Alfonso Yuchengco


(Editor's Note: Alfonso Yuchengco is ranked as 18th Richest Filipino in 2008 with a net worth of US$ 200M. The owner of Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation, Mapua Institute of Technology - one of the pretigious engineering universities in the Philippines and the Yuchengco Group of Companies).

Alfonso Yuchengco with his long-range international relationships is an important reference-person to the international business people in southeast-Asia.
Alfonso Yuchengco was born in 1923. His father Enrique was running rice mills and an insurance company -building a firm foundation for their future business-conglomerate.
His business education which started under his father was culminated at the Columbia University where he completed his management course.

In 1950, Alfonso Yuchengco joined the company of his father. He developed the businesses further. When he retired, he was owner of more than one dozen companies in different industries.
In the center of his activities stood the financial sector, represented by companies like the Malayan Group of Insurance Companies, Great Pacific Life Insurance Company, the House of Investments as well as the Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation (RCBC).

Here are some ideas from Alfonso Yuchengco taken on his interviews:

"You can be the smartest man in the world, but if you are not lucky you won’t succeed. “

"I won’t go into any business that isn't good for the country or may tarnish the company’s reputation. A good name is more important than a successful business."

Mr. Alfonso Yuchengco is regarded as a great businessman. He knows that his economic power is very much welcome. He is proud on his Chinese descent, as well on his Philippine citizenship.
He remarked when asked about his Chinese roots, "Can you show me one Filipino who is not a 100-percent Filipino?"
And this is not only a lip-service. Mr. Alfonso Yuchengco during the term of presidents Aquino and Ramos for five years become the Philippine ambassador in Red China and in Japan. He approves stronger relationships between the ASEAN-Countries as counterbalance to an economically strong Japan.

Mr. Alfonso Yuchengco is also a philanthropist. One percent of his business-profit is given away for his AY Foundation.
His core values: discipline, diligence, honesty and pride in being a Filipino citizen.
He promoted dicipline by initiating an expensive "National Discipline Award" given to approximately 500 high school students that comes with a cash price.
Yunchengco is also known to donate large sum of amounts to universities.
To see the complete list of the Top 40 Richest Filipinos, click here.

Graduation Speech of Manny Pangilinan



(Editor's Note: Manny Pangilinan is ranked as the 39th richest Filipino in 2008 with a net worth of $39 M. This gradaution speech was given at Ateneo in 2006. He was the keynote speaker.)


First part of the journey: A Student
The first part of my journey begins with my family. My lolo (grandfather) started as a public school teacher in Pampanga and Tarlac, rising through the ranks to become superintendent of public schools and, eventually, secretary of education. My dad began his career as a messenger at Philippine National Bank, and retired as president of Traders Royal Bank, one of the larger banks in the ’80s. During my elementary years, I had ten centavos to buy a bottle of Coke, five centavos for crackers, another ten centavos to take the bus home from San Beda in Mendiola, which I made sure I wouldn’t lose, otherwise I would have walked home. In college, my weekly allowance at the Ateneo was P10, and that included my jeepney fares. I have a lot of classmates who have cars and others even have their own drivers. They were lucky. Someday, I said to myself, I will reach all those. My scholarships in both San Beda and Ateneo were only my lucky charms.


In late 1965, as my own graduation was approaching, I had come home from the Ateneo one Saturday afternoon, and spoke with my dad about taking an MBA in the States. I was met with silence, which meant there wasn’t enough money for an education abroad, that if I really wanted it, I had find a way myself. Fortunately, Procter & Gamble was offering a rare scholarship to the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. It was a national competition. I entered-and won. For three generations of my family, life meant coping with challenges despite modest means, relying on God-given talent, hard work and a passionate determination to succeed.


Second part of the journey: A professional manager
Let me now turn to the second part of this journey. After two years in Philadelphia, I returned home, hopeful about landing a managerial position in a large company. I struck out at first bat. My benefactor, Procter & Gamble, turned down my application. So I ended up taking the first job I was offered, as executive assistant to the president at Phinma for P1,000 a month. Without any job experience, we can’t be choosers, right? Grab the first decent job that comes your way, immerse yourself in work, and soon, you’ll find the right job, or it will find you.


After six years with Phinma, I decided to work abroad. There were the usual reasons: the glamor of being an expat in Hong Kong, the stifling staleness of my local career but, more importantly, I needed to find myself, to prove that I can stand on my own and succeed. The warmth of family ties, the comfort of an extended family system so embedded in our society were indeed beguiling, but I wanted to assert my independence.

I was recruited by Bancom International, a Philippine investment bank based in Hong Kong. It was a stimulating experience. I learned the dynamics of international finance from my Chinese colleagues, not from the Filipino executives. Thereafter, I was seconded to a joint venture investment bank with American Express. I had expected to be appointed CEO of that new bank, but wasn’t. While disappointed and even depressed, I soldiered on and, sure enough, this venture failed inside of two years. A huge dilemma confronted a young man of 30 years: return to Manila or stay with AMEX? I decided to remain a soldier of fortune in Hong Kong. Why? Because after this setback, I wanted to prove something to myself. I felt I had to prove to AMEX the Filipino can. Indeed, after four years with AMEX, I received a phone call from my boss in London. He said, “You’ve outgrown Hong Kong and are now ready for London, and to fast track your career.” After reflection, I politely said, no. I’ve proven the point to myself and to AMEX, and that had been enough. Besides, I felt Asia is my home — and so it shall be.
Third part: An entrepreneur and corporate activist



The third, and final part, starts with First Pacific.
Whilst working in the region, I met some clients - foremost being Anthoni Salim - who were willing to support my idea of a regional banking and trading business. With their help, I founded First Pacific in Hong Kong in 1981. I started out with only six people, on 50 square meters of office space, and little capital. Now, the companies that constitute First Pacific have sales of $5 billion, with more than 60,000 employees across the region. But I won’t tell you about our successes at First Pacific. Instead, I’ll describe our failures - some of which indeed became total failures, but some of which we turned around and made a success.


In 1989, we were negotiating to acquire Hanimax, maker of middle to low-end cameras based in Sydney, Australia. I took the overnight flight to Sydney from Hong Kong, confident that when I arrived the following morning, a letter from an international bank approving our financing would await me. But lo and behold, it was a letter of disapproval. So there I was in Sydney, committed to purchase Hanimax, but without enough money to complete it. Providentially, there was a competing bidder who sought to take us out of the race by offering a sum of money. That practice is called “greenmail.” Our gambit won $7 million that day when we had no cards to play. But there’s a sequel to this. Buoyed by confidence - perhaps overconfidence, even hubris - we were off to the races again, and decided quickly to buy another company. This was Tech Pacific, Australia’s largest distributor of computer products. It was indeed a large company with sales in excess of a billion dollars! Well, it was a disaster. It took us three years, and enormous pain and effort, to turn its fortunes around. I fell sick from stress and anxiety and, on several occasions, contemplated resigning. But we stood to our tackle and, after those three years, Tech Pacific is now Asia’s largest distributor of computer products.

In 1998, I came home, after 22 years abroad - after what father (Roque) Ferriols often calls “the days of wasted youth.” When we invested in PLDT seven years ago, we faced the massive task of repair and renewal. Critics told us that we couldn’t change the culture of monopoly, that misdemeanors in PLDT couldn’t be eradicated, that our fixed line business had no future. But we made the tough and unpopular decisions at PLDT. Like reducing the number of employees from 14,000 to 9,000. Like changing dubious practices and encouraging honesty and transparency. Like converting the mindset of bureaucrats to that of innovators and entrepreneurs. Decisions about people are always difficult for us because First Pacific is an Asian company with Asian values. But head count reduction was critical for PLDT to survive.


Now that PLDT has recovered, and is now the most profitable company in the country, my confidence in the Filipino’s ability to succeed has been absolutely affirmed. In fact, despite the downsizing I mentioned earlier, we now have more people under our wings - about 19,000 - simply because PLDT is now a different company. And to most of you who might be familiar with Piltel or Talk N’ Text - it was a company in extremis. I’ve had to tell creditor banks that Piltel could not pay its debts - the first time I’ve done that in my life. My officemates told me to close Piltel. I didn’t agree. I believed that the cellular frequency it owns, as well as its brand, are potentially valuable, as they have become today. Also, I did not want to imperil the financial health of local banks to which Piltel owed much.

