Morning lesson from the garden

Farming and Gardening Enterprise and Wealth Creation

The Alaya Mindset: “I tend to my own life pot, soil and environment.”

Two alugbati cuttings in the same pot, same soil, same weather conditions, and yet growing so differently in our garden. One is moving in spirals as a wild vine and the other sitting smugly in its center, sprouting in beautiful symmetry. 

What is this life force that is  so unique and asserts itself so undeniably?🌱 This life force is in all nature, including us.

Nice reminder to tend to our own pot, soil and environment–to keep them nurturing and permitting of all surprises and possibilities. To welcome both rain and sunshine, and watch out for pests.

What’s in your life garden? Are you getting enough nutrients: good food, quality sleep, inspiring conversation? Are you open to sunshine: things, experiences or people that warm and excite you? How about rain: those that keep you relaxed and flowing? And what are you doing to protect yourself from pests, or seasons of drought, like the COVID19 pandemic?

How about your business garden? Are you tending to your entrepreneur soil and business environment?

Today is Monday, and we’re crossing over to the second half of 2020 in 2 days. Here’s hoping for better, more nurturing days ahead. 🙏

Building the Entrepreneur and Tech Hubs of Alaya

Building LEADIA
Koray and Johanna

Seven months ago, I met someone who would turn out to be Alaya’s first investor.  He would also turn out to be the love of my life and my life partner.

Since September 2017, Koray and I have been traveling all over (Manila, Iloilo, Turkey, Palawan) and discussing nonstop about how to create the economic backbone to make Alaya happen.  As dreams would have it, something bigger than us started carrying us towards the right path, right ideas, right people.   And now here we are, April 2018, getting ready to birth our babies: we’re expecting our first baby girl in July (yay!), and our tech company a little sooner than that.

Why a tech company?

The priority hub in building Alaya was always the Enterprise hub.

Wealth Creation is growing our own value so we can share it with the world.

The Enterprise and Wealth Creation hub of Alaya.PH will focus on the economic aspect of communities:  how do we create wealth for ourselves and scale this?

– from Why Enterprise?

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Being able to scale the wealth creation was always important for us, and what better product or service to scale than something whose very nature is to scale itself–technology.

We’ve just put up Leadeana, a tech holding company whose mission is to give Filipinos fair access to opportunities for a good life.  We will train, hire, and mentor world-class tech professionals in underserved areas of the Philippines to create the biggest Data and AI Team in the world.   The business model is designed to bring with us as many people as possible, to create a new economic class of creative, empowered and self-improving Filipino geeks (geeks used ever so lovingly!).  Our community of tech experts will then be a self-sustaining breeding ground for entrepreneurs ready to take up the challenge of producing Philippine unicorns.

We are now offering an opportunity for 12 people to come in as strategic partners who will bring this vision to fruition with us. If you share our vision for the Philippines and are able to contribute your expertise to the group: industry knowledge, network, passions and time, please send us a big hello.

My Story as a Teacher

Education

Image by Sasin Tipchai from Pixabay

My personal experience as an educator is limited, but I’m an excellent learner.   I’ve always loved to learn.  I read the dictionary and encyclopedia for fun as a child, and to this day, I’m like a kid in a toy store when I encounter anything I know nothing about–it becomes something new to learn!

My teaching philosophy: learning together

I think the best way to engage a student is to reverse the roles and turn him or her into a teacher.  It follows that a teacher walks into a classroom also ready to be a student.  It becomes an occasion of learning together.

The best teachers are not necessarily knowledge experts but expert facilitators of learning.

Teaching Teens

I didn’t study to be a teacher, but teaching seems to be an underlying motif that pops up in my life again and again.

My very first teaching experience was as a substitute teacher for Christian Living in my old high school, St. Pedro Poveda College.  A teacher was going on maternity leave and they were hard-pressed for a temp. At that time I was an idealistic fresh college graduate, ready to conquer the world.  I had my license as a real estate broker, was actively selling insurance and mutual funds, and thought why not–I could teach teenagers for a few months.

