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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.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Unleash Potential

 So human potential is the capacity to keep expanding what a person can understand, do, and contribute over time based on their inner talent and life calling.

With abundant knowledge only clicks away, and unprecedented opportunities and convenience brought by advanced technologies and methodology, what had been previously thought impossible is now accepted as possible. 
The discovery of human potential opens a new window in our psyche to dormant attributes we didn’t know existed.

Human potential is usually grouped into a few broad domains rather than fixed “types,” because different frameworks slice it differently. A practical way to understand it is as a set of capacities people can develop across mind, emotion, motivation, social capital, and meaning.

Cognitive potential. Learning, reasoning, memory, creativity, and problem-solving.


The purpose-based potential. Sense of meaning, values, service, and connection to something larger than self.


Emotional potential. Self-awareness, emotional regulation, empathy, and resilience. For example, stronger emotional regulation often improves learning, collaboration, and performance under pressure.


Physical potential. Strength, endurance, coordination, and overall physical capability.


Motivational potential. Drive, persistence, purpose, and goal orientation.


Social potential. Communication, trust-building, collaboration, and social intelligence.


Transformational potential. The ability to adapt, integrate, and grow into a more mature way of being.


So human potential is the capacity to keep expanding what a person can understand, do, and contribute over time based on their inner talent and life calling. In that sense, the real question is not “which type do I have?” but “which domain needs the most development right now?” These categories are not separate boxes; they usually reinforce one another. So potential management is a holistic approach that needs to leverage both art and science.


Passive to Purposeful in Talent Growth

 There is a growing emphasis on personalized learning tailored to individual employee needs, career goals, and learning styles.

Talent development is a journey. The expert perspective on talent development emphasizes a strategic and comprehensive approach to nurturing employee potential.


“From passive to purposeful” in talent development means moving from a reactive, one-size-fits-all approach to a deliberate training system that builds capability, ownership, and business impact. Instead of waiting for employees to request training, the organization designs development around clear roles, future needs, and measurable outcomes.


Passive talent development usually means ad hoc courses, compliance training, and generic programs that are disconnected from performance. Purposeful talent development is more strategic: it targets critical skills, high-potential roles, succession paths, and capability gaps tied to business priorities.


The shift is from “standardizing learning” to “engineering growth.” Deliberate practice research supports this idea by showing that expertise grows through structured practice, feedback, and focused repetition rather than exposure alone. In practice, that means assigning stretch work, coaching, reflection, and measurable progression—not just courses.


Practical model: A purposeful model usually includes:

-Clear capability goals linked to strategy.

-Development paths by role, level, or future potential.

-Regular coaching, feedback, and on-the-job practice.

-Equity and inclusion, so development reaches more than the usual high performers.


Organizational effect: When talent development becomes purposeful, it stops being a “nice-to-have” and becomes a business lever for performance, retention, and readiness. It also helps employees see a future in the organization because growth is visible, intentional, and connected to real opportunity.


So the passive development asks, “What training can we offer?” Purposeful development asks, “What capability must exist here a year from now, and how do we build it?” How to measure the business impact of purposeful talent programs


Common pitfalls when shifting from traditional training to growth models

-Defining core capability gaps for strategic business outcomes

-How to scale deliberate practice beyond management roles

-Integrating stretch assignments into daily performance workflows


There is a growing emphasis on personalized learning tailored to individual employee needs, career goals, and learning styles. Organizations are leveraging data analytics to create customized talent development plans and recommend specific training resources based on performance and preferences.


Radical Reform

So radical reform changes the boundaries of the system, not just the rules inside the system.

Change is the new normal. “Radical reform cross-boundary” is best understood as change that goes beyond one department, vertical sector, or institution and deliberately cuts across organizational borders. 

In practice, it means redesigning systems so they can collaborate, adapt, and solve problems that no single unit can handle alone.

Cross-boundary reform is not just coordination; it is a structural rethink of how capabilities, authority, and accountability are arranged. The idea is that complex challenges such as climate, innovation, or business transformation require organizations to work across traditional silos and mandates.

Radical reform becomes necessary when incremental fixes are too slow or too narrow for the scale of the problem. In those cases, success depends on shared strategy, aligned incentives, and the ability to combine complementary strengths across boundaries. Examples of cross-boundary radical reform include:

-Integrating capabilities across organizations.