After five years of rehab, Piltel’s return to profitability has been close to supernatural. It is now the country’s most profitable company - after PLDT and Smart. Finally, some of you have raised with me the question - is business bad? Let me respond by saying, business is not all bad. It is people - some people at least - that may make business bad. No business can prosper in the long term without the right values. The best performing companies are those that manage their businesses which meet ethical standards. Transparency, accountability, integrity, discipline - all these good governance principles - must permeate every policy, every process, of the company, as they do at First Pacific and PLDT.


Closing:
Thefore I close, I’d like to make a personal request. I’d like to ask each of you a favor. Give me bragging rights. Do something great. Sometime in the future, I want to hear some incredible thing you’ve done. And I’d like to brag that I spoke at your graduation. In return, I offer you a few more pieces of advice. Keep it real. Stay true to what’s best in yourself, to the best of your experience here at the Ateneo. Trust your instincts. Believe in yourself. Engage in sports, you’ll need it as you age. Make art, or at least, value it. Be brave. Be bold. Find something that moves you or pisses you off, but do something about it. You have a voice, speak up.Take a stand for what’s right. Make a change. You may not always be popular, but you’ll be part of something larger and greater than yourself. Besides, making history is cool, isn’t it? But I also want to offer a warning: you will meet people who’ll entice you to compromise your principles. They’ll try to seduce you and distract you with money, power, security and perhaps, most dangerously, a sense of belonging. Don’t let them; it’s not worth it.You can have genuine values and still get that job. You can have a conscience and still make money.


Let me send you off with one final thought. I was born poor, but poor was not born in me. And it shouldn’t be born in you either. You can make it. Whatever you may wish to do with your future, you can make it. It gets dark sometimes, but morning comes always. Suffering breeds character. Character breeds faith. In the end, faith will not disappoint. You must not disappoint.

Manny Pangilinan


Whatever happens, do not click this link.

(Editor's Note: Manny Pangilinan is ranked as the 39th richest man in the Philippines in 2008 with a net worth of US$ 39 million)

Born in the Philippines in July 1946, Mr Manny Pangilinan graduated cum laude from the Ateneo de Manila University, the Philippines, with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics. He neceived his MBA degree in 1968 from the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was a Procter & Gamble Fellow.

After graduating from Wharton, Manny Pangilinan worked in Manila for Philippine Investment Management Consultants Inc. (the PHINMA Group) and in Hong Kong with Bancom International Limited and American Express Bank, and thereafter with First Pacific Company Limited.

Mr Manny Pangilinan founded First Pacific in 1981 and served as Managing Director until 1999. He was appointed as Executive Chairman until June 2003, when he was named as CEO and Managing Director. Within the First Pacific Group, he holds the positions of President Commissioner of P.T. Indofood Sukses Makmur Tbk, the largest food company in Indonesia.

In the Philippines, Manny Pangilinan was named as Chairman of Philippine Long Distance Telecphone Co (PLDT) , the country’s dominant telecom company after serving as its President and CEO until February 2004. He also serves as Chairman of Metro Pacific Investments Corporation, Landco Pacific Corporation, Pilipino Telephone Corporation, and Smart Communications, Incorporated, the largest mobile phone operator in the Philippines.

Outside the First Pacific Group, Mr Manny Pangilinan is a member of the Board of Overseers of The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania in the United States, and is Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Ateneo de Manila University. He also serves as Chairman of the Medical Doctors Inc. (operating the Makati Medical Center), and the Hong Kong Bayanihan Trust, a non-stock, non-profit foundation which provides vocational, social and cultural activities for Hong Kong’s foreign domestic helpers. On February 5, 2007, Mr Pangilinan was named the President of the BAP - Samahag Basketbol Ng Pilipinas, a newly formed national sport association for basketball.

Mr Manny Pangilinan is Chairman of Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP), a social action organization made up of the country’s largest corporations, Vice Chairman of the Foundation for Crime Prevention, a private sector group organized to assist the government with crime prevention, a member of the Board of Trustees of Caritas Manila and Radio Veritas-Global Broadcasting Systems, Inc., a former Commissioner of the Pasig River Rehabilitation Commission, and a former Governor of the Philippine stock exchange.

Mr Pangilinan has been awarded the Ten Outstanding Young Men of the Philippines (TOYM) for International Finance (1983), the Presidential Pamana ng Pilipino Award by the Office of the President of the Philippines (1996), Doctor of Humanities (honoris causa) by the San Beda College (2002), Best CEO in the Philippines by Institutional Investor (2004), CEO of the Year (Philippines) by Biz News Asia (2004), People of the Year by People Asia Magazine (2004) Distinguished World Class Businessman Award by the Association of Makati Industries, Inc. (2005), Man of the Year by BizNews Asia (2005), and Management Man of the Year by the Management Association of the Philippines (2005).
In May 2006, the Office of the President of the Republic of the Philippines awarded Manny Pangilinan the Order of Lakandula, rank of a Komandante in recognition of his contributions to the country. He was awarded Honorary Doctorate in Humanities by the Xavier University in 2007.
To see the complete list of the top 40 richest Filipinos, click here.

Excerpt from http://ateneansusa.camp8.org/

Manny Villar, Senator of the Philippines



(Editors' Note: Manuel Villar is ranked 11 on the 2008 ranking of richest Filipinos. He was the former Senate President of the Philippines who established Palmera and Camella Homes. His Net Worth as of 2008is US$ 425 million. His autobigraphy was taken from http://www.mannyvillar.com/)

The public life of Manny Villar straddles both the worlds of business and politics. He is one of the few who managed to excel in both.

Manny Villar was born to a simple family on December 13, 1949 in Moriones, Tondo, Manila. His father, Manuel Montalban Villar, Sr., a government employee, hailed from Cabatuan, Iloilo and his mother Curita Bamba, a seafood dealer, came from Pampanga and Bataan.


Manny is the second child in a brood of nine. At a very young age, he was already helping his mother sell shrimp and fish in the Divisoria Market.


(Editors Note: Divisoria Market is one of the popular flea market in the Philippines.)


With the burning desire for a better future and a strong determination to improve his family’s living conditions, Manny worked hard in selling shrimps and fish to be able to send himself to school.


“I learned from my mother what it takes to be an entrepreneur,” Manny Villar revealed. “And it means working really hard to achieve your dreams.” In Divisoria, he marveled at the volume of sales that Chinese merchants were making, thus he vowed early on to become an entrepreneur.
Hard work, persistence, and perseverance became his guiding principles in life. This earned him the title “Mr. Sipag at Tiyaga.” (Ed's Note: Sipag is Filipino term for hard work and tiyaga is Filipino word for perseverance)


Manny Villar continues to inspire Filipinos with his life story and encourages each and every kababayan(Ed's Note: countryman) to improve their quality of life and fulfill their dreams through the very values he believes in -- “sipag at tiyaga.”


Manny Villar was a working student at the University of the Philippines, the premier institution of higher learning in the country, where he obtained his undergraduate and master’s degree in business administration and accountancy. By then, he was also putting in long hours as a fish and shrimp trader, where the action starts at the ungodly hours of the morning when the catch lands in the market.


After graduation, Manny Villar tried his hand as an accountant at the country’s biggest accounting firm, Sycip Gorres Velayo & Co. (SGV & Co). He resigned shortly though to venture on his own seafood delivery business.


When a restaurant Manny Villar was delivering stocks to did not pay him, he printed out “meal tickets” which he persuaded the restaurant owners to honor. He then sold these tickets at a discounted price to office workers. It took him one year to liquidate his receivables.


He worked briefly as a financial analyst at the Private Development Corporation of the Philippines. His job was to sell World Bank loans, despite the attractive rates of which there were no takers. Convinced that he could make it on his own again, he quit his job and promptly availed of one of the loans.


So with an initial capital of P10,000 in 1975, Manny Villar purchased two reconditioned trucks and started his sand-and-gravel business in Las Piñas.


It is here while delivering construction materials to big developers that Manny Villar came up with the idea of selling house and lot packages when the convention then was for homeowners to buy lots and build on them.


Manny Villar became the housing industry leader, and the biggest homebuilder in Southeast Asia, having built more than 100,000 houses for the poor and middle class Filipino families.
He then initiated mass housing projects to achieve economies of scale. His various innovations practically created the country’s mass housing industry. The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism calls him “the dean of the (Philippine) real estate industry.”


For his business achievements, Manny Villar was made cover story in the Far Eastern Economic Review. And his life story was also featured in Asiaweek, Forbes, AsiaMoney and Asian Business Review.

Manny Villar garnered various awards such as the Ten Outstanding Young Men Award (1986) by the Philippine Jaycees, Agora Award for Outstanding Achievement in Marketing Management (1989), Most Outstanding CPA by the Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants (1990) and Most Outstanding UP Alumnus (1991).