I didn’t know anything about lesson planning, so I taught it the way I would’ve liked to learn it: personal, relatable and simple.  We talked about the Old Testament and approached it as Literature: we were telling each other stories. I made the girls talk about themselves a lot, and created a space where dialogue was welcome.   At the end of my 2-month stay, my students prepared a send off and one girl stood up and said, “Thank you, Ms. Jo, for making me dream again.”  That was a precious thank you that I still carry with me to this day.

Over time I would go on to teach High School Spanish for two years and English as a foreign language to kids in a summer camp in Spain.

One key advice I got early on: just love them.  Love your students.

The other key advice I got:  when you’re asked a question you can’t answer, just throw the question back and ask, “What do you think?”  This was especially useful when we tackled difficult topics like God being vengeful, but it also dispelled the idea of teacher as guru.  It’s okay not to have the answers.

Teaching Kids

I’m not a parent, but I’m a big fan of natural schools and methods that nurture a child’s sense of wonder and reverence for the world.

In 2014,  my family took over operations of a private preschool in a prime business district in Manila and I was asked to help out.  Together with natural school mentors, I introduced a nursery program with a natural schooling approach and saw firsthand the difference it made to the kids and parents.

We started monthly dialogues for nannies or yayas and another one for parents, and built a culture of cooperation and openness in our school.  We made it clear to everyone that we were all partners in educating the children.

Key takeaways from this experience:

  • There is a lot of room for scaling this natural approach to education in the Philippines, especially in the daycare/preschool years.
  • Lots of work to be done in convincing Filipinos on the merits of play-based learning
  • Introducing creative living to families is critical when kids are very young.  Not only are these the foundation years for the child, but these are also the foundation years for the parents, who are usually still learning how to parent.  Most parents at this stage are still very involved in the nitty gritty of their child’s education.

Teaching Adults

If I were to embrace teaching as a vocation, I’d choose adults as my students.

I think it’s with adults that one can freely and fully apply the philosophy of learning together.

It is being comfortable with not (yet) knowing.  The goal is still very much to learn, but it’s okay to proceed without having all the answers.
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Anyone in a leadership role can benefit from seeing himself/herself as a teacher-mentor.  I had a chance to test this out for myself when I led my small team of teachers and staff at the preschool for two years.

Year one was chaos, so we started year two with a different tactic.  We spent time building a space of trust and collaboration by focusing our teacher training on biography work and getting to know each other’s strengths and weaknesses.  This opened the door for honest and transparent communication, which set the tone for our working relationship.  The preschool became a center of learning not just for the kids, but also for the adults that ran it.

Takeaways:

  • Encourage healthy dissent.  As co-learners, each one has something to contribute and I appreciated it when my teachers would disagree with me.
  • Give each other feedback as often as needed.
  • Make sure every voice is heard.
  • Step out of the way.

Teaching the Teacher

Having worked independently most of my life, I’ve never had to answer to a boss, but I’ve also never had a mentor.

In 2015, I took some units in Education as part of a Program in Education as Transformational Leadership at the Asian Social Institute in Malate, Manila.   Here are my takeaways from dialogues we had on alternative education and how it applies to building creative communities:

  • A creative community as a learning tool itself, that will shape and support mental, financial, psychological, and spiritual growth of people living in it and passing through.
  • The whole community becomes the learning space.
  • The adults will be busy doing their own creative tinkering—whether as professionals, entrepreneurs, techno geeks, artists, architects, etc.—and at the same time, just by being living examples, they are already manifesting the desired learning outcomes for the children.
  • Adults also need to learn how to be artists again, to trust intuition and allow an atmosphere of creativity to come alive in the community.

My Wealth Creation Journey (Part 1)

Enterprise and Wealth Creation

Image by NikolayFrolochkin from Pixabay

I didn’t go to business school, so much of what I know and feel about money, I learned out there on the streets (and yes, I’m still learning everyday!). I’ve made small and big mistakes and they cost me money, but I regard every one of those stumbles as a learning opportunity.  As they say, you know you’re a true entrepreneur once you have failed…and failed…and failed in business.

