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Urgent matters

IJEAB-FREEPIK

ESPECIALLY for one who never agreed to hard interviews (we want to talk directly to the people we know) or debates (we don’t like to disagree), the topics for discussion or needed attention could be selective. Once in charge, urgent matters can no longer be selective. Priorities are dictated by events and are no longer controllable.

One difference, for example, between staff and line functions deals with managing the “in-box.” These urgent issues that pile up for resolution and decision are not always planned for and the decision time required is dictated by events — Sir, the staff just walked out and are picketing outside.

The CEO may have his job description for what he is responsible for, but his value is determined by how he deals with the urgent matters on his desk: the irate customer, the threat from competition, or the failure of a product’s promise.

Staff positions (now called support services) generally pick the issues they will address and prioritize for the day. Their to-do list is largely self-determined — this month we will be looking at our supply chain efficiency. Of course, the line managers may also pull them in when a crisis arises. But support staff are always in the background — Sir, stick to the message.

This difference in managing the in-box is also found in government positions, with certain cabinet posts being mainly staff or line.

Staff positions deal with analysis, policy directions, and searching for best practices, often requiring some trips abroad to attend conferences or short seminars on transparency. Look at long-term challenges — we are studying the effects of climate change on food security.

While all cabinet portfolios have both staff and line components, most have a dominant dose of one or the other. NEDA, CHED*, and Budget and Management, for example, are mostly support functions dealing with long-term policies over their constituencies. They monitor the macro picture to guide other cabinet members, making pronouncements on budget surpluses and underspending in infrastructure or reporting on growth rates of GDP.

Transportation, Finance, Foreign Affairs, Local Government, Defense, and Public Works are mostly line units and implementors. They are considered successful when delivering projects on time and within budget.

Staff functions require skills related to analysis, the long-term view, and a fine sense of history and the interconnectedness of different variables, the ideal profile for such jobs is laid-back, cerebral, and research-oriented. Thus, shortlists for staff jobs tend to be from academe and think tanks rather than corporate management. For the line jobs, it is managers of large organizations that make the list of possibilities.

Not getting the fit of job to skills set can result in negative outputs. The academic and analytical individual thrust into a fast-moving line job can be overly cautious and too studied in his approach. He is dismissed as someone with “analysis-paralysis.” (We have to subject this to a Venn Diagram.)

On the other hand, matching an operational hands-on manager in a policy-setting position has him coming out as impulsive in his policy pronouncements. And his critics are bound to be academic types who now populate the talking heads on TV talk shows — he exhibits a superficial understanding of economics and fails to grasp the effects of his policy recommendations.

The mismatch between talent and job requirements can be unduly exaggerated with the media coverage of government by armchair analysts. Thus, while an ill-suited appointment in private corporations is bad enough, his bumbling is limited to a small group. The political counterpart is publicly pilloried for his failings and given a tag that haunts him permanently. A “teka, teka” (wait, wait) attribute of a staff type when heading a line cabinet position is bound to chase the unfortunate appointee.

Still, in real life, all jobs have analytical as well as hands-on implementation aspects. The wedding planner draws up the “big picture” and theme of the event (upbeat, hard rock, and contemporary) as well as the invitations and RSVP follow-ups, catering, video coverage, seating of guests, and souvenir gifts.

The fit between talent and job requirements, or “horses for courses,” is critical. Changing the company mission to fit the existing talents at hand is called “courses for horses.” Unfortunately, in government, the courses are set, so the horses must run them.

In the end, the most important skill in government is communications and the willingness to engage the critics without shutting them down — next question, please.

* National Economic and Development Authority and Commission on Higher Education

 

Tony Samson is chairman and CEO of TOUCH xda

ar.samson@yahoo.com

Data-driven marketing requires ‘forward tinkering’ — IMMAP

UNSPLASH

Marketers have to learn how to organize a wealth of consumer data or risk drowning information, said experts at a roundtable hosted by Adobo Magazine and Google. 

“The challenge for marketers now is learning and adapting quickly [to] platforms, technologies, and customers in the Philippines who are evolving faster,” said Digs A. Dimagiba, president of the Internet & Mobile Marketing Association of the Philippines (IMMAP), at the May 31 event.  

He encouraged “forward tinkering” — a combination of the terms “forward thinking” and “tinkering” — as a way of looking at new tools, learning about them, trying them out, and discussing them in a community of like-minded people and professionals. 

