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The magic “I” of CIO sparks many imaginations: Chief information officer, chief infrastructure officer , Chief Integration Officer, chief International officer, Chief Inspiration Officer, Chief Innovation Officer, Chief Influence Office etc. The future of CIO is entrepreneur driven, situation oriented, value-added,she or he will take many paradoxical roles: both as business strategist and technology visionary,talent master and effective communicator,savvy business enabler and relentless cost cutter, and transform the business into "Digital Master"!

The future of CIO is digital strategist, global thought leader, and talent master: leading IT to enlighten the customers; enable business success via influence.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Pursuing Happiness

 So the pursuit of happiness is not just creating a moment for a sensation. It is a practice of progression—guided by fair principles, supported by communities, structured by societies, and enriched by stories that reveal what we are really trying to reach.

Another holiday is coming to reflect on the principles for reinventing an advanced human society. “Happiness” is a word that seems simple until we try to experience it as a long journey with hill top and valley deep.


In literature and the arts, it becomes a form of truth: happiness is not merely reported, it is rendered, tested, and complicated through story-telling. In philosophy it becomes a question: What is happiness, and how should we pursue it? In psychology it becomes a measurable experience shaped by emotion, cognition, and behavior. In economics,  it turns into a matter of incentives and trade-offs. In neuroscience it becomes the mind’s choreography of pleasure, meaning, and regulation. In sociology, it becomes relational—produced not only inside the mind, but across cultures, institutions, and communities. To pursue happiness, then, is not merely to chase a feeling. It is to participate in a set of perspectives that—taken together—reshape what the word can mean to all of us.

The arts and literature: Happiness as narrative truth: Literature and art contribute what other disciplines sometimes leave out: the lived texture of inner life. A novel, or a film can show happiness not as a static state but as a trajectory shaped by choices, gain & loss, reconciliation, and growth. Artists reveal that happiness is often interwoven with purposes and meaning, not merely comfort.


Importantly, the arts also complicate simplistic pursuit. Stories teach that happiness can coexist with disconfort, and that what endures is rarely what is most immediately pleasurable. Characters pursue purpose, love and belonging; they mistake them, redeem themselves, learn slowly. Art does not offer an algorithm for happiness, but it offers different styles to express it: a moral imagination. It trains the reader to recognize the difference between thrill and fulfillment, between appearance and integrity, between temporary relief and lasting effect. In this way, creative work becomes an interdisciplinary guide—not by prescribing practices like a manual, but by sharpening insight into how truthful stories actually unfold.


Psychology: The mind as both architect and performer: Psychology brings happiness from the realm of ideals into the realm of mechanisms. It asks what actually happens in the human mind when we feel good, when we feel fulfilled, and when we feel upset despite what “should” satisfy us. One finding consistently challenges common sense: happiness is not perfectly correlated with external circumstances. People adapt. They adjust their expectations. They revise what they call “enough.” This adaptation is not cynical; it is part of how the mind survives. But it also means that pleasure alone can become unstable as a strategy. A new stimulate may create delight, but the mind learns it, and the novelty fades. Pursuing happiness through constant stimulation may therefore lead to a treadmill rather than a destination.


At the same time, psychology suggests a more promising path: happiness is shaped by the meaning we attach to experience and by the behaviors we repeat. Mindfulness practices, gratitude exercises, acts of kindness, and intentional goal-setting all influence emotional patterns and self-evaluation. This perspective argues that happiness is often built through regulation—learning to steer attention, interpret events, and respond rather than simply react. Psychology, then, contributes an essential humility. The pursuit of happiness requires awareness: awareness of cognitive biases, of emotional triggers, and of the ways we can trick ourselves into confusing comfort with joy.

Sociology and culture: Happiness as something we practice together: If psychology describes the mind, sociology describes the conditions under which minds develop. Happiness is experienced through language. What people call “success” depends on cultural scripts. Norms shape which desires are celebrated and which are condemned. Social belonging influences access to resources, but it also influences perceptions: people do not compare themselves only to individuals; they compare themselves to expectations.