-Building alliances that share funding, data, or delivery capacity.


-Designing governance that allows experimentation, overlap, and learning instead of rigid silo control.


-Reorganizing around missions that span sectors, such as climate, mobility, or digital sovereignty.

So radical reform changes the boundaries of the system, not just the rules inside the system. That is why it usually involves both organizational redesign and resource support from the ecosystem environment. It emphasizes the importance of improving systems and structures to address social, economic, and political issues for enhancing system coherence and expediting radical change and innovation.


Overcoming Shadow Reasoning

Understanding and brightening up the shadow is considered essential for personal growth and self-awareness, for improving problem solving effectiveness. 

Our world is complex with the mix of new and old, right and wrong. Leaders and managers might consider "shadow mentality" as the subconscious or hidden factors within teams or organizations that impact morale, productivity, and collaboration.


Shadow mindset often does the “shadow reasoning,” which can mean a few different things, but in the most common psychological sense it refers to the hidden, denied, or repressed parts of the self that influence how people think and act.


Personal shadow. Traits, feelings, or impulses formed through your own experiences that you learned to hide or reject.


Social shadow. Qualities that a particular group or culture tends to disown, such as emotions or behaviors considered unacceptable in that context.


Collective shadow. Human traits and potentials that are broadly repressed across societies, often linked to archetypes.


Some modern personality-system discussions use “shadow” differently, describing an “inverse type” or shadow functions that show up under stress or in blind spots. In that usage, shadow reasoning means the less conscious, less preferred way of interpreting situations, especially when someone is under pressure.


In everyday language, shadow reasoning usually means thinking driven by unexamined assumptions, projection, or disowned feelings rather than by clear reflection. For example, someone who rejects their own anger may become overly judgmental of anger in others, which is a classic shadow pattern.


The shadow influences behavior and emotions in ways that may not be immediately apparent to the individual, often manifesting in projections onto others or irrational reactions. Understanding and brightening up the shadow is considered essential for personal growth and self-awareness, for improving problem solving effectiveness.

Triage in reinventing organizations

 To reinvent organizations, it’s important to harness cross-functional collaboration, optimize cross functional processes, reduce business friction and deal with conflicts or disruptions continually.

Organizations are at different stages of business growth and maturity. In the context of Reinventing Organizations, “triage change” is best understood as a way of dealing with transformation distress early and deciding whether to pivot, pause, or stop an initiative rather than forcing a failed change effort forward.


A healthy organization should sense and respond to change continuously, with less need for heavy top-down change management.


Triage change means treating transformation work like a live diagnostic process: identify early warning signs, assess whether the core intent is still valid, and choose the least wasteful next move.  The three main responses are a pivot when the goal is still right but the method needs redesign, a pause when timing or capacity is temporarily wrong, and termination when continuing operations would diminish more value than it creates. The triage change is useful because it gives teams a disciplined way to respond when a major shift is not working, without reverting to rigid command-and-control habits.


Organizational effect: Used well, triage change preserves trust, resources, and learning because it treats stopping or pausing as a legitimate strategic move rather than a failure. It also helps organizations avoid “commitment escalation,” where leaders keep investing in a weak transformation simply because they have already invested so much.


To reinvent organizations, it’s important to harness cross-functional collaboration, optimize cross functional processes, reduce business friction and deal with conflicts or disruptions continually, reinvent the culture at the different stages of the organizational development. 



Justable

 Every voice a note, every tear a storm—We’re writing a song that justice can come. That’s the kind of change that starts soft and grows strong..

We don’t need perfect, 

we need listening before speaking out.

A pulse in the pavement, 

a mind shift in a new paradigm.

Not a silo wall, 

but a gate path.

Not a loud noise, 

but an inner call—

We can bend toward fairness, 

we can learn how to reinvent ourselves.



Oh, we’re not there yet , 

but we’re on the way,

Tuning the hidden world,

that delays us for so long time

Every voice a note, 

every tear a storm—

We’re writing a song that justice can come.


When the silence gets heavy,

 and change feels too slow,

We remember the value deep—

we can bend, we can grow.