The mindset of being open to new tools, like automated machine learning (which Google offers to those who want to more audiences or customers via Google platforms), will prepare today’s era of marketers for the complicated future, he added. 

FINDING YOUR AUDIENCE
Google announced that Performance Max, a digital solution that expands on Search ads and allows marketers to showcase promotions across more surfaces, will be updated this year to include sales goals and audience insights, among other metrics.  

“[Performance Max] helped us find qualified leads in a more targeted way,” said Crisela Magpayo-Cervantes, Globe’s marketing communications head. 

The function, she added, allowed Globe to find leads more cost-effectively, bringing down the cost per lead by about 48%.  

New reports that Google will add to its insights page are: 

  • Attribution insights — how existing ads on platforms like Search and YouTube can drive conversions.
  • Budget insights — opportunities for budget optimization based on spending goals.
  • Audience insights — how various customer segments drive campaign performance.

This rapid increase in data is accompanied by the risk of drowning in it and not knowing how to navigate it properly, said Ms. Cervantes. 

“You have a lot of solutions now that allow you to automate and let the machine do the work in optimizing and driving efficiency. It’s a matter of using these wisely,” she said. 

For Dennis Perez, integrated marketing and commerce lead of Unilever Beauty & Wellbeing in Southeast Asia, digital requires an end-to-end perspective.  

Google provided Unilever with CODA (custom optimized designer audiences), a technology that provides customer insights and segmentation.  

When Unilever piloted CODA with Dove, the personal care brand’s reach doubled compared to previous broad-scale marketing efforts, said Mr. Perez. 

This increase was due to the unexpected connections CODA made, such as Dove buyers correlating highly with air conditioner buyers.   

“We are now getting a bit more controlled with the way we can target people,” said Mr. Perez.  

MORE PRIVACY
Google also announced at Marketing Live that global testing of its privacy-focused ad targeting tools — Google Ads and Display & Video 360 — would begin this year. 

It reaffirmed its commitment to phase out third-party cookie tracking, which involves leaving bits of code on a web visitor’s computer after being generated by another website.  

Mr. Dimagiba of IMMAP said that such moves are necessary due to data privacy becoming an increasingly important currency.  

“Because of the pandemic where we were forced to adapt, get online, and get digital, people suddenly realized they’re giving up quite a lot of information and privacy in exchange for getting services and convenience,” he said. “They’ve become increasingly conscious about who they’re actually going to trust.” 

Third-party cookies will be replaced by Google data on search topics or search interests instead of individual activity. — Brontë H. Lacsamana

‘Local is king’: Africa’s online platforms take on Silicon Valley

STOCK IMAGE: vector created by sentavio - www.freepik.com

Plan a funeral, call out corruption or start a business – tough jobs all now made easier by a generation of tech-savvy Africans tackling local problems beyond the grasp of Big Tech.

It was frustration that pushed Tanzanian engineer Maxence Melo to launch an anonymous, online whistleblowing platform after his appeals to media to investigate an array of questionable mega-project contracts were met with silence.

His JamiiForums website launched in 2006, unmasking the murky money trails of Africa’s rich and powerful, and now has more than 3 million visitors daily.

It is just one of dozens of African digital platforms that innovators say are doing what tech giants cannot – designing bespoke solutions for domestic needs.

“Local is king, we know what local solutions we need for our own contexts,” Melo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by video from his office in Dar es Salaam.

Despite challenges such as scarce internet access, funding gaps and intermittent electricity, African entrepreneurs are harnessing the potential of digital engagement, from online funeral services in Egypt to voice-based messaging in Mali.

“Homegrown innovations reduce reliance on foreign technologies,” said Kathleen Ndongmo, a Cameroonian digital rights researcher and advocate, in a video interview.

“We have the local talent and these homegrown solutions help with job creation so talent can stay on the continent instead of leaving to work for the tech giants.”

 

DIGITAL MOURNING

Egyptian entrepreneur Ahmed Gaballah never thought he would work in the death business, but the stress of helping a friend plan a burial led him to rethink the funeral industry.

“It took us a lot of time to get the burial permit and we got lost on our way to the burial site. It was a frustrating experience,” Gaballah, 40, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

His funeral-planning website SOKNA, which means tranquility in Arabic, launched in 2019 as a one-stop shop that can ease some of the pressures after a death, be it arranging body preparation, shrouding, transport or the placing of obituaries.

Customer Noha Ibrahim, 55, said SOKNA had made the aftermath of her father’s sudden death more smooth and peaceful.