Learning to Invest

Fresh out of college, I was invited to sell insurance and I got certified as an Investment Solicitor. I remember sitting in a lecture wide-eyed at the thought of mutual funds and how renting a home instead of buying one can actually be a good business move. Selling Mutual Funds didn’t bring home the bacon, but it planted a critical habit in me: investing in income-earning assets.

Join the Truly Rich ClubFast-forward to 2010 when I was hungry for a community of financially-conscious people I could relate to (i.e. non-corporate), and I came across Bro. Bo Sanchez. He was a poor missionary who had a financial awakening that aligned with his spiritual vocation.  His main mantra that I carry with me to this day:  We want you to get rich because we want money in the hands of good people.   I attended Wealth Circles with Bro. Bo and first learned of the concept of Masterminding, or hanging out with people you admire and who could be your mentors.   To this day, I am part of the Truly Rich Club, which sends monthly updates on which stocks to buy and when to sell them.   Monthly investment is less than Php500, truly a steal for the info he shares! If you want to learn more, here’s the invite page to the Truly Rich Club.

Changing my Money Mindset

In 2014, I made one significantly bad business decision, and over the course of two years it would wipe out my life savings.  I was back to square one financially, and I started thinking that I was really not built for business, even if deep down I didn’t believe it was true.  I convinced myself that I’m an artist and teacher at heart, and I’m happy to give and share what I can for free.

It was Harv Eker’s book, Secrets of the Millionaire Mind: Mastering the Inner Game of Wealth, that got me to rethink about how I think about money.

I picked it up in April 2017 and devoured it in a day, only to reread it the next day.  It came at the right time.  It still sits on my desk, reminding me of the importance of stretching and re-stretching ourselves financially.  Our financial situation is ultimately a manifestation of who we really are on the inside.

As Harv asked, I did the Wealth Declarations at the end of each chapter in the book, and started to do positive brainwashing on myself.

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I visited his website to download the Net Worth Tracking Sheet, which is a table that you fill up every month to monitor changes in your assets vs. liabilities (ideally for the next three months). It was the first time I computed my current Net Worth, and I converted it from Pesos to Dollars–a tactic I’ve adopted to start thinking in global terms.

I also found Harv on facebook and came across the Zero to Multimillionaire class, a 75-minute free webinar where he reveals 6 proven principles that make the difference between getting rich and staying middle class or broke.

It’s one thing to read his words off the page, and it’s another to watch moving, talking pictures of him showing his home, his family.  You get a clearer sense of who this man is, who built his wealth from the ground up.

Make no mistake about it, Harv is a go getter.  He insists that business is a learnable skill.  Wealth Creation is a learnable skill.   He is non-academic and shares his streetsmarts in a straightforward language.

I guess when I “met” Harv, I wasn’t just ready to learn, I was hungry for someone to teach me how to do things.

At the end of the free webinar, he pitched the Million Dollar Business Secrets course, a self-paced online program where he shares his streetsmart tactics in building his businesses (he calls them Guerilla Wealth Tactics), his secrets in Negotiations and Marketing, and the ways of thinking that let him come up with Million Dollar Ideas in a snap.

The course wasn’t cheap, but I wanted in on it, so yes, I signed up.

What did I learn over the next four weeks? A lot.  I saved his modules on my phone for me to read and listen to when I need a wealthy vibes boost.  Here are some of my major takeaways:

  • I really need to let go of my old ways of thinking.  There are still remnants of doubt, poverty mindset, hesitation.  No teacher can do that for me.  That’s all me and it’s up to me to let go.
  • Every business is a marketing business.
  • Build products of higher value.  The work is the same, might as well get paid more for your effort.

Should you sign up for his course?  If you are hungry for tried-and-tested tactics in the business arena and want to kaboom your bottomline to new heights, YES, YES, YES.  Learn from Harv.  The program isn’t cheap but it won’t break the bank either.  Learning is always an investment in yourself, and learning about business is a smart investment in your business.  Find out more about his Million Dollar Business Secrets and see for yourself.

 

 

Read Part 2 of this series: Finding my Mentor and Community.

Note: Some of the links above will give me an affiliate commission if you choose to buy in, thank you!