Not an excuse, not a trick,

 but a sign in the dark—

A whisper that says, “We can start.”


No silos, no thrones, 

just the work that we share,

A thousand small choices, 

each one made with mindfulness,.

The compass is us—

when we listen, we discern:

The next right step is-

 the one we can take.


Oh, we’re not there yet, 

but we’re on the way,

Tuning the hidden world,

that delays us for so long time.

Every voice a note, every tear a storm—

We’re writing a song that justice can come.

That’s the kind of change,

that starts soft and grows strong..


Impact of "Nature Science Museum" in Washington DC

 The strength of the Nature Science Museum is that it combines spectacle with substance, turning popular exhibits into gateways for thought-provoking truth discovery via deeper scientific understanding.

Every time I go to Washington DC, I always like to revisit the National Museum of Natural History because it’s both educational and entertaining, bringing me a new perspective of humanity, history and culture.  Actually the museum educates millions of visitors about the natural world and humanity’s place in it. It also functions as a major research museum, with a collection of about 148 million specimens and artifacts that supports work on climate change, conservation, public health, and food security.


Educational impact: The museum is designed to make science accessible through iconic exhibits like dinosaurs, the mammals, birds, ocean life, Some video demonstrations in human evolution galleries were thought provoking, encouraging us to travel back who we are and where we come from.

The mission of the museum is not just display, but public understanding of science and stewardship of the environment. That makes it especially important in Washington, DC, where it serves as both a cultural landmark and a civic education space.


Research impact: Beyond exhibitions, the museum contributes to scientific knowledge through global fieldwork and laboratory research. Its collections help scientists study biodiversity, geology, human history, and environmental change over time. The institution also uses public programming and digital outreach to expand its reach beyond the building itself. That strengthens its influence as a national resource rather than just a tourist attraction.


In fact, the museum is one of the most-visited museums in the world, which gives it strong tourism value for DC. The biggest strength of the museum is that it combines spectacle with substance, turning popular exhibits into gateways for thought-provoking truth discovery via deeper scientific understanding.


Impact of "Artbox" Festival in Singapore

 Artbox Singapore 2026 was a good festival that combined market activity with entertainment and lifestyle branding.

When I visited Singapore in April, there were truly many great conferences going on, from science to art, from IT to energy.  Artbox Singapore in April 2026 was a large, youth-oriented creative festival that drew strong interest for its mix of shopping, food, art, and play.


The staff there were very professional, inviting me to the event, and gave  me a brief introduction.

 It was a popular weekend event for creators, microbusinesses, and trend-driven visitors in Singapore.


There was a long line of people waiting to enter the exhibition hall, suggesting the event continued to resonate with younger Singaporeans. It also seemed to succeed as a discovery platform for local and small businesses, with visitors specifically noting interest in art prints, and independent sellers rather than only big brands.


ARTBOX CAMP 2026 featured more than hundreds of brands and vendors, plus different themed zones covering lifestyle, entertainment, workshops, play, art, kids, and youth programming. Visitors also found arcade-style games, photobooths, live performances, and food stalls that leaned toward trendy, social-media-friendly items like matcha drinks and other contemporary snacks.


From a consumer experience standpoint, Artbox functioned as a hybrid of market, festival, and social outing, with repeat visitors treating it as a date or leisure destination. Culturally, Artbox helped keep Singapore’s independent creative and micro-retail scene visible by giving emerging brands a high-traffic showcase. The event also blended regional and local creative culture, with brands and performers from across Asia contributing to its cross-cultural character.


Artbox Singapore 2026 was a good festival that combined market activity with entertainment and lifestyle branding. Its impact was strong in youth engagement, creator visibility, and experiential appeal, rather than in being a conventional trade or arts fair.




Impact of GTI Southeast Asia Expo 2026 Malaysia

 GTI Southeast Asia Expo 2026 was less a public festival and more a trade platform with economic development for Malaysia.

In the spring, there was a lot of rain in Kuala Lumpur. Besides visiting the local landmark in the city Center and open botanical gardens, I also went to participate in the GTI Asia Exp, which was an b2b industry event that strengthened Kuala Lumpur’s role as a regional hub for amusement and entertainment trade. 