Sociology also highlights the role of community. Humans are meaning-making beings. We become who we are through networking—through shared values, mutual recognition, and belonging. When communities fracture or become competitive in corrosive ways, happiness perhaps decline even if other conditions keep stable. Conversely, strong social ties often correlate with well-being, not merely because of practical help but because belonging enhances identity.


Economics of trade-offs: What counts as “well-being”? Economics enters the conversation about happiness with a different lens: the study of choice under constraints. If happiness were only an inner state, economists would be irrelevant. But human lives are shaped by economical conditions, healthcare, education, etc. Economic insecurity can erode psychological bandwidth—leaving less room for reflection, health, and social connection. In this sense, the pursuit of happiness cannot be fully separated from the pursuit of fairness in opportunity.


Economists also ask: How should we measure happiness? Surveys and indices attempt to quantify well-being, sometimes revealing patterns that raw statistics fails to capture. Yet measurement is never neutral. A scale can illuminate reality, but it can also narrow it. For example, when happiness metrics become policy instruments, they risk reducing complex lives to numbers—ignoring l emotions, and the kinds of meaning that cannot be easily translated.


Still, economics offers an uncomfortable but clarifying point: if we design systems that make greatness impossible, we make happiness harder. Happiness is not only a personal achievement; it is also a social environment. The pursuit of happiness is therefore partly collective—requiring social justice, fair judgment, and creating conditions in which flourishing is realistically attainable.

Neuroscience: The mind’s balancing act of pleasure, meaning, and growth: Neuroscience approaches happiness as an interplay between neural reward systems and higher-order regulation. Pleasure is often associated with reward circuitry, but human happiness is not only about reward, but also about anticipation, respect, relief, fulfillment, and the sense that one’s life is coherent. These experiences are processed by overlapping systems: some cue us toward what matters, others help us interpret it, and still others allow us to restrain impulses when long-term well-being requires it.


A crucial insight follows: happiness is not solely a matter of stimulation; it is also a matter of capacity. The ability to regulate stress, recover from setbacks, and sustain attention affects emotional outcomes profoundly. In other words, neuroscience reaffirms the psychological view that happiness involves more than immediate gratification. It also suggests that meaning—though philosophical—has a physiological signature: coherent narratives and valued goals can support resilience by helping the mind place experience in a larger framework.


Philosophy: Happiness as virtue, not voltage: Philosophers have long resisted the idea that happiness is equivalent to just a joyful mood. Aristotle, for instance, treated happiness as eudaimonia—a flourishing rooted in virtue and sustained over a life. Under this view, happiness is less like a spike on a graph and more like the rhythm of a strong character: courage over time, temperance in decision, wisdom in judgment. The pursuit is therefore not primarily about consumption but about cultivation.


Yet philosophy also introduces a sharper dilemma: Can we pursue happiness directly? If we pursue it as an object in the world, might we distort it into addiction for sensation? Here, later thinkers complicate the picture.


Happiness can be interpreted as alignment—between one’s values and one’s mindset and conduct, between desire and reality, between freedom and responsibility. The philosophical lesson is subtle: what we aim at shapes how we become. Pursuit is not only a means to an end; it is also a creator of the self.

This interdisciplinary lens challenges the myth of happiness as solitary consumption. Happiness is frequently cooperative. It is built through trust, reciprocity, and the feeling that one’s life is witnessed and valued. From philosophy we learn that happiness is cultivated, not merely obtained. From psychology we learn that attention and meaning matter, and that adaptation reshapes what “satisfaction” means. From economics we learn that well-being depends on constraints and practices. From neuroscience we learn that happiness relies on capacities for regulation and interpretation. From sociology we learn that belonging and culture shape what we can become. From the arts we learn that happiness is best understood through narrative—through the way people transform over time.


What emerges from these perspectives is not a single definition of happiness, but a shared insight and personal experiences. Happiness appears as alignment—between values and behavior, between desire and reality, between individual goals and social conditions, between immediate rewards and long-term resilience. In the end, happiness may never be something we fully possess. Perhaps it is something we participate in: an enriched experience of meaning, connection, and coherence, built by choices made in the presence of uncertainty. Happiness, then, is not merely what we feel. It is also what we do—and the world that makes those actions possible. So the pursuit of happiness is not just creating a moment for a sensation. It is a practice of progression—guided by fair principles, supported by communities, structured by societies, and enriched by stories that reveal what we are really trying to reach.



