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Head of APAC & Japan, Channels & Sales
Dropbox Asia
Head, Local Business and Partners
Dropbox Asia
Senior Consultant & Microsoft MVP
Fedelis Sdn Bhd
Dropbox Malaysia #1 Fan
Toniq Creative Management
Regional Director
Cumulus Pro
Country Manager, Malaysia & Indonesia
Barracuda Networks
Vincent Choy, Senior Consultant & Microsoft MVP, Fedelis
In this year’s keynote, Vincent will talk about how the world has changed, how our communications have changed, what are the business expectations of the world at large today, from customers, suppliers, departments and even among colleagues.
Recognizing these changes, and the short comings of current collaboration platforms found in companies today, is the logical first step in getting businesses to the speed of digital.
Koh Su Hock, Head of channels, Dropbox Asia
How do you keep your teams productive and your data safe?
Is there a better way to work and share data than using email or free tools?
In his session, Su Hock will share with us some of the best practices Dropbox has developed in making sharing easy and at the same time keeping your company's valuable information from falling into the wrong hands.
He will also introduce the New Dropbox, the next generation way to bring content, tools and everyone together on one single pane of glass.
Adeline Tan, Regional Director, Cumulus Pro
The heart of a digital transformation is the digitization of information so that organizations can put them to immediate and effective use. In this session, Adeline Tan, regional sales director of Cumulus Pro shall showcase the digital journey of business information in an organisation. Witness the initial digitization of information from different media and sources including paper, using mobile and cloud technology, the transformation into critical business data with AI and machine learning, passing this data to users for collaboration and user input, and finally stored securely into a Dropbox Business repository.
The Dropbox Team invites you to come ask Dropbox anything. Products, direction, Technical questions, feedback etc. This session will be moderated by Dropbox Malaysia's #1 Fan Joanne Kam Poh Poh. Ask a naughty question and you may get to interact with her !!!
This year marks the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo missions, where mankind traveled to the moon, and back. Dropbox KL celebrates the golden age of man kind's greatest technological achievement. Inter spaced within Dropbox KL will be themed activities and games with prizes to win. Hopefully this will ignite your sense of discovery, of boldness stepping into the unknown. After all, if we can land someone on the moon 50 years ago, with the most rudimentary of technology, what else can't we do.
Ballroom 1 & 2
145, Jalan Ampang
Kuala Lumpur
A gourmet buffet Lunch will be served at Four Season's Curate restaurant prior to the start of the event.
Registration exceeded our initial available seats.
even after we have added more.
We apologize if we are unable to offer you a seat.
In 1961, President John F Kennedy announced that the US would send a man to the moon. At the time, a majority of Americans did not support it, considering the enormous expense, the technical challenges, the very short deadline, the risk of death and failure, and the sheer fear of the unknown.
Despite all the reasons not to, 400,000 engineers, scientists, technicians were united behind a compelling vision. Kennedy in 1961 told the US Congress that: “We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”
Inspired, they created and delivered solutions, invented and innovated new technology. Fifty years ago today, they landed a man on the moon.
Technology is central to Malaysia’s strategic road-map to a better future, and has been a major thrust of Government policy for the last 28 years, to create an economy suited to compete in the 21st century.
But in harnessing the power of technology, as an economy, we have only chosen to do the easy things. In the words of Wawasan 2020, Malaysia has only become “a consumer of technology” and is not yet “a society that is innovative and forward-looking”.
To be “a scientific and progressive society” and a contributor to the scientific and technological civilization of the future, to get to the next level, we need a change in mentality and outlook.
Superficially, Malaysia has modernized, with smartphones, computers and laptops in widespread use. Eighty percent of Malaysians use the Internet, while there are 32 percent more active mobile accounts than the whole population, according to a recent survey by Hoot-suite. And Malaysians are more optimistic about the power of tech than the populations of most OECD countries.
But scratch the surface and the Malaysian economy is still stuck in the 1990s. Yes, we have made the switch to email, but this is a technology that was invented in 1986. It has contributed greatly as a productivity booster, but it is only one weapon in the arsenal that any modern business needs to compete.
Thousands of companies, many of them SMEs, still rely on manual processes which are slow, prone to error and fraud. For example, they still use paper forms for staff to submit claims and apply for leave, or time cards for clocking in and out.
Collaboration is the new frontier of productivity, but many Malaysian workplaces have not embraced it and don’t know how to improve workflows, or empower employees with mobile applications. Many lack the right tools for it, and those who have the tools often don’t use them to get teams to work together virtually or through online meetings.
Instead of using modern day Cloud Apps as a collaboration stack, many companies still treat IT as merely glorified word processors for creating documents or presentations and email. They don’t realize that work communications has already evolved into a social network for work, to share ideas, to solve problems and seek faster feedback, especially while they are on the move.
For example, instead of using cloud service Dropbox’s advanced features, many employers treat it as just a free virtual thumbdrive to share files. They don’t realize that it enables teams to collaborate and work together at the same time on a single document.
Worse still, they risk the threat of Shadow IT – the exposure to data breaches, malware, spyware and other perils. To avoid the expense of paying for apps, some employers allow or even require staff to use free consumer versions for work. Designed for individuals, these free apps have less security features than the paid or business versions, and often have little or no compliance and audit features.
And even when there are smart, enlightened professionals in the IT department, they and sometimes even their boss, the Chief Technology Officers, are often treated as glorified technicians who exist only to fix problems with emails.
These companies don’t even realize that there are tax efficiencies to be gained by implementing software-as-a-service and cloud computing.
There is a laundry list of reasons not to, when it comes to using modern software and technology: lack of budget, fear of failure, low opinion of users’ IT skills, extra work, and so on. But Malaysian businesses need to realize that if they focus on just the negatives, then they are risking failure.
Next year, in the year 2020, those born between 1997 and 2002 will enter the job market. Many of these Millennials will have grown up with mini-computers in their hands that are far more powerful than the giant mainframes that sent Man to the moon. To Millennials, cloud services and mobile apps are second nature, but they will find the workplaces at their first jobs are those of the last century.
If Malaysian employers fail to harness technology and channel the energy and enthusiasm of the next generation, they will be left behind, and eventually fail.
In 2018, Malaysians united and chose to change the country’s path on May 9. The choice may have been easy, but coping with the change that followed has been hard for many. The reason for taking that leap of faith was that we chose to do the hard thing.
We chose a better future, because, as Kennedy also said, the challenge before us was one we were willing to accept, and unwilling to postpone.
If Malaysia is to compete, if the economy is to grow, if our people are to flourish and thrive, we can only create a better future by choosing to do the hard things. We must take that first small step.
Visit our Apollo Booth, collect your Space Passport, join our activities of the day to win valuable prizes and Lego Sets.
This is an edited version of an article first appearing on The Malaymail Online on 17 July 2019
Organized in association with Dropbox Inc
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