Through the years, universities and colleges all over the country have conferred upon Villar honorary degrees in various fields in recognition of his exemplary performance in public service, his pioneering initiatives and innovations that revolutionalized the country’s mass housing and real estate industry, and his distinct role in the enactment of economic and social reform laws that are vital in sustaining the country’s economic momentum and improvement of the lives of Filipinos, particularly the cause of small and medium enterprises.


Among these universities and colleges that have bestowed Honoris Causa to Manny Villar are: Adamson University, Doctor of Science; Bataan Polytechnic State College, Doctor of Humanities; Bulacan State University, Doctor of Humanities; Cagayan State University, Doctor of Humanities; Central Luzon State University, Doctor of Humanities; Foundation University (Dumaguete), Doctor of Humanities; Laguna State Polytechnic College, Doctor of Humanities and Entrepreneurship; Pangasinan State University, Doctor of Development Management; Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology, Doctor of Business Administration; Ramon Magsaysay Technological University, Doctor of Entrepreneurial Management; Romblon State College, Doctor of Humanities; Tarlac State University, Doctor of Public Administration; Wesleyan University-Philippines, Doctor of Humanities; and Western Visayas College of Science and Technology, Doctor of Technology in Entrepreneurial Management.

Senator Manny Villar, despite his numerous accomplishments and heroism, has remained simple and unaffected. A true family man, he is a devoted husband to Congresswoman Cynthia A. Villar (Lone District of Las Piñas), and a loving father to sons Paolo and Mark and daughter Camille.
To see the top 40 richest Filipinos, click here.

Interview with George Ty (Metrobank)


Editors Note: George Ty is ranked as the 9th richest Filipino in 2009 as conducted by Forbes. He has a net worth of $435M. He is the owner of one of the biggest bank in the Philippines, the Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company (Metrobank). From Starweek - By Doreen G. Yu


When George S.K. (for Siao Kian; the first character of his Chinese name means youth, the second strength or persistence) Ty founded the Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. in 1962, part of his business vision was that in 15 years he would set up a foundation as the means by which he could give back and serve the community. That was one of the few targets he didn’t meet, for it was only in January 1979–or 16 years later–that the Metrobank Foundation was established, acquiring controlling interest in the Manila Doctors Hospital.


Almost three decades later, the foundation has significant projects in health care, education, the military and police, the arts, architecture and design with an operations budget of well over P100 million. Among its projects are awards for outstanding teachers, policemen and soldiers, as well as a national painting competition and another for design. These projects have since become benchmarks in corporate social responsibility and philanthropy.


The foundation’s endowment got a major boost in 1993 when, on the occasion of his son’s wedding, Ty announced a donation of one million of his personal shares in Metrobank–at the time worth about P600 million–to the foundation. With increased resources, the foundation expanded its activities, especially in education.


I am probably one of the most misunderstood men around," he tells us in a rare but extremely candid interview over breakfast (his is a sparse serving of fruit and tea, while the rest of us get a multi-course spread) at the penthouse of the Metrobank Plaza in Makati. "Being the majority shareholder of the biggest bank, people misunderstand that it’s all my money."


That, he warns, is a pitfall facing bankers: "After a while, some of them forget that it’s not their money, and it’s not up to them to invest in whatever they like."


"As a banker," he continues, "I always remember that I’m holding public funds...that I am trusted by the public, and it is my job to protect the depositors." "Trust" and "protect" are two key words that come up often when Ty talks about the banking business. This, he explains, underlies the conservative conduct of business that is the foundation of the strength of Metrobank. He says he realized "how powerful a bank is" when the family-owned Wellington Flour Mills ran into financial difficulties back in the 1950s. "Then I decided I want to be a banker," he smiles.


In 1962, at the age of 29, Ty founded Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company, together with Don Emilio Abello, Don Pio Pedrosa and Placido Mapa Sr., with a branch in Binondo. Four years later, a provincial branch was set up in Davao; by the 1970s the bank went international, opening in Taipei. "In Taiwan, people forgot the name Metrobank; they called it the Filipino bank," he says proudly.


He speaks of "having, somewhere in your heart, love–for the business, for the people. That’s very important." A surprising statement perhaps, coming from a successful hard-nosed banker, but not much more surprising than when he reveals that, threatened with the prospect of a hostile take-over sometime ago, he gathered the bank’s senior officers and told them that if the take-over became inevitable, he would give up all his shares in order to save the bank, perhaps even agree to help run it under the new owners. "At least I save the bank," he reasons, "rather than lose both (my shares and the bank)."


Fortunately, circumstances intervened and the threat never materialized, and Metrobank, majority family-owned but "not run like a family business," today has assets nearing P600 billion and a loan portfolio of almost P350 billion, the country’s biggest bank (until perhaps the merger of Equitable-PCI and Banco de Oro) with a network of 557 domestic branches and 32 overseas offices. It is the only Philippine bank allowed to open a branch in China, in the booming metropolis of Shanghai.


Last year, Ty turned over the presidency of Metrobank to his eldest son Arthur, who at only 40 years is the youngest bank president around. But the elder Ty is quick to dispel any notions that this is simply a case of natural succession, that Arthur got the position only by virtue of being the SOB–son of the boss.


"After observing him for many years, I told Arthur that even if you are not my son, I would still make you president," he says, offering what must be the best endorsement a son can get. "That should give him a lot of motivation," Ty adds with a mischievous laugh.


He also insists that he is "not a very hard-working man, compared to others. I have many hobbies," he says, including swimming which partly accounts for his good health and sprightly gait.


Another hobby–if it can be called a hobby– is his art collection, particularly of traditional Chinese paintings, which is reputed to be the largest private collection in the world outside of China. Some of the paintings in his collection are scheduled to be exhibited in the Shanghai Museum.
When asked about plans for a museum here to house this and other art collections owned by the bank and the foundation, he says, "I’ve thought about it, but I don’t know how much the public here will appreciate Chinese paintings. Some friends abroad put up museums for their collections, but after a while, nobody comes anymore. You cannot expect people to come back and see the same paintings over and over. Opening a museum is not an easy thing."
Another jewel in the crown is Toyota Motor Philippines, the only locally-controlled (51 percent) Toyota subsidiary in the world (all others are majority owned by Toyota Japan), consistently number one in automotive sales in the country.


When asked why and how he ventured into what even he admits is unknown business territory, Ty answers with a laugh, "I asked the same question! They found me... Toyota insisted that it had to be Metrobank. I do not know anything about car manufacturing, but they brought us to Toyota City (in Aichi, Japan), showed us their facilities and assured us that they would support us.


"When I asked Dr. (Shoichiro) Toyoda (at that time president, now honorary chairman, of Toyota) why, all he answered was that ‘when Toyota is looking for a partner...if we find the right partner, then we’re already 50 percent successful.’ We’ve been their partner for over 15 years, so I think maybe we are the right partner!" With the company reali- zing about P12 billion after taxes, there’s very little room for argument there.


A further business surprise is the Marco Polo Hotel in Cebu, in what was formerly the Cebu Plaza Hotel. "This one not only found me, I was forced," Ty guffaws. "It was a bad debt; I had to develop it. With my experience of having stayed in hotels half of my life I went into it," which included overseeing the remodeling and refurbishing of the prime downtown Cebu property.
But associates say that it isn’t really that far a stretch, because the 74-year-old taipan, who came to the Philippines from China when he was six years old, is something of a frustrated architect.


"Sometimes I think I prefer to be in construction than banking," he admits, perhaps only half joking.


His successful real estate venture, Federal Land, now headed by second son Alfred, has roots in an early transaction, when Ty was still a student. He had put a P500 down payment on a piece of property in the then newly developing Araneta Heights in Sta. Mesa, which he subsequently sold for a profit. "I made a few thousand pesos there," he shares.


Making money, and spending money in the community are, for George Ty, two sides of a coin, inseparable. That includes paying taxes (the group pays up to P12 billion annually) and paying workers (around P5.2 billion a year in compensation for Metro-bank employees), and even something as simple as doctors’ fees.


"When I go to see a doctor at Manila Doctors Hospital, they do not make me wait and let me go in first, but I pay double," he says, "so that maybe the doctor can help someone else."


That brand of mathematics also holds true for all the beneficiaries of the foundation’s projects. "We don’t ask anything from them," he reveals. "I only say that in case someday you do well, you are successful, you will help others the way we helped you."


Despite an accent that unmistakably reveals his ethnic origins, Ty is staunchly proud of being Filipino. "If I am not in the Philippines, I cannot be what I am today," he says unequivocally, grateful for the opportunities of education, business, and service that his adopted land has given him and his family. "That is why I never talk negatively about the country."