Intercultural Understanding

 Intercultural competence is the ability to effectively communicate and interact with people from different cultural backgrounds, with the goal to unleash collective human potential and drive progressive changes. 

Our societies are blended with diverse culture heritages and diverse perspectives. Culture, heritage, and communication are tightly linked: culture shapes shared meanings and identity, heritage preserves what communities value, and communication is how those values are transmitted, interpreted, and kept alive across audiences and generations.


Culture is a collective attitude, heritage is a shared asset, communication is a bridge: Culture gives people a common framework of symbols, practices, and beliefs. Heritage turns that culture into something tangible or intangible that can be safeguarded, interpreted, and shared. Communication is the bridge that moves those meanings from one person or group to another, whether through language, storytelling, media, museums, rituals, or digital platforms.


Interconnection between them: Effective cultural heritage communication helps audiences understand not just the facts of a site or tradition, but the values behind it. Actually culture and heritage are vehicles for intercultural dialogue and social cohesion, meaning they can help people build understanding across differences.


-A museum exhibit uses labels, visuals, and audio guides to explain a community’s history and identity.


-A heritage site uses digital storytelling to convey intangible values that are not obvious from the physical remains alone.


-Language preservation keeps stories, songs, and traditions meaningful across generations.

Simple takeaway


So culture is the “collective habit” heritage is the “what we keep,” and communication is the “how we share it. Intercultural competence is the ability to effectively communicate and interact with people from different cultural backgrounds, with the goal to unleash collective human potential and drive progressive changes. 


In Pursuit of Equal Opportunity

 Human potential is not just a private asset—it is a collective resource and capital to invest in for benefiting human societies.

It’s time to celebrate another holiday coming, pondering justice, and pursuing equal opportunities. Human potential is not a fixed inventory waiting to be discovered; it is more like an ever-evolving system—involving, constrained, and sometimes stifled by the conditions people grow up in.

To unleash it is therefore not only a matter of individual effort, but also requires a disciplined commitment to equal opportunities and a careful approach to set good principles and optimize resources—so that talent, effort, and resource alignment have a real chance to achieve high-performance results.


Removing the invisible barriers in pursuit of equal opportunities: Equal opportunity does not mean everyone gets the same starting line. It means the starting line is shaped to prevent factors beyond personal control from deciding outcomes. When opportunity is unequal, ability can be misdiagnosed. An adult may look “unskilled” not because they lack aptitude, but because they’ve been denied for resource access, training, mentorship.


At its best, equal opportunity is a form of fairness that is also a form of efficiency. It recognizes that wasted potential is not just unjust—it is economically and socially costly. Societies lose innovators when promising individuals are blocked; they lose leaders when organizations or  communities are discouraged to explore unconventional talent pool; they lose direction when entire groups feel excluded from progress.


Yet equal opportunity requires more than rhetoric. It needs coherent systems: optimized processes that are not biased by proxies, hiring and promotion practices that evaluate capability rather than pedigree, and public policies that enforce inclusion and encourage diverse viewpoints. The objective is not to equalize outcomes mechanically, but to ensure that choices are not coerced by circumstance.


Optimizing resources: making help work where it matters. Optimizing resources means using funds, time, infrastructure, and attention in ways that produce the greatest human benefit. Importantly, “optimization” cannot be reduced to cutting costs or too many metrics. True optimization is strategic allocation: investing in what enables people to convert effort into understanding and  career advancement.


Resources should be directed toward leverage points—places where small improvements unlock large gains. In education, that might mean high-quality instructors, and reliable access to learning materials. In health, it might mean preventive care that reduces long-term impairment. In workforce development, it might mean apprenticeships, skill-based training, and partnerships with employers that shorten the distance between learning and earning.


