an event in China – an unfamiliar ground.
  • It’s the first time I work with the China team and the key team members have been with the company for only a few months. Can I trust them to run a good show?
  • The events company in China was appointed based on recommendation and gut feel. Will they be able to deliver as instructed and promised?
  • There was no way we can get a rehearsal conducted prior to the event. All presenters and supporting staff would be seeing the venue for the first time and we had only 30mins to setup and settle down before the event started. Will we have enough time to get ready?
  • We have been warned by Cisco Pavilion’s operations team that our event is unlikely to commence until 11am when our event is scheduled to start at 10am. No one could guarantee the acutal outcome due due to the morning crowd at the entrance [refer to picture below]. What if we cannot start on time?
  • All five spokespeople were only officially briefed the night before and some were meeting each other for the first time. Although briefing documents were circulated a few days earlier, will they be able to absorb and deliver all the key messages in a concerted manner?
  • We have non-mandarin speaking spokespeople addressing local media. Will the interpreter be able to appreciate and translate the content accurately on the spot?
  • How many clients will be turning up? Too many? Too little?
  • Will all the media turn up as confirmed?

You can just imagine the amount of stress I was under but, seeing is believing – While all my concerns were valid, they were unfounded. I was blessed with a dream team comprising of Cisco’s Expo team, Datacraft China team and the agencies that we worked with. Everything went as planned as I ticked items off my checklist, one at a time. What more can I ask for? If I were to rate the event, it’s 9.5 out of 10.

Through this rare opportunity, I’ve gained a lot of domain knowledge and experience, in addition to the new friends I’ve made along the way. If you ask me, I have plenty to thank this love-hate relationship for.

The day concluded with a client dinner hosted by Datacraft. At the end of which, Bill said to us, “I had high expectations and you exceeded them all. Thank you for the great work.”

My first thought was “Phew! I can finally have a restful sleep tonight.” Needless to say, I was knackered. So I took the next 3 days off to recover from Expo fatigue.

5 more events to go. Will they be even more impressive? Can they?

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I’m one of the fortunate few who was given VIP access to get to see what goes on behind the scene in creating a ‘Smart and Connected Community’ or S+CC in short. For those who have yet to visit the Cisco Pavilion, here is a summary of what you can see at the US$45million facility.

You will be shown 2 short video clips:


First video clip

In the second clip, it’s like a little afternoon soap-opera (with suspense, dispute, love-element), featuring a family living a modernised world, where everything works seamlessly together ala StarTrek.  Everything is connected to everything!  From a granny tracking her grandchild’s location in the comfort of her home, to an expectant mother having a remote diagnosis of her pregnancy, a young boy making use of public-kiosks services to purchase tickets and a man having his car trip routed, planned with traffic events optimization etc.

It shows what is it like to live in a perfectly connected community, leading a connected life.

Leaving the Pavilion, the propeller-head in me started to envisage how far are we from such a lifestyle, and what does it take to make it happen.  As I reviewed each StarTrek moment in the video clip, I realized that the technology is already here today!  I’ve already got semi-home-automation – my home lights are governed by X10 and I can ‘peep’ at my kids via the Internet cameras set up in my living hall and kitchen.

So, what’s the next hurdle to get to the ‘Connected Life’ stage as depicted in the video clip?

Surprisingly, it’s not technology! Technology is what helps to transport and transact the data/information from point to point quickly but on its own, it plays only a small part to ‘Connected Life’, albeit an important one.

It’s the eco-partnership between government agencies, public utilities (electricity, water, gas), communication service providers, law enforcers, private/public transport, health agencies like hospitals. These are the enablers of a Connected Life.

These parties need to agree to a standard mechanism for communication, exchange of information, transactions, etc.  We have the technology (Web 2.0, XML, Bonjour, etc), but the agencies need to agree to inter-operate in an eco-system that makes sense for all. Without the interoperability of these agencies, all you will get is silo point solutions. We will not achieve Connected Life Nirvana.

We are not that far off actually.  Currently, we already have e-Government web applications in certain countries and some municipals are automating their public services. But, this is still a far cry from what can be achieved if there is standardisation for all.  Take a look at how HTTP and HTML standard has revolutionised the Internet.

In a nutshell, perhaps we need some form of standardisation body that looks at this interoperability and to lobby the agencies (private, government, municipals) for the betterment of mankind.

Until we have a catalyst to quicken this process, we can only depend on StarTrek movies for a vision of Connected Life nirvana.

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Storage Virtualization – Choosing the right approach

by Francis Lee July 1, 2010 Data Centre Solutions

A friend of mine, who’s a CIO of a media company came to me the other day (at a StarTrek convention), asking me about all the hype he’s been hearing with regards to Storage Virtualization, and how it can help save his company’s money, save power, save space, and short of saving the world, save [...]

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