On Tuesday, February 6, Ty will receive the Management Man of the Year 2006 award from the Management Association of the Philippines (MAP), together with Ayala Corporation chairman Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala (see STARweek issue of 21 January 2007).


Asked for his thoughts on this pairing of the two awardees, Ty says, "First of all, I think we both represent a particular generation in our own families’ involvement in the business. We both represent a set of values that have accounted for our families’ success in the industries where we have business interests. The difference is that in my case, you could say that my retirement signals the passing of the torch to the next generation, which JAZA represents at Ayala."


Interview Portion:


STARweek: What has been your most successful management formula? What is the key to your successfully building the Metrobank "empire"?


Ty: Taking good care of people, whether they are our clients or employees. I think that over the years, we have managed our relationships with people who do business with us, and take care of business for us, such that we have continued to enjoy their loyalty and support. Without these people, Metrobank would not have been able to stay in the business and become an industry leader.


Q: When you handed over the reins to your son Arthur, what advice/instructions did you give him?


Ty: I’ve always told my sons Arthur and Alfred to think big. In particular, I think that Arthur has spent enough time with the bank to know how to run it, and he has a lot of seniors to help him run it better, people like Placido Mapa Jr. and Tony Abacan. I just told him to listen to whatever advise these people may offer him but at the end of the day, it will be up to him to make the hard decisions.


Q: How different is your son’s management style from yours?


Ty: Arthur has the benefit of the best education to make him succeed, not just from the academe but from his long and extensive exposure to many facets of the bank’s operations. In this sense, his management style should be a blend of the best academic preparation and the needed grasp of the Metrobank culture and an understanding of its people.


Q: How do you spend your time now? How active are you still in your various businesses?


Ty: I am trying to expand and consolidate Metrobank’s involvement overseas. We’re growing the family’s business in Asian markets. I am now able to spend more time personally looking after our investments and trying to look for more business opportunities, particularly in China.


Q: What "rule" do you live by, in business as well as in life?


Ty: I’ve always sought to do everything the best way it can be done, whether banking or real estate development or automobile dealership. I think this has accounted for pretty much what I’ve accomplished in life, personally and as a businessman.


Q: How many of your children are now in the business?


Ty: All my five children, in one way or the other, are currently involved in the business or in Metrobank subsidiaries. Arthur is of course president of the bank, while Alfred is in charge of Federal Land and Toyota. My three daughters (Anjanette, Margaret and Alesandra) are all with Metrobank subsidiaries.
Click here to see the top40 richest Filipinos in 2008.

Tony Tan Caktiong

Whatever happens, do not click this link.

Editors Note: (Tony Tan Caktiong is ranked as 5th richest Filipino in 2008 with a net worth of US$ 690M. His business is mainly on the food business and through acquisition he became so huge to land as the 5th richest Filipino for 2008. He was awarded as World Entrepreneur of the Year in 2004).


Fourth annual Ernst & Young event named Asian businessman Tony Tan Caktiong, head of Jollibee Foods Corporation, as 2004 World Entrepreneur Of The Year (WEOY) at an award ceremony held on 29 May in Monte Carlo, Monaco.
Tan Caktiong was hailed the first Filipino Entrepreneur Of The Year at an awards banquet held last March 23, 2004 in Manila.

Afterwards, he proudly accepted the WEOY award along with his family at Salle des Etoiles Terrace (Summer Sporting Club) in Monte Carlo.Courtesy of Air France, Tony Tan Caktiong was also accompanied by David Balangue, chairman of SGV & Co., the Philippine practice of Ernst & Young, and president of the SGV Foundation, the official organizer of the Entrepreneur Of The Year Philippines program.



Editors Note: (Here is the excerpt from www.ey.com)

Food and family are two essential elements behind the success of both Tony Tan Caktiong and his company, Jollibee Foods Inc. While growing up in Davao (Southern Mindanao), he and his brothers worked in their family restaurant where their father was also the chef. From his parents, they learned two basic ingredients that led to the Jollibee phenomenon -- good food and humility. After high school, Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong moved back to Manila to pursue an engineering course at the University of Santo Tomas. Upon graduating from the university, he and his brothers applied for a franchise of Magnolia Ice Cream House. The business was already doing well but they noticed that the customers were looking for something besides ice cream. This gave them the idea to serve sandwiches and spaghetti. Pretty soon, the hot meals were outselling the frozen delights. Mr. Tan Caktiong decided to convert their two ice cream parlors into dine-in fast-food restaurants called "Jollibee."
Tony Tan Caktiong receives the Master Entrepreneur award from Oscar Reyes, SGV Foundation Board of Trustee member.The story behind the name is as interesting as the company's. When Mr. Tan Caktiong and his family were brainstorming on a symbol for their business, they thought of a bee because it is known for its hard work.
Bees also produce honey that represents the sweet things in life. In addition, they also wanted the name to connote happiness and prefixed "jolly" because people should be happy with their work to enjoy it. .With Jollibee, the Tony Tan Caktiong team decided to focus on the Filipino taste. They made sure -- as their father had taught them -- that all the food that Jollibee serves must taste good. And when they learned that the Number One fastfood chain in the world was making an entry in the Philippines, Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong knew that they had only two choices: to be a franchise of the global brand or to stand on its own. Today, it is a known fact that Jollibee is the undisputed leader in the local fastfood industry. Jollibee commands 65% of the market, leading in three major segments -- Jollibee in chicken and burgers; Chowking in oriental fast food; and Greenwich in pizza and pasta. Moreover, Jollibee is one of the largest franchising networks in the Philippines. From two stores in 1975, Jollibee can be found in around 900 locations in the country and 29 overseas. This phenomenon is due mainly to Mr. Tan Caktiong's persistent drive to innovate, to look ahead, and to learn from other companies' successes and mistakes. He is the toughest quality controller of Jollibee's products and services. At the moment, Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong is upbeat about doing business in China and Indonesia. Jollibee will explore opportunities in the Japanese dining segment through the US California-based Tomi's Teriyaki Japanese Restaurant. He is not afraid to fail despite an unsuccessful venture in the Middle East. From a business standpoint, he considers the episode successful because of the valuable lessons he learned form it. For his tremendous success, Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong was recognized Management Man of the Year in 2002. He has also been presented an Agora Award for Outstanding Marketing Achievement, a Triple A Alumni Award from the Asian Institute of Management, a Golden Scroll Award, a Ten Outstanding Young Men (TOYM) Award for Entrepreneurship, a Star of Asia Award from BusinessWeek, and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Asian Chain Restaurant Operators and Suppliers Series. Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong credits his parents for cultivating his entrepreneurial spirit and instilling in him the values of respect and humility, which are now ingrained in the corporate culture of Jollibee. Everyone in Jollibee -- from the CEO to a store's kitchen crew -- respectfully address each other as "Sir" or "Ma'am." "If you take care of your people, they will take care of you," Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong puts simply. By people, he refers not only to employees but also to Jollibee's numerous suppliers, franchisees, shareholders and the public at large. After all that has been said and done in the last 25 years since Jollibee metamorphosed from an ice cream parlor, Mr. Tony Tan Caktiong returns again and again to the one basic question his parents would ask often of him: Have you made people happy? Only when he is certain that he has made people happy can Mr. Tan Caktiong say that he is truly successful.

Editor’s Note: Click here to see who made it to the top 40 richest Filipinos in 2008.


Socorro Ramos:Heart and Soul of the National Book Store



(Editors' Note: Socorro Ramos is the named as one of the top 40 richest Filipino for 2008.
She is on her 80's but her love and passion for business is very evident. She is the owner of National Bookstore which distributes quality books and school supplies all throughout the Philippines. It has been a household name since the 1950's.)