“They took care of every single thing starting from securing the burial permit, the new and well-equipped van, managing transportation from the hospital to the mosque then to the cemetery,” said Ibrahim, who read about SOKNA on Facebook.

While SOKNA now has about 3,000 customers and 76 employees, Gaballah says he has seen countless digital startups crash and burn, largely due to scant funding and poor internet connection.

“Tech giants like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram have all the attributes required to have exponential growth,” he said.

But Gaballah says none has his local expertise or insight.

“Most local entrepreneurs solve problems that they have already experienced themselves,” he added.

 

ORAL CULTURES

Another factor driving local innovation is language, said Ndongmo, especially in a continent with more than 2,000 of them.

Malian developer Mamadou Sidibe witnessed the power of communication in indigenous languages when he launched his ‘vocal social network’ service, Lenali, in 2017.

It lets users message via voice notes that can be attached to images, helping informal traders consume news and information and sell products online.

A simple tool, it opened new horizons for many in Mali, helping the isolated and illiterate find a voice, and bringing opportunities to small businesses cut off from new markets.

“We have an oral culture and more than 100 dialects,” said Sidibe.

“One of the ways to be innovative is not to copy what is done in Europe or the U.S. – in general, we need to adapt everything to our own cultural reality.”

Fewer than a third of Malians can read and write, according to the World Bank.

Lenali has been downloaded 150,000 times in 118 countries from Brazil to Sri Lanka to Russia, Sidibe said.

“We also teach literacy courses on the app. Our goal is not to maintain low literacy – our goal is to make teaching, tech and business accessible,” Sidibe said of his ad-backed platform.

 

DATA SOVEREIGNTY

Big tech has come under fire for harvesting and selling users’ data by the world’s main central bank umbrella group, the Bank for International Settlements, as well as activists against algorithmic bias and racism.

This is an opportunity for local innovators to do things differently, said Melo, who has fought in court for over a decade to protect whistleblowers’ data despite the government repeatedly demanding JamiiForums hand it over.

Ndongmo said her biggest fear for the future of Africa’s innovation is government crackdown on online resistance.

“You cannot innovate around repressive policy,” she said.

Melo has racked up 159 court challenges by Tanzania’s government for exposing corruption. But his refusal to buckle has paid off.

New leadership in Tanzania has opened consultations with Melo to draft frameworks that will better protect free speech.

Creating room for digital innovation does not mean that platforms should go unmonitored, said Sidibe, who employs a handful of people to check every Lenali post to root out hate speech, porn or danger.

Like JamiiForums, Lenali follows strict policies to protect users’ data rights and ensure their privacy.

“Big tech companies are interested in big data so that they can do business with your data … they are interested in profit, not truth,” said Melo.

Nothing wrong with profits, he said, but not at users’ expense if Africa’s wave of startups is to endure, thrive – and take its place at the table alongside Big Tech.

“It’s about the content you create, not about how much we can generate from you. It’s about the kind of information you can put on the platform to help others,” Melo said. – Reuters

US agrees to send advanced rockets to Ukraine

Army soldier figurines are displayed in front of the Ukrainian and Russian flag colors background in this illustration taken, Feb. 13, 2022. — REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION

Russian troops fought to take complete control of the eastern industrial city of Sievierodonetsk on Wednesday as the United States said it will provide Ukraine with advanced rockets to help it force Moscow to negotiate an end to the war.

President Joe Biden said the United States would provide Ukraine with more advanced rocket systems and munitions so it can “more precisely strike key targets on the battlefield”.

“We have moved quickly to send Ukraine a significant amount of weaponry and ammunition so it can fight on the battlefield and be in the strongest possible position at the negotiating table,” Biden wrote in an opinion piece in the New York Times. Read full story

A senior Biden administration official said weaponry provided would include the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), which Ukraine‘s armed forces chief said a month ago was “crucial” to counter Russian missile attacks.

Addressing concerns that such weapons could draw the United States into a direct conflict with Russia, senior administration officials said Ukraine gave assurances the missiles would not be used to strike inside Russia.

“These systems will be used by the Ukrainians to repel Russian advances on Ukrainian territory, but they will not be used on targets in Russian territory,” the U.S. official told reporters.

Shortly after the U.S. decision was announced, the Russian defense ministry said Russia’s nuclear forces were holding drills in the Ivanovo province, northeast of Moscow, the Interfax news agency reported.

