-->
 
 Info

firstname: Wan Mohd Fahimi
lastname:
fullname: Fahimi
nickname: Wan Mohd Fahimi
email: fahimi.hamad@gmail.com
 Archives
December 2003
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
November 2006
 Links
Weblog Commenting and Trackback by HaloScan.com
Official Spider-Man Movie Site
Sony Pictures
Blogger.com
Haloscan
Hostima.net
Born Wajjaq
Sembang2 Melayu.com
Soccernet.com
yanz - my plethora of thoughts
modD - junks of my life
fashah - this is us.. now!!
adam - ah OK lah
shsuya - diamonds...
taqriz - engineered fr cul-de-sac
azmie - cuti2 malaysia
Mommy Hazel - Hazelinesnow
drueDana - saja2
ezz - look..listen..choose..act..
fairuz - dato' seri
salman - hero@work
ayzan - diari kehidupan
zam - ZaM::JepuN@BloGger ®
sonisan - soni-san speaks online
junaidix - junaidix blogger
slyn - simplify...
amir etcetera - sense and non-sense of me
Dean - abu dzhareef's blog

Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Honey & Lil' Danish

 Shoutouts!
Powered by TagBoard
Name

URL or Email

Messages(smilies)

Monday, May 23, 2005
TOUGH SELL

Nothing happens in business unless and until someone sells something. I learned how to sell at the Regal Thai Restaurant in Bangi. Working my way through college as a waiter, I became really good at adapting my style to the different personalities of my customers.

The best salespeople see things through their customers' eyes, modify their styles to their customers' chemistry, and pull together their offering to meet their customers' needs. Ten years ago, our customers were focused on technology. Today, technology performance has to be translated into improving patient outcomes, enhancing quality, and reducing costs. It's a more subtle conversation. So the biggest challenge for salespeoples is to get quality time in front of their customers.

But being in front of the customer doesn't help if you do all the talking. My father used to say, "Many a sale was lost from the jawbone of an ass."

What Dad said then applies today...

"When I build something for somebody, I always add $50 million or $60 million onto the price. My guys come in, they say it's going to cost $75 million. I say it's going to cost $125 million, and I build it for $100 million. Basically, I did a lousy job. But they think I did a great job"

-Donald Trump

Posted by Wan Mohd Fahimi @ 11:57 AM

|
Wednesday, May 18, 2005
WHAT I LEARNED FROM THE APPRENTICE

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

YOU'RE FIRED! With the finale of season three this month, three people who've heard that signature Trumpism share what they learned about image, experience, role models, decision making, and leveraging free publicity from being on The Donald's hit show. And - surprise! - Trump himself had little to teach.

1. Fame Is a Double-edged Sword

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Pamela Day
Managing director, Crimson Holdings LLC
Los Angeles, California

It's really tough to strike a balance about when to use my Apprentice fame and when to distance myself from it. I don't want to be on the calendar of the "Ladies of Reality-TV Stars." But if you're not making money, what's the use of all the publicity?

I didn't do this show because I needed to be on television. I did this as a calculated maneuver to increase the reach of my business. I told the producers that if I won, I was going to decline the job. My main goal was to show the world who I was and how I do business. As long as I behaved myself, I figured it would all be worth it in the long run. Frankly, the jury's still out on whether this was a risk worth taking. The benefit has been that it has raised my profile among potential investors in my venture fund. The other benefit is that now I get paid to write and speak about a lot of topics that I normally pontificate on anyway.

Apprentice fame has its downsides, though. I have to choose my words carefully to avoid sounding arrogant, but when you put yourself in with this group of folks, some of whom are extremely young and inexperienced, some of whom are just plain crazy, you get lumped together with them. I've actually spent a lot of time trying to separate myself from the show. I feel the need to tell people, "Hey, wait, I'm a little different." I've got a bit of a chip on my shoulder about that.

Pamela Day, 33, appeared in season two. She has founded two businesses: Blazent, a software startup that has since grown to 100 people, and Crimson Holdings, a private-equity firm. She holds a bachelor's in economics from the University of Pennsylvania and received her MBA from Harvard Business School.

2. Don't Be a "Yes" Woman

Kristen Kirchner
Real-estate agent
Los Angeles, California

If Donald Trump wasn't a real-estate tycoon, I wouldn't have wanted to do the show. I thought there was something I could learn from him. Quite honestly, I didn't learn anything.

Donald Trump isn't going to hire the most successful entrepreneur on his show. He's going to hire the person who can take direction, a person who's used to working for other people. If you're a true entrepreneur in every sense of the word, you will not become the next Apprentice.