Optimization also requires feedback. If we invest blindly, we perpetuate waste. If we measure responsibly—tracking outcomes without reducing people to numbers—we can learn which programs expand market share and which merely create paperwork. The goal is to scale what works, redesign what doesn’t, and protect vulnerable populations from the “greatest efficiency” temptation to under-serve them. So opportunity without resources is fragile, resources without equity is hollow 


Equal opportunity and resource optimization are often treated as separate agendas, but they function best together.

-Equal opportunities without optimized resources can become symbolic: policies announce fairness, while practical supports lag behind.

-Optimized resources without equal opportunities can become exclusionary: the best programs help the people who already have access, leaving systemic gaps intact.


Unleashing potential requires both: fairness in access and effectiveness in implementation. An inclusive system that delivers reliable support converts latent capability into realized competence. A high-performing system that also addresses unequal barriers ensures that performance is not reserved for those who were privileged first.


A practical framework: invest, remove barriers, and build pathways: A compelling approach to unleashing human potential can be summarized as three commitments:

-Invest early and broadly: Prioritize interventions that protect development—especially for children and youth—because later recovery is harder and more expensive.

-Remove barriers that distort choice: Eliminate structural obstacles such as discrimination, costly delays, information gaps, and unequal access to networks. Opportunities must be reachable, not merely advertised.

-Build pathways that turn skills into differentiated competency: Create bridges between education, training, and employment. People don’t need only opportunities to learn; they need career path to apply knowledge and build stable futures.

Human potential is not just a private asset—it is a collective resource. So potential is of great value to benefit human societies. When equal opportunities and optimized resources align, they produce more than individual success. They generate public value: stronger economies, healthier communities, and more advanced and resilient societies.  The moral argument is clear: people deserve a fair opportunity. The pragmatic argument is equally compelling: societies cannot afford to waste talent. To unleash human potential is, ultimately, to design a world where capability can reliably find expression and practice —and where progress is a well-supported journey.


Friday, July 3, 2026

Unveil Potential

  To identify potential and accelerate future performance, successful organizations should encourage people to learn and grow, and improve professional competency and maturity constantly.

The dynamic economy continues to present opportunities and risks in talent management, Talent management needs to have a strategic impact. From a talent management perspective, “unveil hidden potential” means identifying capability that is not yet visible in someone’s current role and then creating the conditions for it to emerge. It’s more about spotting growth capacity, learning agility, influence, and untapped strengths across the workforce.


What it means in practice: Hidden potential is often missed when managers rely only on current performance, title, or confidence level. Strong talent management looks beyond that and asks who can grow, who learns fast, who solves novel problems, and who can succeed in broader or more complex roles later.


Common approaches include:

-Ask people to demonstrate skills rather than just describe them, so you can see how they think and execute in real situations.


-Use stretch assignments, role plays, and scenario-based assessments to observe character, judgment, and strategic agility.


-Gather input from managers and peers, since hidden strengths are often more visible to others than to the individual themselves.


-Create ongoing skill reviews and career discussions instead of waiting for annual performance cycles.


How to develop it: Once potential is identified, talent management should turn it into growth through personalized development plans, mentoring, continuous learning, and opportunities to move across functions or take on bigger responsibility. It also helps to give employees clear goals, regular feedback, and visible opportunities to contribute so they can build confidence and capability over time.


A structural framework

-Spot signals: intellectual curiosity, resilience, learning plasticity, collaboration, and innovative initiative.

-Validate with evidence: projects, simulations, peer feedback, and results under pressure.

-Match to opportunity: stretch roles, cross-functional work, mentorship, or leadership exposure.

-Reinforce progress: coaching, feedback, and recognition for small wins.


Talent-management lens: The “hidden potential” is a workforce planning issue as much as a development issue. Organizations that find it early can improve internal mobility, reduce hiring gaps, build future leaders, and retain people who might otherwise feel overlooked.


So the hidden potential is the capacity for future contribution that is not yet obvious from current performance alone. To identify potential and accelerate future performance, successful organizations should encourage people to learn and grow, and improve professional competency and reach the high levels of maturity constantly.


