They are young. They are innovative. The corporate and nine to five jobs yes boss working atmosphere is not the only option for young people to success in their life.
So many companies are formed within 2011. An increment of 20% from the previous year, is a fact that many young people are into business in this digital and open era.
So who they are?
Ganesh Kumar Bangah, 31, co-founder of MOL and group CEO of Friendster
HIS success story is almost legendary in Malaysia's field of
information, communications and technology. He built MOL Access-Portal
Berhad (MOL) from scratch to become one of the biggest online payment
service providers in Asia with an annual revenue of RM320 million, over
500,000 physical payment channels across 75 countries, handling over
five million transactions a month.
He was certified by the Malaysia Book of Records as the youngest
chief executive of a public-listed company in Malaysia when he listed
MOL on the Mesdaq market of Bursa Malaysia at 23. He won the JCI 2009
Creative Young Entrepreneur Award, the Pikom Technopreneur Excellence
Award at the ICT Leadership Awards 2009, and is acknowledged by Society
Magazine as one of the 100 people you must know in Asia.
Late last year, he again made headlines when he led MOL to take over social networking site Friendster.
"I've always wanted to be the Bill Gates of Malaysia. I saw him on
television when I was a cybercafé operator in my teens in Johor. I told
my boss then that I wanted to be the Bill Gates of Malaysia," he says
with a laugh.
Excerpt from here
Patrick Groove, 35 founder of Catcha and iProperty
Patrick is the man behind Catcha and iProperty. Catcha is the most visited website in Malaysia back in late 90s.For those who have been on the internet since the late 1999, you will have used the
dot com
he founded with 3 other friends call Catcha.com. The dot com bubble show Catcha the way out of IT business. It
forced Patrick to rethink and innovate their business model and went
into Media and Publishing. With Magazine ranging from clubbing culture (Juice Magazine) to golf
and lifestyle, Catcha is now one of the leading publishing house in
Malaysia.
As for their return to the internet ventures, their Iproperty.com
which is currently operating in around South East Asia is listed in
the Australian Stock Exchange.
Excerpt from here
Timothy Teah, 26, co founder Nuffnang
Everyone and their pet chicken has a blog. But Nuffnang made it actually
profitable. Or potentially profitable at least. At 24, the young and
ambitious Timothy Tiah founded Nuffnang with Cheo Ming Shen, aiming to
bring both bloggers and advertisers to the negotiating table. With more
than 150,000 registered bloggers in 2010, Nuffnang has become one of
Asia's brightest stars in entrepreneurship.
Excerpt from
here
More to come
Nizam Razak (Animonsta),