Some 1,000 servicemen were exercising in intense maneuvers using more than 100 vehicles including Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launchers, it cited the ministry as saying. Read full story

There was no mention of the U.S. decision to supply new weapons in the Interfax report.

The latest U.S. pledge of weapons for Ukraine – on top of billions of dollars worth of equipment already provided including anti-aircraft missiles and drones – came as Russia pressed its assault to seize the eastern Donbas region, having abandoned its earlier thrust toward Kyiv from the north.

Russian troops have now taken control of most of the eastern industrial city of Sievierodonetsk in Luhansk, one of two provinces in the Donbas, regional Governor Serhiy Gaidai on Tuesday.

Nearly all critical infrastructure in Sievierodonetsk had been destroyed and 60% of residential property damaged beyond repair, he said. Russian shelling had made it impossible to deliver aid or evacuate people.

A Russian victory in Sievierodonetsk and its twin city of Lysychansk across the Siverskyi Donets river would bring full control of Luhansk, one of two eastern provinces Moscow claims on behalf of separatists.

A pro-Moscow separatist leader said Russian proxies had advanced slower than expected to “maintain the city’s infrastructure” and exercise caution around its chemical factories.

“We can say already that a third of Sievierodonetsk is already under our control,” Russia’s TASS state news agency quoted Leonid Pasechnik, the leader of the pro-Moscow Luhansk People’s Republic, as saying.

Gaidai warned Sievierodonetsk residents not to leave bomb shelters due to what he said was a Russian air strike on a nitric acid tank.

The Luhansk People’s Republic’s police force said Ukraine‘s forces had damaged it. Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists traded accusations over a similar incident in April. Read full story

Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council aid agency which had long operated out of Sievierodonetsk, said he was “horrified” by its destruction.

Up to 12,000 civilians remain caught in crossfire, without sufficient access to water, food, medicine or electricity, Egeland said.

“The near-constant bombardment is forcing civilians to seek refuge in bomb shelters and basements, with only few precious opportunities for those trying to escape,” he said.

 

WEAPONS PACKAGE

Ukraine says weapons sent by the United States and other countries since the beginning of the invasion have helped fend off Russian gains.

The high mobility artillery rocket systems are part of a $700 million weapons package expected to be unveiled by the United States on Wednesday.

The package includes ammunition, counter fire radars, a number of air surveillance radars, additional Javelin anti-tank missiles, as well as anti-armor weapons, officials said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has called for more weapons while lambasting the European Union, which agreed on Monday to cut imports of Russian oil, for not sanctioning energy from Russia sooner.

The EU said it would ban imports of Russian oil by sea. Officials said that would halt two-thirds of Russia’s oil exports to Europe at first, and 90% by the end of this year.

Responding to the EU oil embargo, Russia widened its gas cuts to Europe, pushing up prices and ratcheted up its economic battle with Brussels. Read full story

Putin launched his “special operation” in February to disarm and “denazify” Ukraine. Ukraine and its Western allies call this a baseless pretext for a war to seize territory.

Ukraine accuses Russia of war crimes on a huge scale, flattening cities and killing and raping civilians. Russia denies the accusations. – Reuters

Australia PM Albanese appoints record number of women to diverse cabinet

REUTERS

Australia‘s new federal ministry was sworn into office on Wednesday, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese appointing a record number of women to a diverse cabinet team that includes religious minorities and Indigenous Aboriginals.

A total of 10 women were included in Mr. Albanese‘s 23-member cabinet, surpassing the seven in the previous Liberal-National coalition government led by Scott Morrison.

Industry Minister Ed Husic and Youth Minister Anne Aly became Australia‘s first Muslim federal ministers at a ceremony in the national capital, Canberra, while Linda Burney, wearing a kangaroo-skin cloak, became the first Aboriginal woman to hold the Indigenous Australians ministry.

Mr. Albanese formed an interim ministry, that included 4 other key members, two days after the May 21 election so he could attend a Quad group meeting in Tokyo, attended by U.S. President Joe Biden and the leaders of Japan and India.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles – who was part of the interim ministry along with Penny Wong in foreign affairs, Jim Chalmers as treasurer and Katy Gallagher in finance – has been assigned the defense portfolio.

Don Farrell is the new trade minister and Tanya Plibersek the environment minister, while Clare O’Neil will be in charge of home affairs and Chris Bowen takes energy.

Former Labor leader Bill Shorten will be minister for government services.