By Ching M. Alano

Socorro Ramos’ success story: One for the book - In the ballroom of a five-star hotel packed with men in crisp barong tagalog and women in chic ternos, no one was the least bit surprised when Socorro Ramos’ name was called to receive this year’s Entrepreneur Of The Year Award. Perhaps no one except for Socorro "Nanay Coring" herself. She was busy collecting the untouched leftover chicken of the other guests seated at her table. The anxious Nanay Coring forgot to give her driver dinner money and couldn’t wait to brown-bag the four pieces of chicken that auspiciously landed on her plate, courtesy of her seatmates, for her driver.
There was standing ovation. Applause thundered across the room as a smiling-but-unbelieving Nanay Coring made her way to the stage in an Inno Sotto gown that she borrowed from her daughter-in-law Virgie Ramos, who called up Inno to rush a new panuelo for Nanay for this Oscar night of the business world.
(The Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award honors entrepreneurs whose ingenuity and perseverance have created and sustained successful, growing business ventures. Begun in 1986, Ernst & Young has since awarded the most successful and innovative entrepreneurial business leaders in more than 115 cities in 35 countries around the globe. The winners become lifetime members of The Entrepreneur Of The Year Hall of Fame, which is part of the Entrepreneur Of The Year Academy.)
That night, Nanay Coring went home with three trophies: as one of 17 finalists, another as Woman Entrepreneur Of The Year, and finally as Entrepreneur Of The Year. Three cheers for Nanay!
But the loudest applause that night probably came from the two tables occupied by members of the Ramos family – children and grandchildren, all present and accounted for. Twins Alfredo and Benjamin Ramos and only daughter Cecilia Ramos-Licauco couldn’t be prouder of their mother.
"They had to pay for their dinner," says Nanay, the heart and soul behind the National Book Store. "Ako libre."
Of course, Nanay Coring knows there’s no such thing as a free lunch. She’s always worked for what she has. Tagged as the super tindera, she inherited her business savvy from her grandmother, Aling Akang, who supported her family by buying and selling bananas, bakya, gugo, and other assorted goods. So good is Nanay at what she does that she could probably sell you an old toothbrush. At 81 (born Sept. 23, 1923 in Sta. Cruz, Laguna), Nanay Coring has the boundless energy of a 20-year-old and an undiminished passion for work.
Certainly, Nanay Socorro Ramos’ success story is one for the book. And one that you’d be inspired to read again and again. Allow us to share a few chapters from Nanay’s life story in these excerpts from the STAR interview:
PHILIPPINE STAR: What did you dream of as a young girl?
SOCORRO RAMOS: Putting up a bookstore was the farthest from my mind. We were poor and I was always thinking of how I could help my parents (Jose and Emilia Cancio) support our family of six. My father died when I was 10 . . . I remember I was an honor student in Grade 7 and my uncle was the one who bought my white dress and white shoes. During the war, my grandmother’s house was near a sugarcane field and they were making panocha (candied brown sugar). What I would do was buy up the produce of the day and then put them in the kaing and my two sisters would then sell them in the market the next day. I remember I would go home with bites from wasps. I must have been 12 or 13 years old then.
So you’ve always been business-minded?
I don’t know if I was then, but I was always thinking of how to make a little money. During summer vacations, I had to work for the whole two months so I’d have money to buy my notebooks, paper, and pencils. Because I went to public school (Arellano High School), there was no tuition. On one vacation, I worked at American Sweets wrapping bubble gum. I was paid the minimum wage of 50 centavos a day (the exchange rate at that time was P2 to US$1). Back then, you could buy a kilo of pork for 45 centavos. Magaling akong magbalot, I was a very fast worker. So my American supervisor would say, "Look at this girl, how fast she wraps bubble gum!" So all the more I would show off.
What happened after high school?
I wish I could have gone to college and taken up medicine after high school, but my parents had no money to send me to school and I had to find a job. After high school, I worked as a sales clerk at Goodwill Bookstore, which was owned by my older brother Manuel Cancio and his wife (Doña Juana Cancio). Here, I met my future husband, Jose Ramos, the brother of my sister-in-law. Yes, it was love at first sight. I was only 20 when I got married.
It was the stuff romance novels are made of. Girl, 18, meets boy, 14 years her senior. They wanted to get married, but the girl’s family was against it, what with World War II hanging threateningly over their heads. The girl was exiled to the province to stay with her grandmother. An elder sister of the boy followed the girl to the province to implore her to return to Manila as the boy was truly heartbroken. Despite her grandmother’s objections, the girl went back to Manila and married the boy the next day.
And you and Jose were married and lived happily ever after as business partners as well?
My eldest brother opened a branch on Escolta and he put me in charge of the store. Later, my husband bought the place from my brother and named it National Book Store.
Why did you name it National Book Store? Did you envision a book store that would be national in scope?
No, I named it after the National Cash Register, our second-hand caja. National Book Store was very, very small (a tiny 4 x 15-meter space inside a haberdashery shop) during the Japanese time in the 1940s. And we were not selling books because the Japanese were censoring them. The Japanese soldiers were asking for slippers, toothpaste, toothbrush, writing pad – so those were what I was selling. Whatever the customers were looking for, I was selling. But we were forced to keep our books because if you brought them out, the Japanese would tear off the pages until there was none left of the thick books.
After the war, my husband was able to get the corner of Rizal Avenue and Soler Sts., to put up a small – barong-barong muna – store. Our nighttime door served as our morning table where we put our books.
Where did you get your books?
We had this stock which I bought during the Japanese time. I bought all the textbooks which were available then and kept them in our warehouse. I bought from the vendors who kept their books in the bodega. Since they could not sell these, they might as well sell to me and make money out of it.
You were busy running the store? What about the kids?
I really wanted to have a houseful of kids, from A to Z, but I only got ABC – Alfredo, Benjamin, and Cecilia. And I had to make a nine-day novena to the Mother of Perpetual Help in Baclaran to have Cecilia seven years after the twins. The twins were born premature at seven months, weighing only three something pounds each, my fist was bigger than their faces. During the war, I breastfed them so they survived.
As the children were growing up, so was your business?
In the beginning, it was just me and my husband and two other employees. We did everything – from being manager to janitor. I fixed the show window; my husband swept the floor at 2 a.m. It took 20 years before we branched out. Recto was our first branch; it’s still there. But before we put that up, we finished Avenida Rizal first. We did it slowly, one at a time (to date, NBS is the largest chain of bookstores in the Philippines with 72 branches nationwide and No. 10 in the top 300 retail companies in the country).
When I got married, my only dream was to give my children the best education money could buy (Nanay sent her boys to Ateneo). What I lacked I wanted my children to have. In fact, I got insurance for education for my children during the war. I said, "What if I got shot? At least, there’s insurance to finance my children’s schooling."
What’s the best lesson you’ve taught your children?
Work hard. Be frugal (laughs). Persevere. Those have been the guiding principles in my life.
If there’s one book that has influenced your life, what would that be?
Dale Carnegie’s How to Win Friends and Influence People. It taught me how to be humble and how to get along with other people, no matter what class of society they come from.
And we guess this must have helped you influence or charm publishers into giving you low prices for your books?
Yes, people are surprised that our mark-up is really very low. My job is to talk to foreign publishers to give us a low price. I have to explain to them why I’m squeezing their necks for a low price. I tell them our people can’t afford their books. And I add, "Wait until Filipinos are a little richer, and I will not have to bargain with you. In the meantime, you have to help us." That’s my trade secret.
Our aim has always been to contribute to the educational upliftment of Filipinos by selling books at low prices. Not only books, but also office/school supplies. During the time of President Marcos, he allowed the reprinting of college textbooks under Presidential Decree 285. We could reprint a foreign book and pay them royalty based on the US dollar price. What happened was we were able to reduce our prices by up to 75 percent. I was talking to a certain fellow the night I won the award and he told me, "You know, when I was in college, I was using your book – the paper is not so nice, but the content is the same as the imported one." By using newsprint, we were able to bring down the price of books and make them available to more people. I think that’s the most important thing we’ve done for students. Maybe now, some of them are in the US earning good money.
What’s your favorite book?
The book I like very much is The Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren. It just came last year. I got two copies. You know how many we sold? 330,000 copies last year. I think people were buying five or 10 at a time. Except for the dictionaries, it was the biggest number we sold. Even the Catholics were reading it (the author is a Christian). I was so surprised! It even beat Harry Potter. Harry Potter Return of the Phoenix sold 32,000 copies last year. Frankly, I had to sign a contract with the publisher not to put it out before the launch date worldwide. On the day it was released, people were waiting outside National Book Store as early as 5 a.m. And to think the hardbound copies were selling for more than P1,000 per. It was a year after that the paperback edition came.
Did your children join the business on their own or were they forced to?
I never impose on my children. They have always been there to help; the same with my grandchildren. When my children were young, they were the cashiers in the store. Naturally, they could see what the customers were buying. So they got an early business orientation – kung baga influence of the environment.
How are the children involved in running National Book Store?
Alfred is the president of National Book Store; Ben is in charge of publishing and printing; Cecile is in charge of purchasing. One of my grandchildren (Gabby Licauco) is in charge of Powerbooks.
So you’re letting your children run the business now?
I’m allowing them to make mistakes, to think for themselves. Once in a while, I look for mistakes.
What about retirement?
Work has become a habit for me. All these years, when I wake up in the morning, I look for something to do.
What advice would you give somebody who wants to go into business?
Work hard. Be frugal, be patient, persevere. And be willing to take a little risk.
How much of a risk-taker are you?
There are things you want to order for the store, but you do not know if they’d sell. For example, in the early days of National Book Store, I was looking at what the customers were buying. They were buying Christmas cards. So I made these Christmas cards with Philippine sceneries on them. I asked some artists to draw and then I made them into cheap Christmas cards selling from 10 to 20 centavos each. They sold well. Then I also thought of making postcards. My son Alfred went all over the Philippines with a German photographer to take pictures of the Mayon Volcano, the vintas in Mindanao, Pagsanjan Falls, etc. When they came back after two months, they were very dark from having been exposed to the sun. We made these very nicely done pictures into postcards. And then I made them into Christmas cards as well. It was a risk, but they got sold again. I was also thinking: Filipinos love to sing, but they don’t know the lyrics of the songs. What I did was to put these lyrics in a card, like Let me call you sweetheart, with a little design on the side. It cost me three centavos to make and I sold it for 10 centavos. But people were buying not just one card but five to 10 cards of the songs whose lyrics they wanted to know.
How does a typical day go for you?
I wake up at 7 a.m., take breakfast, usually a fruit and a sandwich. I eat anything, I have no diet restrictions. After breakfast, I go to work – I visit a few outlets at a time. I meet with people. Sometimes, I have to treat foreign visitors to dinner. It’s part of my job. I usually sleep at 2 or 3 a.m. Because I still have to read the STAR. Ang kapal ng dyaryo nyo! Enjoy ako sa STAR. I’m a woman, I look at the fashion pages. But no matter how late I sleep, I’m automatically up at 7 a.m.
If it’s necessary to work even on Sundays, I go to the office.
Do you travel a lot?
Once in a while. I like to go out if they give it to me for free.
What is the favorite bonding activity of the Ramos family?
We eat out a lot. (The Ramoses love Japanese food – which is probably why they put up Tokyo Tokyo.)
What’s the secret of your good health?
I don’t take vitamins. I think what’s important is to eat a balanced diet. But I eat a lot! And I think you have to be less stressed. My job may be stressful, but because I enjoy doing it, I don’t get stressed.
What legacy would you like to leave behind?
I hope National Book Store would continue what I’m doing by helping people have good books, good school/office things at reasonable prices. Because I can never forget that once upon a time, I was in their shoes.
Editors Note: Click here to see who made it to the top 40 richest Filipino and their net worth.