It brought international exhibitors, buyers, and senior executives to the event, creating business-matching, networking, and investment opportunities for the leisure and attractions sector.


The expo focus was amusement parks, attractions, family entertainment centers, indoor facilities, immersive experiences, and related technologies such as arcade machines and VR/AR systems. The organizer described it as a platform to connect buyers and sellers and showcase new products, services, and solutions to decision-makers in the region.


In short, GTI Southeast Asia Expo 2026 was less a public festival and more a trade platform with economic development for Malaysia. Its impact was mainly in business attraction, regional networking, and reinforcing Kuala Lumpur’s profile as a Southeast Asian center for amusement and leisure industry growth


Impact of "History Museum" in Washington DC

The National Museum of American History matters because it preserves national memory, educates the public, and helps define what American history means in the present.

The future is unfolding and history repeats itself. That’s perhaps the reason I revisited the
Museum of American History in DC. The museum has a major civic impact because it preserves and interprets the stories, objects, and controversies that shape U.S. identity. Its mission is explicitly tied to helping visitors become more engaged and informed citizens, which makes it one of the Smithsonian’s most important public-history institutions.

Cultural impact: The museum affects how people understand American memory by presenting artifacts from across politics, war, innovation, civil rights, and daily life. That broad scope makes it a key place for exploring how national identity is constructed and debated rather than simply celebrated.

Educational impact: Smithsonian museums can reach school groups, families, tourists, and researchers without financial barriers due to the government support. This accessibility helps make historical knowledge part of everyday public life in DC. I saw many school kids coming to the museum for their history assignment. The museum’s educational role is to turn history into something visitors can actively interpret, not just passively observe. Its exhibits and programming are designed to support scholarship, public learning, and civic engagement.

Social and political impact: The museum also has social impact because its interpretation of history can influence public debates about race, democracy, citizenship, and memory. That matters in DC because the museum sits at the center of the National Mall museum ecosystem, where it helps shape how national history is taught to millions of visitors each year. In practice, it functions as both a classroom and a public forum.


That means the museum’s impact is not only educational but also political in the broad sense: it helps determine which stories are centered, which are questioned, and how Americans understand their past. Supporters see that as essential to honest history, while critics worry about ideological framing and lack of holistic future perspectives. 


The National Museum of American History matters because it preserves national memory, educates the public, and helps define what American history means in the present. Its impact is strongest where culture, citizenship, and public debate intersect.


Why

 Why—why do we feel alright? ’Cause we’re learning, not conclude. Every chasm is where the light gets in. When we stop calling it “divide.”

Why do we walk around the same place, 

Why do we hold the memory that makes us crying;
Why do we call it “healing,”
When it still hurts our reputation,

Why do we sing the same song, 

again and again,

when the true understanding is-

so hard to clarify


I watch the sunrise at the dawn time; 

 listen to the echoes of nature sound,

I feel a little bit down,
In the corners of my mind,
Like every unanswered question,
Wants to be the solution I continue to find.


And I tried to let it go,
But the inner voices still mumble around.


Why—why do you have to be like that?
Like shadow in the dark,
Like changes that slice in half.
The moment we ask “who you are.”
Why—why do you think you are somebody, you don’t know at all.
When the truth is right here,
If they stop pretending, 

try to feel things,
so we could finally get through the tough time.


Why do you say “it’s nothing,”
When your mind won’t stay still?
Why do you turn into the slide,
Just to hide a fragile who?


 We grasp the softest moments of time.
For a little while we pause,
Then wonder why we’re so rushed up,
In the journey being called life..


So tell me what you mean,
Don’t leave it halfway, 

with an unspoken story hidden und…


Maybe the “why” is a gateway,
Not a straight line, 

not a hidden agenda.
Maybe it’s our chance to learn,

 How to make words count.
No more games, no more guessing,
No more running away from the present time—
If we ponder the question together,
We can get things right.


Why—why do we feel alright?
’Cause we’re learning, not conclude,
Every chasm is where the light gets in.

 When we stop calling it “divide,”
Why—why do we feel so different?
’Cause we want to be understood,
So I’ll ask it one more time,
And this time, 

Please don’t flinch or hide the truth inside,
Continue to ask Why?