Mr. Albanese on Tuesday said Labor will govern in its own right, claiming 77 seats in the 151-seat lower house, letting it form a majority government without the support of climate-focused independents and Greens. Read full story

Securing a majority lowers the risk for Labor that it would have to negotiate with 16 crossbenchers to pass legislation, although it will still need to win additional support for legislation in parliament’s upper house. – Reuters

N.Korea hails progress in fight against drought despite COVID wave

FREEPIK

North Korea has made progress in its fight against drought, and rice planting is under way nationwide even as the country ramps up efforts to tame its unprecedented coronavirus wave, state media said on Wednesday.

The reclusive country has been waging a battle against its first-ever COVID-19 outbreak since declaring a state of emergency and imposing a nationwide lockdown last month.

The outbreak triggered concerns over a potential food crisis amid an “all-out fight against drought, in a country that lacks vaccines and medical supplies and has already been hit by international sanctions over its weapons programs. Read full story

The anti-drought efforts have made progress after the central and local government organs and even art groups mobilized “all capacities and means” to improve irrigation and helped with rice planting, the official KCNA news agency said.

“All farmlands that could suffer drought were located without exception, and farmers were informed of reasonable watering methods according to soil humidity and lighting conditions in order to prevent crop damage,” KCNA said.

Agriculture authorities have come up with “meticulous farming strategies”, including maximizing the efficiency of rice planting machines and securing high-quality fertilizers, it added.

Droughts and flooding have long posed seasonal threats to North Korea, and major natural disasters could further hurt its isolated economy. Leader Kim Jong Un has warned of a tense food situation due to the pandemic and last year’s typhoons. Read full story

KCNA said 93,180 more people showed fever symptoms as of Tuesday evening, bringing the total to 3,738,810. It did not report any new deaths, and the toll was 70 a day before.

State media has said the COVID wave has shown signs of abating, after the daily numbers of people with fever topped 390,000 about two weeks ago.

North Korea has never confirmed how many people have tested positive for the virus. But experts have said the released figures could be underreported, which could make it difficult to assess the actual scale of the situation.Reuters

Yellen says she was ‘wrong’ about inflation path; Biden backs Fed

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. — US FEDERAL RESERVE

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Tuesday that she was wrong in the past about the path inflation would take, but said taming price hikes is President Joe Biden‘s top priority and he supports the Federal Reserve’s actions to achieve that.

Asked in a CNN interview whether she was wrong to downplay the threat that inflation posed in public statements over the past year, Ms. Yellen said: “I think I was wrong then about the path that inflation would take.”

“As I mentioned, there have been unanticipated and large shocks to the economy that have boosted energy and food prices and supply bottlenecks that have affected our economy badly that I didn’t at the time fully understand,” Ms. Yellen said, adding that the shocks range from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to recent COVID-19 lockdowns in China.

“So really, the shocks to the economy have continued, but inflation is the number one concern for President Biden,” Ms. Yellen said.

Mr. Biden “believes strongly and is supportive of the independence of the Fed to take the steps that are necessary” to reduce inflation, Ms. Yellen said, adding that unemployment was also nearly as low as it has ever been since World War Two.

A Treasury spokesperson said later: “The Secretary was pointing out that there have been shocks to the economy that have exacerbated inflationary pressures which couldn’t have been foreseen 18 months ago, including Russia’s decision to invade Ukraine, multiple successive variants of COVID, and lockdowns in China.”

Mr. Biden met earlier on Tuesday with Fed Chair Jerome Powell and underscored that he “respects the independence of the Federal Reserve,” a White House official said.Read full story

Ms. Yellen said the Biden administration was taking action to try to supplement the Fed‘s effort by reducing the cost of prescription drugs and health care and by pushing proposals in Congress to boost the use of renewable energy.

While she said a recent decline in core inflation data was encouraging, she noted that oil prices remained high and Europe was working on a plan to ban imports of Russian oil.

“We can’t rule out further shocks,” Ms. Yellen said. – Reuters

K-pop supergroup BTS meets Biden, speaks at White House

BTS in 2019 Clockwise from left: Jin, RM, Jungkook, J-Hope, Suga, V, and Jimin — DISPATCH/EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG/

South Korean boy band BTS, a fundraising juggernaut for U.S. social justice causes, met with President Joe Biden at the White House on Tuesday to discuss hate crimes targeting Asians.

The K-pop stars made brief statements to reporters prior to the meeting, calling for a halt to crimes targeting Asian Americans.