Lucio Tan in Vivienne's eyes


Whatever happens, do not click this link.
Editors Note: Lucio Tan started with a humble beginning. What is interesting is to hear is that the company where Lucio Tan closed down after John Gokongwei started his company. The best information is always the insiders'. Who is Lucio Tan in the eyes of her daughter? Read on to take a glimpse.)


From Philippine Daily Inquirer
by Margie Quimpo-Espino

THE lives of the rich and famous always fascinate people.



Every tidbit of information is taken note of. The richest men in the country are often the most elusive. They very rarely give interviews to media and avoid the cameras as much as they can.
A glimpse of one of the Philippines richest man, Lucio Tan, can be had from the words of daughter Vivienne in a speech she delivered years ago but which still provides a rare opportunity to see the man in the eyes of his daughter:

"And so today please allow me to share with a few stories on parenting I learned by walking down memory lane.


My father, born of very humble beginnings … an immigrant from China with little knowledge of the local dialect … wasn’t able to graduate with a degree, and who faced racial discrimination—rampant at that time … he struggled his way to become one of the most successful industrialists in the Philippines. For most, he is the astute … controversial … shrewd … and reclusive Kapitan … but he is first and foremost, Dad to me and my first teacher.


Let me start with this story:


Once upon a time, our whole family went to Japan for a vacation. It was a freezing day in Tokyo. I was a skinny seven-year-old wearing my favorite pullover with an apple on it. My younger sister and I were left with my dad. As always, the older ones spent their time doing their shopping while the younger ones were stuck waiting for them to finish.


We were outdoors and my sister and I were freezing, our teeth chattering, once in a while playing smoke rings and warming our hands in our pockets. My dad slowly approached us, sat down, smiled and softly said, "Just think it is not cold."


My younger sister and I just looked at each other with a puzzled look unable to comprehend how he could even say such a thing, when it was downright cold. I thought that maybe the cold had started to get to his brain.


Perhaps sensing our skepticism, my dad persisted and said, "Relax, close your eyes and imagine. Think of the color green, imagine grass, think of the color yellow, imagine the sun, think of sunflower … imagine the colorful butterflies … imagine hearing the birds chirping … imagine the weather … it is summer, it is hot ..."


Then, as if under a magic spell, I felt my body slowly stop shivering, my teeth stopped jittering. When I opened my eyes, I was actually still with my father, who was now smiling. Then he said: "See? It is all in the mind. Just believe."


Up to this day, I warmly bring to mind that story, especially during difficult times and when "cold" circumstances arise in my life.


Ten years later, my first year in the US to me was a turning point.The first few months, I saw the typical things seen on TV, US college life; parties, sex, drugs, alcohol. Peer pressure was so visible. Since I was brought up with a solid foundation and I was never a person who can easily be persuaded, I never got lured into those things … usually. I stayed on track and focused on school.
On my second term, my friends started getting to me. Like some schoolmates, I started to cut classes, go to parties, shop, hang out. I knew I was not doing the right thing but why can’t my friends and schoolmates see anything wrong? How can they use their tuition funds, given to them by their parents, to buy cars and other things? I felt so lost. I felt so confused.


One time, I came home from spring break… my dad was there. He was carrying a piece of paper. I was shocked to see that it was actually my grade report! Up to this day, I never asked how it got to him. Full of shame—I remember I didn’t want to look up.


Instead of getting scolded, he used his gentle voice and asked: "How can your grades of As and Bs deteriorate to Cs and even Ds?" I was burning with guilt. I wished he just scolded or yelled at me. But no. He didn’t. He continued by saying: "I can buy you everything you want but I cannot buy you knowledge. The best I can do is to give you everything you need to acquire that knowledge. And that, I have given you. The rest is up to you."


"The rest is up to me" … those words hit me like a ton of bricks. I took for granted my education. Knowledge is priceless. Things became clearer and I knew what to do.
Four years later, in 1991, I was fortunate enough to graduate from the University of San Francisco with a double degree in Math & Computer Science. Being a computer science graduate from the US in the ’90s, I could have actually commanded a handsome salary. True enough I had good job offers with great salaries from the best multinational companies.


My dad who had just flown in at that time asked me which offer I had decided to take. I boastfully replied that as a computer science grad I was entitled to wait for the highest bid, which would surely come along. He paused and then wisely said, "Be humble. Don’t look at the money, but rather, look at what you really want to do and the amount of learning and growth you would get." He further added, "In fact, you should pay tuition to the company for giving you the training you need."
These are just a few of my memorable learning points. In the end, we are the sum total of our experiences. The lessons that I have learned from my father are some essential principles I carry with me today and that I believe will make a successful individual. Belief … passion … and knowledge—a few important values that I was to bring back to the Philippines."
Click here to see who made it to the top 40 richest Filipino for 2008.

JOHN GOKONGWEI'S KEYNOTE SPEECH


Whatever happens, do not click this link.
Editors Note: (John Gokongwei is ranked as the 6th richest person in the Philippines in 2008 as published by forbes magazine. He is the Chairman of JG Summit Holdings and controls companies such as Cebu Pacific Air and Universal Robina Corporation with a net worth in 2008 of approximately US$ 680 million.) 

A very inspiring story indeed. Be inspired!