I was made to look like an idiot on national television because Trump decided he wanted to fire me. I'm very upset about that because I was one of the best workers on that show. I think Trump just doesn't like strong women. Carolyn? Sure, she's feisty, but she's by no means an entrepreneur. When Mr. Trump says, "I want to fire this person," George and Carolyn say, "I agree." Someone like me would say, "I disagree." He doesn't want someone who's going to disagree with him.

The person I learned the most from turned out to be [Apprentice creator and executive producer] Mark Burnett. He's seen the rough side of life. Like him, I started at the bottom. I lived with plastic crates and a box spring for a couch. I remember emptying out my piggy bank just to be able to have enough money to go to McDonald's to get a burger. Burnett's taken risks. And then to single-handedly change the entertainment industry like he's done, that's a far more impressive feat than being born with a silver spoon in your mouth. He's the true rags-to-riches story.

Kristen Kirchner, 32, was fired in the fourth episode of the current season. She's currently opening her own real-estate investment firm, Xanthus Enterprises.

3. Perception Trumps Reality

Troy McClain
Mortgage broker
Boise, Idaho

Back east I get accused of being stupid or being some country bumpkin. And yeah, I allow people to run with that perception. Perception can be reality for some people - Mr. Trump taught me that. When I get behind closed doors and into a negotiation with someone who underestimates me because I don't have a college degree and have a bit of a drawl, they're always like, "You seemed so charming - what happened?" And I tell them, "Hey, that was your own perception."

I was disappointed when Mr. Trump fired me for a lack of education. A few weeks after the show, Mr. Trump was on Larry King Live and offered to pay for me to go to college. The next day, Wharton, Harvard, Columbia, Yale, they all got in touch with me - I'll show you the letters! It was amazing. But I can't move to Boston. I'm an Idaho kid who loves to hunt and fish and be with his family. So I registered at Boise State University. And sure, I could have taken a $50,000-a-year college degree and had Mr. Trump pay for it, but a degree is a degree and it's what you make of it. I'm going to start part-time in the fall while I continue to run my mortgage business.

Being on TV can warp your perspective, but I haven't changed my values. I still eat at IHOP and I still go to Wal-Mart. If I happen to drink fine wine with a billionaire, a guy like Trump, well, I can still drink my cheap Boone's as well.

Troy McClain, 34, appeared in season one. In addition to running his real-estate and mortgage-brokerage business, McClain now does motivational speaking and has engagements booked through mid-2006.

Posted by Wan Mohd Fahimi @ 12:23 PM

|
Friday, May 06, 2005
Guys, Blame It on the MBA's!

A bunch of MBA's thought that people could get rich by some new magical method that did not involve hard work, creativity, and dedication. A group of people had a mindset that they were smarter and better than the rest of the world because they could create PowerPoints and drone on and on about the plainly obvious. All for a high fee, of course.

When history looks back upon these people, they will not be regarded highly, no matter how much money they made for themselves or how many stock options they got. In the short term, those types all feel they are important and special, but 100 years from now - if we all survive the mess these greedy, selfish people created - they will be considered a low point in the evolution of mankind: intelligent beings who wasted a chance to make a positive contribution to society and mankind.

Think about it!

p/s : A great idea will only take a venture so far. Ultimately, success depends on having the right people in the right positions and executing, executing,... executing!

Posted by Wan Mohd Fahimi @ 11:42 AM

|
Sunday, May 01, 2005
HAPPY LABOUR DAY!

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Hi people, Danish here! And yeah, that's my new hat, cap or whatever you may call it! And hey, it's public holiday tomorrow. The first one since May, I think. Since it falls on Sunday, Monday is gonna be a public holiday as well! And did I mention that ayah is on leave on Friday; which gives him a 4-days break. GREAT! This means that I have ayah and ibu; just the 3 of us, at home, yayyy!!! Psssttt,... anyway, I heard ayah discussing with ibu while I was 'sleeping' in the craddle (At least, that was what they thought!), that they were planning to go to MidValley and get me a toy!!! I wonder what I'll get. Gosh, can't wait... Gotta run y'all... Have a nice break!

Sign, Danish Haiqal.

Heh, no posts this weekend... go play with the cat instead!
Happy Labour Day!

Posted by Wan Mohd Fahimi @ 2:20 PM

|
MARVEL, SPIDER-MAN, DOCTOR OCTOPUS and all MARVEL character names and distinctive likenesses thereof:
TM & © 2003 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved. MARVEL and SPIDER-MAN: Trademarks registered in the USA and certain other countries.
© 2003 Sony Pictures Digital Inc. All rights reserved.