“We were devastated by the recent surge of hate crimes, including Asian American hate crimes,” band member Jimin said through a translator. “To put a stop on this and support the cause, we’d like to take this opportunity to voice ourselves once again.”

The meeting came as Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander month in May drew to a close following a sharp upswing in hate crimes against the community in the past year.

Attacks against people of Asian descent have escalated as some politicians and pundits have encouraged Americans to blame China for COVID-19. Read full story

While the meeting was closed to press, the White House said one goal was to “discuss the importance of diversity and inclusion and BTS‘ platform as youth ambassadors who spread a message of hope and positivity across the world.”

The musicians are known for using their lyrics and social campaigns aimed at empowering youngsters since making their debut in 2013. Their fan base extends into older demographics, tying their spending clout to an internet-savvy generation that harnesses the power of social media.

In June 2020, BTS fans raised about $1 million in one day in the #MatchAMillion online campaign for U.S. social justice causes, matching the band’s donation to Black Lives Matter.

The group’s management Big Hit Music said it was honored to be invited to the White House.

“As we are visiting as artists representing South Korea, we look forward to discussing various topics including inclusion, diversity, anti-Asian hate crimes, culture and art,” Big Hit Music said. – Reuters

Transformation redefined: Putting transformational leadership at the heart of business

By Leo Salvador

In a post-pandemic world, the idea of revisiting and building on existing corporate management policies has never sounded more enticing. Inspiring others and being visionaries for change has become the goal of companies and their leaders, intent on looking past actions that did not work and channelling a renewed optimism that after all the upheavals during the pandemic, lessons gleaned can help foster business growth.

That said, more businesses are cultivating a culture that places emphasis on transformational leadership. This is an old concept gaining increased interest today, more than four decades after James MacGregor defined transformational leadership in 1978. He mentioned that the idea of transformation is not just directed towards leaders but to all employees, fresh graduates and new hires included. At the heart of this principle is the realization that as challenges to business arise, corporate management must prepare for them by being more proactive, going beyond old solutions, and introducing new policies that inspire employees to innovate and be more resilient to change.

The benefits of transformational leadership

Transformational leadership, or the ability to engage people to change and improve, covers the ways leaders can assess and satisfy the needs of their team members. Its benefits are many. Think lower turnover costs. Because leaders who employ this type of leadership style have been found to keep their staff inspired, employee turnover rates are reduced. And as staff are more engaged and motivated, their productivity levels increase.

Likewise, results of the McKinsey Global Report also show that when companies take on more transformative policies and actions, they become much more likely to succeed in its corporate goals and agenda. Looking at it in a broad perspective, the benefits of incorporating transformative leadership styles is more boon than bane for business.

Ultimately, there are four factors unique to transformational leadership that businesses can consider implementing in the workplace.

Idealized influence

When leaders become effective role models, their team and staff tend to trust and respect their decisions more easily. This is the core principle behind idealized influence as a factor of transformational leadership. Because they are perceived as exemplary figures of the organization, their staff identifies with them and are able to emulate their actions.

Inspirational motivation

When managers aim to persuade and continuously motivate their teams, they are also able to foster team spirit. Inspirational motivation suggests that when leaders are able to express clear goals and evoke a sense of commitment and positive, collective action among their peers, they contribute to overall work productivity and growth of their company.

Intellectual stimulation

When the pandemic hit, new ways of work had to be implemented. This scenario did more than just keep leaders on their toes; it allowed them to tap their inner resilience and think of innovative ways to keep business going. Intellectual stimulation suggests that leaders must go beyond challenging the norms and go out of their way to foster an innovative, creative mindset among their colleagues.

Individualized consideration

Aside from training, coaching and mentoring contribute a whole lot in making assessments and keeping communication open between staff and leaders. When these initiatives are rigorously maintained, management is able to encourage employees to reach not just their individual goals in the company but also help them advance their careers.

When these factors are met, corporate management will be able to help employees grow and transform their individual actions into more meaningful business efforts. Aside from following these steps, leaders, will also be able to benefit from engaging in various executive learning and training programs, where they will be able to learn more about transformative leadership through formal, leadership-led discussions.

While there is no one-size-fits-all solution to hasten and improve the transformation leadership process, businesses can create their own policies which take into account ways that can further inspire and motivate all employees. This, along with business resiliency efforts, can pave the way for companies to get sturdier footing amidst a volatile business environment.