JOHN GOKONGWEI'S Keynote Speech at Ad Congress
21 NOVEMBER 2007

"Before I begin, I want to say please bear with me, an 81-year-old man who just flew in from San Francisco 36 hours ago and is still suffering from jet lag. However, I hope I will be able to say what you want to hear.
Ladies and gentlemen, good evening. Thank you very much for having me here tonight to open the Ad Congress. I know how important this event is for our marketing and advertising colleagues. My people get very excited and go into a panic, every other year, at this time.
I would like to talk about my life, entrepreneurship, and globalization. I would like to talk about how we can become a great nation. You may wonder how one is connected to the other, but I promise that, as there is truth in advertising, the connection will come.
Let me begin with a story I have told many times. My own. I was born to a rich Chinese-Filipino family. I spent my childhood in Cebu (Ed Note: Cebu is one of the progressive city in the central Philippines where John Gokongwei was born) where my father owned a chain of movie houses, including the first air-conditioned one outside Manila . I was the eldest of six children and lived in a big house in Cebu's Forbes Park . A chauffeur drove me to school everyday as I went to San Carlos University , then and still one of the country's top schools. I topped my classes and had many friends. I would bring them to watch movies for free at my father's movie houses.
When I was 13, my father died suddenly of complications due to typhoid. Everything I enjoyed vanished instantly. My father's empire was built on credit. When he died, we lost everything, our big house, our cars, our business to the banks. I felt angry at the world for taking away my father, and for taking away all that I enjoyed before. When the free movies disappeared, I also lost half my friends.
On the day I had to walk two miles to school for the very first time, I cried to my mother, a widow at 32. But she said: "You should feel lucky. Some people have no shoes to walk to school. What can you do? Your father died with 10 centavos in his pocket." So, what can I do? I worked.
My mother sent my siblings to China where living standards were lower. She and I stayed in Cebu to work, and we sent them money regularly. My mother sold her jewelry. When that ran out, we sold roasted peanuts in the backyard of our much-smaller home. When that wasn't enough, I opened a small stall in a palengke. I chose one among several palengkes a few miles outside the city because there were fewer goods available for the people there. I woke up at five o'clock every morning for the long bicycle ride to the palengke with my basket of goods.
There, I set up a table about three feet by two feet in size. I laid out my goods, soap, candles, and thread, and kept selling until everything was bought. Why these goods? Because these were hard times and this was a poor village, so people wanted and needed the basics : soap to keep them clean, candles to light the night, and thread to sew their clothes.
I was surrounded by other vendors, all of them much older. Many of them could be my grandparents. And they knew the ways of the palengke far more than a boy of 15, especially one who had never worked before.
But being young had its advantages. I did not tire as easily, and I moved more quickly. I was also more aggressive. After each day, I would make about 20 pesos in profit! There was enough to feed my siblings and still enough to pour back into the business. The pesos I made in the palengke were the pesos that went into building the business I have today.
After this experience, I told myself, "If I can compete with people so much older than me, if I can support my whole family at 15, I can do anything!"
Looking back, I wonder, what would have happened if my father had not left my family with nothing? Would I have become the man I am? Who knows? The important thing to know is that life will always deal us a few bad cards. But we have to play those cards the best we can. And WE can play to win!
This was one lesson I picked up when I was a teenager. It has been my guiding principle ever since. And I have had 66 years to practice self-determination. When I wanted something, the best person to depend on was myself.
And so I continued to work. In 1943, I expanded and began trading goods between Cebu and Manila . From Cebu , I would transport tires on a small boat called a batel. After traveling for five days to Lucena, I would load them into a truck for the six- hour trip to Manila . I would end up sitting on top of my goods so they would not be stolen! In Manila , I would then purchase other goods from the earnings I made from the tires, to sell in Cebu .
Then, when WWII ended, I saw the opportunity for trading goods in post-war Philippines . I was 20 years old. With my brother Henry, I put up Amasia Trading which imported onions, flour, used clothing, old newspapers and magazines, and fruits from the United States .
In 1948, my mother and I got my siblings back from China . I also converted a two-story building in Cebu to serve as our home, office, and warehouse all at the same time. The whole
family began helping out with the business.
In 1957, at age 31, I spotted an opportunity in corn-starch manufacturing. But I was going to compete with Ludo and Luym, the richest group in Cebu and the biggest cornstarch manufacturers. I borrowed money to finance the project. The first bank I approached made me wait for two hours, only to refuse my loan. The second one, China Bank, approved a P500,000-peso clean loan for me.
Years later, the banker who extended that loan, Dr. Albino Sycip said that he saw something special in me. Today, I still wonder what that was, but I still thank Dr. Sycip to this day.
Upon launching our first product, Panda corn starch, a price war ensued. After the smoke cleared, Universal Corn Products was still left standing. It is the foundation upon which JG Summit Holdings now stands.
Interestingly, the price war also forced the closure of a third cornstarch company, and one of their chemists was Lucio Tan (Editor's Note: Lucio Tan is 2nd richest man in the Philippines in 2008), who always kids me that I caused him to lose his job. I always reply that if it were not for me, he will not be one of the richest men in the Philippines today.
When my business grew, and it was time for me to bring in more people, my family, the professionals, the consultants, more employees. I knew that I had to be there to teach them what I knew.

When dad died at age 34, he did not leave a succession plan. From that, I learned that one must teach people to take over a business at any time. The values of hard work that I learned from my father, I taught to my children. They started doing jobs here and there even when they were still in high school. Six years ago, I announced my retirement and handed the reins to my youngest brother James and only son Lance. But my children tease me because I still go to the office every day and make myself useful. I just hired my first Executive Assistant and moved into a bigger and nicer office.
Building a business to the size of JG Summit was not easy. Many challenges were thrown my way. I could have walked away from them, keeping the business small, but safe. Instead, I chose to fight. But this did not mean I won each time.
By 1976, at age 50, we had built significant businesses in food products anchored by a branded coffee called Blend 45, and agro-industrial products under the Robina Farms brand. That year, I faced one of my biggest challenges, and lost. And my loss was highly publicized, too. But I still believe that this was one of my defining moments.
In that decade, not many business opportunities were available due to the political and economic environment. Many Filipinos were already sending their money out of the country. As a Filipino, I felt that our money must be invested here. I decided to purchase shares in San Miguel, then one of the Philippines ' biggest corporations.
By 1976, I had acquired enough shares to sit on its board.The media called me an upstart. "Who is Gokongwei and why is he doing all those terrible things to San Miguel?" ran one headline of the day. In another article, I was described as a pygmy going up against the powers-that- be. The San Miguel board of directors itself even paid for an ad in all the country's top newspapers telling the public why I should not be on the board.
On the day of reckoning, shareholders quickly filled up the auditorium to witness the battle. My brother James and I had prepared for many hours for this debate. We were nervous and excited at the same time. In the end, I did not get the board seat because of the Supreme Court Ruling. But I was able to prove to others and to myself, that I was willing to put up a
fight. I succeeded because I overcame my fear, and tried. I believe this battle helped define who I am today. In a twist to this story, I was invited to sit on the board of Anscor and San Miguel Hong Kong 5 years later.
Lose some, win some.
Since then, I've become known as a serious player in the business world, but the challenges haven't stopped coming.
Let me tell you about the three most recent challenges. In all three, conventional wisdom bet against us. See, we set up businesses against market Goliaths in very high-capital industries: airline, telecoms, and beverage.
Challenge No. 1: In 1996, we decided to start an airline. At the time, the dominant airline in the country was PAL, and if you wanted to travel cheaply, you did not fly. You went by sea or by land. However, my son Lance and I had a vision for Cebu Pacific: We wanted every Filipino to fly. Inspired by the low-cost carrier models in the United States , we believed that an airline based on the no-frills concept would work here. No hot meals. No newspaper. Mono-class seating. Operating with a single aircraft type. Faster turn around time. It all
worked, thus enabling Cebu Pacific to pass on savings to the consumer.
How did we do this? By sticking to our philosophy of "low cost, great value." And we stick to that philosophy to this day. Cebu Pacific offers incentives. Customers can avail
themselves of a tiered pricing scheme, with promotional seats for as low a P1. The earlier you book, the cheaper your ticket. Cebu Pacific also made it convenient for passengers by
making online booking available. This year, 1.25 million flights will be booked through our website.This reduced our distribution costs dramatically. Low cost. Great value. When we started 11 years ago, Cebu Pacific flew only 360,000 passengers, with 24 daily flights to 3 destinations. This year, we expect to fly more than five million passengers, with over 120 daily flights to 20 local destinations and 12 Asian cities. Today, we are the largest in terms of domestic flights, routes and destinations. We also have the youngest fleet in the region after acquiring new Airbus 319s and 320s. In January, new ATR planes will arrive. These are smaller planes that can land on smaller air strips like those in Palawan and Caticlan. Now you don't have to take a two-hour ride by mini-bus to get to the beach. Largely because of Cebu Pacific, the average Filipino can now afford to fly. In 2005, 1 out of 12 Filipinos flew within a year.