Philosophy, Value, Universal Wisdom Behind Holiday Spirit

 We bridge differences with common humanity, uphold equality, and expand opportunity through intellectual curiosity, fairness, and courage.

T
he digital workforce today is multigenerational, multi-geographic, multi-cultural, and multi-devicing. Due to the increasing speed of change and abundant knowledge flow, outdated thoughts and variety of gaps are the reality.

People have different perceptions about our society. Therefore, it’s always important to clarify philosophy and value, enhance universal wisdom to bridge gaps, and shape an advanced society to reflect on the value conveyed by the Independence Day.


Establish the principle to shape an advanced world view for pursuing equal opportunities: The philosophy behind advanced worldview centers on interconnectedness and shared humanity—recognizing that diversity isn't a barrier, but a strength. It’s built on the principle that every person, regardless of background, deserves respect, and a fair chance to thrive. This approach doesn’t just tolerate differences—it actively values them, seeing varied perspectives as essential for innovation and progress. 


Equality isn’t about treating everyone the same, but about meeting people where they are and removing systemic barriers so opportunity isn’t shaped by physical identity, but created by advanced mindset and professional competency.  At its core, it’s about justice, empathy, and intentional action—creating structures where inclusion is measurable, accountability is clear, and belonging is real. It’s not just idealism; it’s a practical commitment to building an advanced society that try to work for everyone.


Clarify common values to connect the world of difference: What ties us across differences are shared human values such as empathy, fairness, and the desire to make achievement. Empathy allows us to step into another’s experience, even when it’s not our own. Respect reminds us that every person has inherent worth, no matter their background. Fairness drives the belief that opportunities should be based on merit and need, not privilege or bias. And the need to belong—deeply and authentically—is something we all share, no matter where we’re from. These values act as bridges. When we focus on them, we stop seeing difference as division and start seeing it as a source of creativity. They’re the foundation of trust, cooperation, and progress in a connected world


Highlight universal wisdom: The universal wisdom that enables people across the boundaries to understand each other and advance humanity: At the heart of it lies a simple truth found across cultures: treat others as you wish to be treated—the Golden Rule. It appears in some form in nearly every major tradition, reminding us to act with common values, even when we don’t fully understand someone.


Beyond that, universal wisdom teaches that listening—truly listening—opens doors where judgment builds walls. It’s not about agreeing, but about honoring the other person’s humanity. Intellectual Curiosity, humility, and patience let us move beyond surface differences and see shared hopes: value, growth, love, meaning.


Great leadership is about change and innovation. When we lead with common value and universal wisdom, we don’t just coexist—we collaborate. We innovate. We heal. And that’s how humanity moves forward: not by erasing differences, but by weaving them into something stronger together. We bridge differences with common humanity, uphold equality, and expand opportunity through intellectual curiosity, fairness, and courage. We close gaps via respect, empathy, fairness, and a shared commitment to human potential. We seek truth across differences and build a world to reflect such an independent spirit.


Profound Understanding

 When in-depth thoughts and understanding transcend into wisdom, the good solution to a specific problem can be scaled and applied to other domains.  

True understanding bridges the gaps. The deep understanding is the ability to deconstruct complexity and then recombine it into insight. Another way to say it is that analysis finds the parts, and synthesis reveals the system.


Analysis & Synthesis: “Deep understanding” is usually the result of two things working together: analysis and synthesis. Analysis breaks a subject into parts so you can see structure, relationships, and assumptions; synthesis puts those parts back together into a coherent whole that explains meaning and supports transfer to new situations. 


In plain language, analysis asks, “What is this made of, and how does it work?” while synthesis asks, “How do these pieces fit together, and what bigger pattern emerges?” Deep understanding goes beyond memorizing facts because it includes explaining ideas in your own words, comparing cases, applying knowledge in new contexts, and connecting concepts across situations.


A concise formulation of deep understanding: Map the 'Analysis-by-Synthesis' framework: turn complex subject matter into a visual mode.


See through the noise → ignore distraction, hype, and surface-level chatter.

-Cut through the distractions.

-Look past the chatter.

-Distinguish signal from hype.