 

Leo Salvador is the Senior Manager from the Knowledge and Management Group of P&A Grant Thornton. He is part of the Senior Leadership in Finance Program, a speaker-led training and discussion on transformational leadership organized by P&A Grant Thornton and the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX). To know more about the program, you may contact the FINEX Academy through: Michael Vinluan, Executive Director, FINEX – mbvinluan@finex.org.ph. Or Shaine Cervantes, Administrative Assistant/Support Staff, FINEX Academy – wdsecervantes@finex.org.ph

 


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Larger than life vivo ads across Metro Manila encourage Filipinos to ‘Own Your Masterpiece’

vivo’s digital billboard displays in various locations in NCR are hinting to a masterpiece that is soon to come to the Philippines

With central business districts and cities gradually coming back to life, flocks of commuters and motorists once again frequent the highways in Metro Manila. One thing that may spice up the transit for those traveling through major thruways are vivo’s digital billboards posing the question: “Ready to own your masterpiece?”

vivo’s billboards feature striking images of everyday-life scenes highlighting masterpieces in the ordinary. From the patriotic shot of the Philippine national flag, to a candid photo of a kalesa rider, to people passing through a city bridge, the photos depict simple moments in life, presented in grand and vivid portraits. Paired with the challenge of owning your masterpiece, vivo’s ads inspire the desire to make every moment count.

A masterpiece in the making?

Aside from the booming headline, the vivo ads also include a teaser statement saying “a technological work of art for professional imaging is coming to the Philippines.” As one of the country’s leading smartphone brands, this could be a nod to vivo’s partnership with ZEISS to deliver state of the art tech devices.

For the techies and digital enthusiasts, this is also a cause for excitement. With many devices and gadgets rumored to soon hit the local market, it leads one to wonder which model in particular vivo is gearing to launch.

Given the quality of the photos featured in the ads, the “technological work of art” that may soon be announced may be a high-powered camera in the body of a vivo smartphone that can enable Filipinos to capture their own masterpieces. Until more details are revealed, tech fans and commuters catching sight of the billboards are to wonder what the vivo ads could be alluding to.

Can you spot the masterpieces?

Excitingly, vivo has announced via its social media channels that it will be giving away prizes for those who will be able to spot and take a selfie with these larger than life ads. Announcing their Find the Masterpiece promo, vivo said that they will be accepting entries from their followers from May 31 to June 7. Those who will be able to take a snapshot with one or two locations may win vivo merchandise. Meanwhile, those who can catch all three billboard locations will be eligible to win tickets to the Clark Hot Air Balloon Festival. Five winners of the said grand prize, along with the consolation prize winners, will be announced on June 8.

The billboard locations will be revealed via the official vivo Fam PH community page. So for those looking to score merch and Clark Hot Air Balloon Festival tickets from vivo, the search is on!

For more information on vivo’s latest news and updates, please head to vivo’s official Facebook, Instagram and YouTube channels.

 


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BSP sees inflation above 5% in May

PHILIPPINE STAR/ RUSSEL A. PALMA
Pump prices have steadily increased since the start of the year. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ RUSSEL A. PALMA

HEADLINE inflation likely quickened and breached 5% in May due to higher pump and food prices and a weaker peso, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) chief said on Tuesday.

May inflation may have reached between 5% and 5.8%, BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno said in a Viber message. This is well above the 2-4% target of the central bank for this year.

The consumer price index last hit the 5% level in December 2018 and stood at 5.2% that month.

May inflation data will be released by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) on June 7. Headline inflation was at 4.9% in April, the highest in more than three years.

“The continued increase in domestic petroleum prices, higher prices of key food items, and peso depreciation are the primary sources of inflationary pressures during the month,” Mr. Diokno said.

Pump prices of gasoline, diesel, and kerosene have jumped by P25.55 per liter, P29.10 per liter and P25.20 per liter, respectively, as of May 24 year to date, Energy department data showed.

PSA data also showed increases in the price of pork and vegetables in some trading centers in the first phase of May (May 1-5) versus the last phase of April (April 15-17).

Meanwhile, the peso remained at the P52-per-dollar mark in May, closing the month at P52.37 on Tuesday, down P1.37 or 2.69% from its P51 finish on Dec. 31, 2021.

These upward pressures could have been offset by lower electricity rates of Manila Electric Co. (Meralco), as well as the decline in rice and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) prices, the BSP chief added.

Meralco said households will likely see a decrease of around P24 in their May electricity bill as distribution-related refund offset an increase in power generation charge. The overall rate went down to P10.063 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) in May from P10.183 per kWh in April.