In 2012, by continuing to offer low fares, we hope to reduce that ratio to 1 out of 6. We want to see more and more Filipinos see their country and the world!
Challenge No. 2: In 2003, we established Digitel Mobile Philippines, Inc. and developed a brand for the mobile phone business called Sun Cellular. Prior to the launch of the brand, we were actually involved in a transaction to purchase PLDT shares of the majority shareholder. The question in everyone's mind was how we could measure up to the two telecom giants. They were entrenched and we were late by eight years! PLDT held the landline monopoly for quite a while, and was first in the mobile phone industry. Globe was a younger
company, but it launched digital mobile technology here. But being a late player had its advantages. We could now build our platform from a broader perspective. We worked with more advanced technologies and intelligent systems not available ten years ago. We chose our suppliers based on the most cost-efficient hardware and software. Being a Johnny-come- lately allowed us to create and launch more innovative products, more quickly.
All these provided us with the opportunity to give the consumers a choice that would rock their world. The concept was simple. We would offer Filipinos to call and text as much as they want for a fixed monthly fee. For P250 a month, they could get in touch with anyone within the Sun network at any time. This means great savings of as much as 2/3 of their regular phone bill! Suddenly, we gained traction. Within one year of its introduction, Sun hit one million customers. Once again, the paradigm shifts - this time in the telecom industry. Sun's 24/7 Call and Text unlimited changed the landscape of mobile-phone usage. Today, we have over 4 million subscribers and 2000 cell sites around the archipelago. In a country where 97% of the market is pre-paid, we believe we have hit on the right strategy.
Sun Cellular is a Johnny-come- lately, but it's doing all right. It is a third player, but a significant one, in an industry where Cassandras believed a third player would perish. And as we have done in the realm of air travel, so have we done in the telecom world: We have changed the marketplace. In the end, it is all about making life better for the consumer by giving them choices.
Challenge No. 3: In 2004, we launched C2, the green tea drink that would change the face of the local beverage industry -- then, a playground of cola companies. Iced tea was just a sugary brown drink served bottomless in restaurants. For many years, hardly was there any significant product innovation in the beverage business. Admittedly, we had little
experience in this area. Universal Robina Corporation is the leader in snack foods but our only background in beverage was instant coffee. Moreover, we would be entering the playground of huge multinationals. We decided to play anyway.
It all began when I was in China in 2003 and noticed the immense popularity of bottled iced tea. I thought that this product would have huge potential here. We knew that the Philippines was not a traditional tea-drinking country since more familiar to consumers were colas in returnable glass bottles. But precisely, this made the market ready for a different kind of beverage. One that refreshes yet gives the health benefits of green tea. We positioned it as a "spa" in a bottle. A drink that cools and cleans, thus, C2 was born. C2 immediately caught on with consumers. When we launched C2 in 2004, we sold 100,000 bottles in thefirst month. Three years later, Filipinos drink around 30 million bottles of C2 per month. Indeed, C2 is in a good place.
With Cebu Pacific, Sun Cellular, and C2, the JG Summit team took control of its destiny.
And we did so in industries where old giants had set the rules of the game. It's not that we did not fear the giants. We knew we could have been crushed at the word go. So we just made sure we came prepared with great products and great strategies. We ended up changing the rules of the game instead.
There goes the principle of self-determination, again. I tell you, it works for individuals as it does for companies. And as I firmly believe, it works for nations.
I have always wondered, like many of us, why we Filipinos have not lived up to our potential. We have proven we can. Manny Pacquiao and Efren Bata Reyes in sports. Lea Salonga and the UP Madrigal Singers in performing arts. Monique Lhuillier and Rafe Totenco in fashion. And these are just the names made famous by the media. There are many more who may not be celebrities but who have gained respect on the world stage.
But to be a truly great nation, we must also excel as entrepreneurs before the world. We must create Filipino brands for the global market place. If we want to be philosophical, we can say that, with a world-class brand, we create pride for our nation. If we want to be practical, we can say that, with brands that succeed in the world, we create more jobs for our people, right here.
Then, we are able to take part in what's really important - giving our people a big opportunity to raise their standards of living, giving them a real chance to improve their lives.
We can do it. Our neighbors have done it. So can we. In the last 54 years, Korea worked hard to rebuild itself after a world war and a civil war destroyed it. From an agricultural economy in 1945, it shifted to light industry, consumer products, and heavy industry in the '80s. At the turn of the 21st century, the Korean government focused on making Korea the world's leading IT nation. It did this by grabbing market share in key sectors like semiconductors, robotics, and biotechnology.
Today, one remarkable Korean brand has made it to the list of Top 100 Global Brands: Samsung. Less then a decade ago, Samsung meant nothing to consumers. By
focusing on quality, design, and innovation, Samsung improved its products and its image. Today, it has surpassed the Japanese brand Sony. Now another Korean brand, LG Collins, is following in the footsteps of Samsung. It has also broken into the Top 100 Global Brands list.
What about China ? Who would have thought that only 30 years after opening itself up to a market economy, China would become the world's fourth largest economy?
Goods made in China are still thought of as cheap. Yet many brands around the world outsource their manufacturing to this country. China's own brands, like Lenovo, Haier, Chery QQ, and Huawei?are fast gaining ground as well. I have no doubt they will be the next big electronics, technology and car brands in the world.
Lee Kwan Yu's book "From Third World to First" captures Singapore 's aspiration to join the First World . According to the book, Singapore was a trading post that the British developed as a nodal point in its maritime empire. The racial riots there made its officials determined to build a "multiracial society that would give equality to all citizens, regardless of race, language or religion." When Singapore was asked to leave the Malaysian Federation of States in 1965, Lee Kwan Yew developed strategies that he executed with single-mindedness despite their being unpopular. He and his cabinet started to build a nation by establishing the basics: building infrastructure, establishing an army, weeding out corruption, providing mass housing, building a financial center. Forty short years after, Singapore has been transformed into the richest South East Asian country today, with a per capita income of US$32,000. These days, Singapore is transforming itself once more. This time it wants to be the creative hub in Asia , maybe even the world. More and more, it is
attracting the best minds from all over the world in filmmaking, biotechnology, media, and finance. Meantime, Singaporeans have also created world-class brands: Banyan Tree in the hospitality industry, Singapore Airlines in the Airline industry and Singapore Telecoms in the telco industry.
I often wonder: Why can't the Philippines , or a Filipino, do this? Fifty years after independence, we have yet to create a truly global brand. We cannot say the Philippines is too small because it has 86 million people. Switzerland, with 9 million people, created Nestle. Sweden, also with 9 million people, created Ericsson. Finland, even smaller with five million people, created Nokia.
All three are major global brands, among others.
Yes, our country is well-known for its labor, as we continue to export people around the world. And after India , we are grabbing a bigger chunk of the pie in the call-center and business-process-outsourcing industries. But by and large, the Philippines has no big industrial base, and Filipinos do not create world-class products.
We should not be afraid to try, even if we are laughed at. Japan, laughed at for its cars, produced Toyota . Korea, for its electronics, produced Samsung. Meanwhile, the Philippines ' biggest companies 50 years ago, majority of which are multinational corporations such as Coca-Cola, Procter and Gamble, and Unilever Philippines for example, are still the
biggest companies today. There are very few big, local challengers.
But already, hats off to Filipino entrepreneurs making strides to globalize their brands. Goldilocks has had much success in the Unites States and Canada , where half of its customers are non-Filipinos. Coffee-chain Figaro may be a small player in the coffee world today, but it is making the leap to the big time. Two Filipinas, Bea Valdez and
Tina Ocampo, are now selling their Philippine-made jewelry and bags all over the world. Their labels are now at Barney's and Bergdorf's in the U.S. and in many
other high-end shops in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East .
When we started our own foray outside the Philippines 30 years ago, it wasn't a walk in the park. We set up a small factory in Hong Kong to manufacture Jack and Jill potato chips there. Today, we are all over Asia . We have the number-one-potato- chips brand in Malaysia and Singapore . We are the leading biscuit manufacturer in Thailand , and a significant player in the candy market in Indonesia . Our Aces cereal brand is a market leader in many parts of China . C2 is now doing very well in Vietnam, selling over 3 million bottles a month there, after only 6 months in the market. Soon, we will launch C2 in other South East Asian markets.
I am 81 today. But I do not forget the little boy that I was in the palengke in Cebu . I still believe in family. I still want to make good. I still don't mind going up against those older and better than me. I still believe hard work will not fail me. And I still believe in people willing to think the same way. Through the years, the market place has expanded: between cities, between countries, between continents.I want to urge you all here to think bigger. Why serve 86 million when you can sell to four billion Asians? And that's just to start you off. Because there is still the world beyond Asia . When you go back to your offices, think of ways to sell and market your products and services to the world. Create world-class brands.
You can if you really tried. I did. As a boy, I sold peanuts from my backyard.
Today, I sell snacks to the world.
I want to see other Filipinos do the same.
Thank you and good evening once again."
Editor's Note: Click here to see who made it to the top 40 Richest Filipinos in 2008.