-Focus on what matters, ignore the rest.

-Clear your vision of the static.

-Don’t get distracted by the noise—stay locked in.

-Separate truth from noise.


See through the obvious → don’t stop at what’s “right there”; look for what’s behind it (motive, mechanism, context). “See through the obvious” can be articulated as look past what is immediately apparent to find the deeper reality. Depending on tone, you could also say:

-See beyond the surface.

-Discern what’s hidden beneath the obvious.

-Don’t stop at the first impression.


See through commonality → don’t rely on what everyone assumes or repeats; find the uncommon signal. “See through commonality” can be articulated as look past what people or things have in common to notice the important differences underneath.

-Look beyond the shared features.

-See past the similarities.

-Notice what distinguishes them.

-Focus on the deeper distinctions.


Deepening understanding is a journey. When in-depth thoughts and profound understanding transcend into wisdom, the good solution to a specific problem can be scaled and applied to other domains; the mindsets with a cognitive difference can be connected via empathy and problems can be solved structurally.


Process Innovation

 Process innovation is best seen as both an efficiency tool and a growth lever.

Process is an important factor to solve problems or run successful business. The process innovation can be viewed from several angles: operational efficiency, customer value, organizational change, and strategic advantage.


A useful multifaceted view is that it is not just about making a workflow faster, but about redesigning how work creates value, how people collaborate, and how the firm competes.


Strategic lens: At the strategic level, process innovation helps a company compete by building hard-to-copy capabilities. It can support differentiation, scalability, and resilience, especially when linked to broader innovation systems and long-term transformation rather than isolated process tweaks.


Operational lens: From an operations perspective, process innovation focuses on reducing cycle time, errors, cost, and friction in how work gets done. This can include new software, automation, better handoffs, or redesigned workflows that make execution more reliable.


Customer lens: From a customer-value perspective, the question is whether the improved process produces a better experience, faster delivery, more consistency, or a stronger value proposition. In this view, process innovation matters because internal efficiency only counts if it improves what customers actually receive.


Organizational lens: From an organizational perspective, process innovation changes how teams coordinate, make decisions, and take new routines. It can require new capabilities, stronger management commitment, and alignment across functions, because the process itself often shapes behavior and culture.


Keep in mind, people, process and technology. A simple way to frame process innovation is: identify the problem, generate improvement ideas, prioritize the most valuable changes, then test and refine them. That sequence captures both incremental improvement and more transformative change, which is why process innovation is best seen as both an efficiency tool and a growth lever.


Indispensable Professional Abilities

 Think of indispensable professional capability as moving from “good at the job” to “great for problem-soling,” growing from a specialist to an expert to an innovator.

Professional development is a journey that is not a straight-line, more like a spiral up cycle that expands into the new horizon extensively; so people need to keep their mind open and their energy high, to continue unleashing their potential. Becoming indispensable means building a mix of core, technical, and leadership competencies that are hard to replace and clearly tied to business outcomes.


The strongest path is to develop a rare technical edge in your field, pair it with reliable execution and collaboration, and then add judgment or leadership that helps others move faster.


What to build

-Leadership mindsets and behaviors such as strategic thinking in decision-making, influencing, and change management, because they expand your impact beyond your own tasks.


-Technical depth in a high-value domain, because specialized expertise is what makes you visibly useful in complex work.


Strong fundamentals such as communication, problem-solving, agility and teamwork, because these are the baseline traits that make expertise effective in organizations.


Best Practices;

-Pick a problem area that matters to the business and become the person who can solve it reliably.


-Build a skill stack that combines one deep specialty with a few adjacent strengths, such as engineering plus systems thinking plus communication.


-Make your work legible: document decisions, create reusable tools, and share insights so others depend on your judgment, not just your output.


-Keep updating your competency set as tools and business needs change, since stale skills lose value quickly.


Think of indispensable professional capability as moving from “good at my job” to “great for problem-soling,” growing from a specialist to an expert to an innovator. Collaboratively, that means becoming the teammate who can be trusted with the hardest problems, explain them clearly, and help the team achieve high performance.