Oil companies also cut the price of LPG by P5.73 to P5.75 per kilogram (kg) or about P63.03-P63.29 per 11 kg cylinder as of May 1.

On the other hand, average retail prices of special rice dropped by about 25 centavos to P4 in the first phase of May versus the second phase of April.

“Looking ahead, the BSP will continue to monitor closely emerging price developments to enable timely intervention to arrest emergence of further second-round effects, consistent with BSP’s mandate of price and financial stability,” Mr. Diokno said.

The BSP chief last week said they are likely to raise key interest rates by another 25 basis points at its next policy review on June 23 following a hike of the same magnitude at its May 19 meeting to curb growing inflationary pressures.

At the May meeting, the central bank upwardly revised its average inflation forecast for 2022 to 4.6% from the previous forecast of 4.3%, exceeding the 2-4% target band. For 2023, the BSP’s inflation forecast was hiked to 3.9% from 3.6% previously. — BVR

Bank lending jumps 10% in April, fastest in 2 years

BW FILE PHOTO

BANK lending jumped by 10% in April, reflecting the rebound in economic activity as restrictions were eased alongside the steady decline in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases.

This was the fastest growth in bank lending in 23 months, or since the 11.2% in May 2020.

Preliminary data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed outstanding loans of big banks expanded by 10.1% to P9.9 trillion in April from P8.99 trillion in the same month of 2021.

The growth in bank lending was faster than the 8.9% seen in March.

On a month-on-month seasonally adjusted basis, bank lending net of reverse repurchase (RRP) placements with the BSP inched up 0.9%.

Inclusive of RRP placements with the BSP, bank lending was 9.8% up in April.

“Credit conditions continue to improve as economic activity rebounds amid a manageable domestic COVID-19 caseload,” the BSP said in a statement.

Borrowings for production activities jumped by 10.3% to P8.74 trillion in April, fueled by double-digit expansion in loans for real estate (18.7%), manufacturing (12.4%); and information and communication (26.9%).

Consumer loans also rose by 6.7% to P879.39 billion, a faster pace than the 3.6% seen in March.

Credit card loans expanded by 16% in April, while salary-based general purpose consumption loans went up 2.2%. Motor vehicle loans dropped 3.1%.

“A steady improvement in overall credit activity and stable financial market conditions have allowed the BSP to continue rolling back its pandemic-induced liquidity interventions,” the central bank said.

The BSP said it will keep a close watch on “evolving credit and liquidity conditions to ensure that appropriate level of liquidity is available to nurture the momentum of economic recovery, while containing inflation pressures.”

The continued expansion of bank lending in April likely reflected some borrowers’ rush to secure financing in view of the increase in long-term interest rates locally and globally amid elevated inflation, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said in an e-mail.

The central bank is likely to raise its key interest rate by another 25 basis points (bps) at its next policy meeting in June.

The BSP delivered its first interest rate hike since November 2018 when it raised its benchmark interest rates by 25 bps on May 19 as it tries to temper rising inflationary pressures.

The Monetary Board will have its next policy review on June 23.

MONEY SUPPLY
As lending increased, the BSP said M3 — which is considered as the broadest measure of liquidity in an economy — grew by 7.3% to P15.3 trillion in April. This was slower than the revised 7.7% growth in March.

On a month-on-month seasonally adjusted basis, the BSP said M3 was “broadly unchanged.”

“The continued expansion in domestic liquidity indicates that liquidity remains sufficient to sustain the economy on a firm recovery path. A strong rebound in economic activity has also allowed the BSP to gradually withdraw its extraordinary liquidity intervention,” the central bank said in a statement.

The BSP said domestic claims rose by 9% in April, higher than the revised 8.1% in March, thanks to improved bank lending to the private sector and increase in net claims on the central government. 

“Claims on the private sector grew by 6.5% in April from 5.6% in March with increased bank lending to non-financial private corporations and households,” the central bank said.

“Meanwhile, net claims on the central government rose by 17.6% in April from 16.3% (revised) in March owing to the sustained borrowings by the National Government.”

Net foreign assets (NFA) in peso terms rose by 5.2% in April, from the revised 8.2% in the prior month.

“The slower expansion in the BSP’s NFA position reflected the decline in gross international reserves relative to the same period a year ago. Meanwhile, the NFA of banks continued to expand, albeit at a slower pace, on account of higher investments in marketable debt securities as well as loans and receivables with nonresident banks,” the BSP said. — Keisha B. Ta-asan